‘rise Guardian. Three Cents. stoning Dally I887. a’, i ills BARR in moms" CHARDUTTETQWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1948' 14 PAGES MAXIM! f OIL 1 MERE MAN i llebsorlption Delivered sees. i Mall 85.00, other Provinces b. U. l. I130. ANADIAN ARMY Britain ‘Plans , New Defensive Alliance In Europe Judging At Pelt Shawls Concluded New liames Join flanks 0f Veteran Ranchers 0n Prlze List; Show Said “Most Successful.” Corning Events’ “Clyde Loan. pantry sale et Rogers Hardware Friday, Jens‘. i0. "Mill now closed for repairs until further notice, -McGuigan end Boyle. "Farm Forum Organization Meeting in Merle Church Hall, Friday evening, January 23rd at 8‘, P. M. Movies. Everyone welcome. BY AIR to Montreal end ‘Boston ' in about three hours. Phone Marl- time Central Air" aye 2061 or 540, "Card Party and Dance ln Crap- aud Hall, Monday, January 26th, Crapaud W. I. "Buying good used Feed Bags daily. Bring or ship them in to us. Dillon dis Splllett. "Loading hogs at Kinkora ev- lry Tuesday morning. For infor- motion contact J. P. Callahan. "Rummage Sale. st. Peters sun- day School 6.30 P. M. Satmday, lanuary 24th. "Cake Sale at Holman; Batu:- day, January 24th, 1948, by Park- iale Guides. _ “Loading hogs at Emerald ev-r cry ‘Puesday morning. For infor- ~ nation and trucking service phone or contact G. C. Green. , "Loading hogs at Albany every Tