EDMONTON. Be t. za_ (CP)- oaivnm iunronr. Nfld. t. a a new incident which farm 2s —(OP Oable) —Lack oz’ t?» WEDNESDAY, Picket: Are Dispersed By Police stock deliveries arrival of police was the only de- velopment tonight in the delivery strike of 20,000 members of the Alberta Farmers Union as they awaited word from Ottawa on their demands for parity prices. The incident occurred at Coron- ation. 150 miles southeast of Ed- monton where 25 pickets were to have attempted to stop delivery of livestock to the stockyards. They dispersed peaceably with the arrival of a lone R,C.M.P. con- stable. V The strike called b the A-FJI. Sept. 6 seeking establshmerit of a board to determine parity between farm costs and returns continued to bring reports of dairy product shortages at some points, but left major Alberta centres unaffected. In Saskatchewan where the Un- lted Farmers of Canada has issued a strike call to its estimated 30.- 000 membcrs, some shortages were in prospect. Latest word from Ottawa said it was unlikely the Federal Cabinet would consider the farmer de- manda until Tuesday and lit prob- ably would be Wednesday before a Federal decision was announced on‘ possible action to end the hold- ou . halt live- dlepersed with Facilities Bag Down iimieriinpylvalanche B ITABCY 0' mun“ ,1, Casladian Preaa But?" Writer munclation facilities, of ee ination "between sources of formation and of transportation Dwvril to be the three major headaches of rsewspapenntm cove]; l"! events here following the crash of a. Belgian airliner last Wednest da with a loss of 20 lives. 35 and iXi: photographers came can“ and the United states on the as. slknment and theg found their 60D)’ could be sent y telephone or on two teletypee operated by thy Nwffllllldllnd POM Office Depart ' ment. These communications h... ade- quately filled the requirements of passengers passing through but they bogged down under the ava-l-y anche of press copy which reamed" from typewriters of the newspaper. men. The teletype operators did their best to take messages at the coun- ter and keep copy moving but there was not sufficient equipment or enough operuwrs to keep up with the pounding typewriters. When it was decided to give press copy priority over commercial cables the weather stepped in now and again with demon aurora borealls throwing the wires out of commission. i On most days when correspond- ents wanted to use the telephone they would find that calls oould not get beyond St. John's beca l induction 0f iiev. R. J. Beriis A-T-ssflvi-fll-Inthe prgggnge g t; its place at the bottom of the over 300 i§ev.an§§§fif§“§_°§e,,flf beside the teltrvpe operator. ' BA. B.D., w“ inducted filday When correspondents did get night as minister of the Church of weather interference. ~ | This Cbrresmroent thought he would get his "our out at least an hour ahead of others by sending it to Halifax on an R C.A F. plane.’ The aircraft crashed on takeoff. however, and the copv had to tgfie; e their oopy through they sometimes! of St. Andrew and St. Paul, Mont- real. Succeeding the Rev. Dr. Donald. wrho served for 20633? as minister of the largest Presby- terian congregation in the prqy- lnce. ivlr. Berlis was ordained mm- isler in i936. He served overseas, the recent war as chaplain, first with the Canadian Forestry 00PM. then with the Black Watch <R.H.R.) of Canada. Be. fore his wa/r service, the new min- ister was assistant minister at the Church of St. Andrew and st. Paul u: 1939 and 1940. The charge to the minister was made bv Rev. O. Ritchie Bell, B. A, B.D., and the charge to the gZLIéItTBQBIlOH 11y Rev Dr. David Benediction was offered Berlis at the end of the mony. L PYECEdIXIR the act of induction. Rev. William lvfcBlide delivered the sermon in which he said that unless man does climb to a higher spiritual and moral plane. there, can be no real peace or security amongst nations." Mr. McBride remarked that the Four Freedoms for which the recent war on the part of the Allies was foufinta would continuesttol be un- ea ze “men p9 . ticinz greed." rs n p!“ by Mr. cere- In nls charge to the congrega- births of Charles Parnell and,‘ ilon- Dr- Scott Dolmed out that Michael Davltt, mo. natlonflliil- the members of the church should leaders. record their newly-appointed mlfl- iii lster as an “ambassador of God" BOTTLES LONG TRIP and added that “the congregation and minister do their best work" GRIMSBY. msland —<CP> —A once every i0 times it was needed. A bus makes the tour of the base; every 45 minutes but it. seemed to be always pulling away when cor- respondents wanted it most. correspondents found it arrivcd on their Kiltors‘. desks hours after the CoastGiiard] in New York had already ClISCiOSEG, similar information relayed from} the American Coast Guard base at- Argentia. The transportation situation wasi a major source of delay. Sources l of information and communicat. ions all seemed to be as far away from one another as they possibly oould at this mnmmouth airbase. re is only om taxi on the base which wns available about, The result was that by nightfall‘ usually trouped back to their rooms with bllstered feet and aching limbs but grateful for the fact that there was at 161st 24 hour; e day service in the dining TOOTH. {he Rev Edwin J. White formed t e Call to Worshifl- v The choir was under the dir- ectlon of organist Kmnelh Me“- HONOR IRISH HEROES DUBLIN- (C?) - Special 2 1-2d. and 3d. stamps will be issued to. commemorate the centenary 0f ihe D9?‘ Popular Autumn Colours Take your cue from the calendar, Mister, Indian Summer is al- most here! Tone up your ward- robe and your spirits with a new, neat, color-right felt: s5. s6. $1.50 s9. and $10.50 MGDRE s. Mtusoollclei" (IHARLOT’1‘ETU\N.\, REL when the former regard the lat- ter as “one who has been placed lmollli V011 l7! God.” l Dr. Donald delivered prayer; 01' letter tossed overboard in a botile in the Indian Ocean has arrived here after being found can a beach in Somaiiland intercession and remembrance and coast. l, V was killed 1n l" "tmmlhm on the African east MAIGRET IS AIR “A Crime in Holland" lay ace defective story-writer Georges Simenon Another dastardly dime has been committed-flail time in Holland! Who was the murderer? In this thrilling murder-mystery story, luqaecior Maigret is faced with one of ihe most baffling crimes of his career . . . how he solves it is another tribute to the genius of ace detee- tive writer, Georges Simenou, the creator of the greatest in detective fiction since Sherlock Holmes! His latest novel, “A Crime in Holland", appears u the book-of-the-weelr, complete in this week's issue of clraract The Standard! WHEAT FARMING IN A BIG WAY Call it fate, or what you will, but Ila: cry-g Europe's starving millions rnuat have reached the ears of Saskatchewan's farmers answering it with the bigger history of that province! And they ra harvesting it 4i OAD AGAIN! Br near the Flushing, planned to along m El‘. Tichy and Webb and and they an crop in lllc similar centres around try. the customers will be whisked lmdecgroni .1 Sidewalks. The) ‘ll he pooled in sum. warmed will be no crowded streets, no ing problem, allrllllgeotclljexllsfolis_plus Just about dream . .000 nd ill b ~-; . ated into Wlildf. w F morpor Knapp call retail shopping world. Its 1,500,000 squgrg fee; retail selling spare is planrud New York Plans Shopping Sentre 0n Zii-Acre Site ARLENE WOLF A§5<Ylp§3“.f%..i°*°l' f’ “A” ‘rival the wonders o Omormw to ‘world of tomorrow" l5 p of the original lanned gldYWorldb Fair site in. In this ZO-"icte buyers’ utopia. Serve aS a model for the coun. 0n moving winter. There park- nn traffic jams, a lcolnsore housewife llll- will cost about architect Lester C. real estate developers ihe largest in the of to CEBU‘? sub-basement driveways to elim. inate street level traffic jams. On the first basement level, horlzont. al escalators will convey customers arriving by oils, railroad or sub- way past retail displays and on to their destination. Also planned for the centre are three l0.storc_v modern structures- e. professlcrvl building. a hotel. and possibly an office building Most of the other structures will be two or three stories high. The shopping centre site now contains a bus station, to be moved in accordance vith the new plan, and a Long Island railroad station whose tracks will run right through the area, It is planned to remove all existing etructures- they're mostly old buildings in various states of disrepair—so that the de- velopment om start from scratch Population displacement in the area will be small, explainsMr. Tichy. for the district is not densely settled. TAKE SICK BOY 'l'O QUEBEC SHRINE GlRANBY CENTER. N Y.. Sept B3— The parents of four-yczr-old Gary l-Ialstead. tir-ier treatment for a brain cancer said to be in. curable. plan ‘.0 lnke the young- ster to the shrine of Ste. Anne de Beaupre, Que. Mrs. Clifford l-lalsicad the boy's mother, said they hope to make the 13 Women Candidates In Election (By William Stewart. Canadian Press Staff Writer) CANBERRA, Australia, Sept. 24 (OPP-Thirteen women are cun- didales for parlia erlt in Austral- ian general elccti ns. Sept. 23. though four more campaigned in elections three years ago and for the first time two were success- ful Two of the women are Labor Party candidates and two are Lib- erals. The others represent smaller parties or are running independent- yWomen in Australia have been eligible for Parliament since Con- federation though none won :1 scat until 1943. Most prominent among this year's women candidates are Dame Enid Lyons, widow of a former Prime Minister, who seeks re- election in the Tasmanian (llViS- lc-n of Darwin as a Liberal, and Labor Senator Dorothy Tangncy from Western Australia. with all the spend that modern equipment provides. ln The Standard this wank, an exclusive photo alury hlsea you deep into the wheat-growing districts of Saskatchewan to giva you an insight into how wheat farming is done in the modern wayl WHAT ABOUT LABOR? Are the present industry-crippling strikes lu Canada only isolated c of abor unrest . . . or are they all part of a m or plan on the part of Labor to snatch swords will: Management in a final show- down battle? Staff writer Bob McKaown of The SlandarrPa Ottawa Bureau provides you with some timely wall-Informed observations on the labor unrest throughout the country-ha TIM llaudardi Magazine section this wool. THE LIFE OF AN ALIERTAN GARAGE OWNER How much does In earn? What llnd of llfo does l0 lead? In The Standard llala wash,- Kate Aidan eon- lrlliuha another interacting photo story In laar "Mont Mr. and Mn, Canada" acrlea. Willa words and pla- harea, it reveals the day-iy-day llfa of a lyplcul Albertans garage owner. Interesting reading! ~ illteStandarli comics - Maoazml - aorooaavual " counrra uovn. - u lws RIVIIW on sat: now. Tlnassslomlnsssspsperllmbdi/Imuanlbolue j ri-tfivams-sxsv: . - a serve a potential 1.000.090 cuslonh ers. and yield, some $250,000,000 annual sales l'!-.c prcgect is cx- An average my Bi this modern. tic centre. planned for middle come group salaries, might go something like this: The fihvmlel‘ drives up a ramp, ewinss DB5! Jllc glass-enclosed second story of a futuristic depart. ment store. and parks her car 0n l covered roof parking area that will accommodate 5.000 automobiles Then, she parks junior at an adjoin. 1H8 nursery. where he will be fed. “mil-led fllld Put io bed at the pro. per hours. Theatre Included Her first atop probably Wmlld be somewhere in the LOOO-foot long "n" WmPrBlnihi-he department store and a vninety oi specialty shops arrl service stores She might window.shop on the street lcvei on covered sidewalks cooled with exhaust blown from the air-con. ditioned buildings She could tags in a movie and stage show in 5 MOO-seat super de luxe theatre or mosey aiourd in tile "five and ten", When she's finished, she picks up her on’, drives acioss the roofs to 8 ‘llpermarket and farmers‘ market fo her groceries, collects junior and goes on home. If she as a spare hour. she can 8o skating, bowl in one of 100 alleys. get some sun-mine in a green nursery that, will serve u outdoor sample room for florists. or even make a reservation for hubby and herself for that evening st a. night club on the premises. All delivery truciu serving this north shore shoppim centre, on which construction viii begin 1 Pflrled to pry for itself in 25 years.‘ consolation for the wel- fare through the trip. "I have quite a bit of faith in prayer." Mrs. Halstead said, cx. plaining thut are was told of the chlid‘s in '47 will loid and unload via" shrine by a priest in Rochester. "1 certainly can't. lose anything by going, anti there is everything to be gained." Sill’ DOWN illl TAKING [IXATIVES TIlIS WAY Soc How Regula You Can Bo Every Morning TrytaldngCartefaPfllatiiiawayzstart with 8 and eet a definite time every morning. When you get lar every morning cut down to 2. tar a few t %erl1lry taking Carter's mm other day. You may even find ou can keep _ re ular without any luxe Ive. ou are, Carter's»: ao tiny can cut down the dose-from 8 to -to fit the needs of your individual system. Without disappointment. Cartetrgzlhfe pcleaaotatyourmteséihnal traetno wa ‘ oroug y. Mus-t... made wit bsoompmmded prop on. lfllOfD I9 gators-IS W 1.0 . mar graduafed Idlfllhpflt uuine at any oil ' (M. ofbaIIa-slvvrsrin ten "19 501119111"? "115 ‘Veek- prlgrtrairlrneenlgnilill’ womllllslsaffglrs mprlxtglezlgslgr 1359 végenrqifi] ticraethgloé many years before her election w‘ h . hm]. they hope lo 0mm“ mmevlfilifl as first woman memmr n. the House of Representatives. lln ill 1939, during the seven years her late husband Joseph Lyons was head of the United Australia Party administration. she was re- garded as his most reliable coun- selior. Elected in 1948 to fill a vacancy caused by death, Miss Tagney bo- came Australia's first woman Sen- ator. A former teacher. she is only 35 hut has been an active Labor supporter for several years. In the present election, the Labor party has given her top ranking among its candidates for Western Aus- tralia's three open Senate seats. Queensland candidates for the Senate include Annabell Rankin. also only in her 30s. Her selection as a candidate by the Liberal party over Senator H. B. Foil, who has represented Queensland for 35 years in Canberra. was a minor sensation. One of Miss Rankiffa opponents is Winnifred Payne who served during the First Great War with ihe Australian nursing service and is a! candidate for the New Service r I y. In New South Wales there are two women candidates for the 5611B“. Mrl. Edith Oook a grand- mother. and Mrs. Dorothy Roger. son, People's Protestant Party representative. ' for the Houle of Representatives fomlnilt. A Ill kee er, llias Melinda Ivey, is nfiingfl. an independent candidate in West Sydney an Mrs. Madge Roberts, a housewie, is m. rural _seat of Oal of 10 candidates in NQWPBSUB 91"‘ lSlOll. Mrs. Maurice Blackburn. _ l widow, seeks election as an in- dependent Labor candidate in tile Victoria division of Bofki‘. P9P‘ resented for several years by lief‘ husband- A school teacher. Win- nifrcd West, opposes Reconstruc- tion Minister John Dedmazi in Corio, in Victoria. Llveliest campaign of all is be- lng conducted by Mrs, Mascc-tie Brown, an independent, in ihe Victoria division of Fillvker. .-"rs. Brown has pui on swim: sessions and concerts briefly interrupted by hor political chats. Presentation To Commissioner HALIFAX, Sept. 23—rCPl —On the occasion of his zicprlrturc from Canada after scvcn years as icl'ri-' torinl learlcr- of tho Salvation Army for the Dominion, Alaska and Bor- muda, Commissioner Btfninmin Ortlmes was tonight. presented with a pen and pencil set, nli bchnlf of the citizens of Halifax. The prcsentaiinil was to have been a (lliill liffail‘ with the ex- pected arrival here of Gl-ncrnl Ai- hert. Orsborn, lnlcrnaticclul Salva- iiannot Stand Another War, Says ElialllliiWBf BERLIN, Sept, 23—fAP)- Gen. Dwight D. Ei-stcnhower, United States Army Chief of Staff, was quoted in a Washington dispatch to Btara and Stripes today as say- ing he was "convinced that the world cannot stand another global war and. as I see it, the thing to prevent such a tragedy happening ls education." r The interview was given before Gen. Eisenhower, wartime sup- reme commander of allied expedi- tionary forcea. departed for Eur- ope to make a general inspection of American occupational forces. He left Halifax by ship today for Bri in. Gen. Eisenhower spoke fervent- ly of his "foremost belief-my he- iief in democracy." The army newspaper said his words were intended as a special message to American soldiers. "No one wants war." Btara and ltripeflquoted Eisenhower. "The common man everywhere hates Wtanuwet must enlist] that haired 0 I‘ 0 Drevent t ha enln again." pp g __________ mm. worm wrionr» coupon ._'.<ce> __ ment is plannl "Pul Weight" poster llgmgalgn lo PM le to remain" in lndu ir produce‘ Rood for a ‘iii-pell-cgntlirll ‘The govern- d d LA open m but, is one’ ocean over pr .w ll "n as ‘.3 I.’ §l§Zlltll'.“"l§i on. liOlllI (Oflllllfl \ Socialite Heiress T0 iiope Diamond Dead By United Press WASHINGTON, Sept. 3 - The death of Mrs. EvalY" McLean Rgy" noids, 25-year-old socialite added another link to the chain that lirrids her family's fabulous Hope Dia- mond to tragedy. FOUND DEAD Mrs. Reynolds. wife of former Sen. Robert Reynolds. Democrat. North Carolina, was found tienci in her room at Friendship, the Mc~ Lean family home. _ A police report declared death due to "apparent atural causes" but her physician, r. W. B. Leon- ard, said an accidental overdose c-f sleeping tablets was a possible cause. , Coroner A. Magruder Mac-Don- ald ordered nn autopsy to deter- mine the exact cause, Family sources said private services would he held Monday at Friendship. son r. I acrlmll“; l?" lmslbunda dilat- Him mpnfn] instllllilrm, ‘Brim d' uUhtflr dwm of hcr mat-o l1 .- - out at I‘i'icl1tlslilp — 599m‘ ° some of Washington's most dazzling , , . - -Lcun pnrflcspsm vflms- 59rd fMlxlil‘ llllxlfliflt‘ was llntlcr lhc tale 0 _. - iail. ' Home“ ‘$133132? on November l6. 1931- d “m h“ “ism m “mu-W an ld uribglrell lillilllidy, Slept m 5 3° I; o?“ o, io hcr father by Klllg °p Bclrrium- 53w passed I fllllfit chndho: anti liil0l‘ startled WnshlflEV-YU _ ciciy hy turning down a dellglligturii: stead she went to NPW Yi-‘ildi h,“ i-cd lllfillilfllll 1 ilCfilgilglnl l" ' to FZPt ii .0) 01'? - In i039, her life was threat-unfit‘! hy kidnapors anti a stronfl l” h‘ QllfllTl tflilloxvcd her cverywhercdfq‘ \\'Cnt, ‘Pu-o ycrirs later, after n “Ru-tr. “llilil rollriShlp, she married \f.\ Home, thcn lllt.‘ powerful anti-l Deal chairman of the Senate firm‘ tat-y ilflfglrs committee. Rflyll/ "rlflwedipi. lived at Friendrhip. Sincr- his volllniflfy Ntlfemwl m 1944, Reynolds has been practising lmv in Vifasllington. GIANT (lEMENT-MIXER IIEADACIIE FOR W. A. C- OTTAWA. SEpL, 24 -War As- Dr. Leonard found Mrs. Rwy- nold'a hotly while at Friendshl to pay a cnll on her mother, rs. Evnlyn Walsh McLean. a promin- ent figure in Washington society and nwncr of the Hope Diamond. (ion Army leatlr-r nlinnrd the MM" Mclfiflfi broke h" “gem” l" , , ' - a rcccnt a . .l."."“l’..“.-'i.‘§. “3I1~°.-‘J..';.§°Tii “inf.” The death "I the rams Me- l-rom dovklng m] morning Reynolds was another episode in l. ihe misfortune that has clogged some owners of the Hope Diamond, a $2,000,000 blue white rem that once belonged ‘to Catherine the Great. The diamond was given to Mrs McLean by her husband, Edward B. McLean, the scion of a prominent publishing family, There was a ropular belief the atone was a llinx, but Mrs. Mclean bollttlcd the ea. - Yet since acquiring the gem, the family was involved -lnnocerltly enough- in the Teapot Dot-rm scan. dal; Mrs. McLean's eldest son, Vin- sets Corporation has possession ol the biggest cement-mixer in l!" world and doesn't know what NI do with n. It is so or: rwbldv wants l0.l)ll_\' it. Originally hullt for use in "U" siruciinn of the great power Slit‘ nt Shipsmv, Que, the mixer “l” turn out 300 inns of concrete an hour nliri will deliver it grew: liis- tunrcs over an equally gigantic con- veyor system. With completion of the work l" Shlpsaw, there were no other con- structlon jobs big enough for thtl granddatidy of nil cement-mitten and it was sold to Russia. It W only as far as Vancouver wilctl Mutual Aid ended and the all?” ment \vas cancelled. _ Now, the giant piece of machin- ery sits on the Vancouver 600k! crated in two-inch lumber, whll! War Assets agents comb the WOT" for a buyer. an flown NOVELTIES There are many differen and each t designs in these novelties one has a container for flowers. When filled with flowers in paatei shades, these noveltie are aure i0 bring joy cities for baby alone. These to the Mother and new baby. Aiao special nov- lnciude Cradles, Carriages, Lambs, Booties, eta, and may be filled with flowers and finished with pink able! Try one the next. time baby. 1...... Nurseries m. 2'! Richmond Si. or blue ribbon bows. Simply ador- you need a gift for a new t . Phone 8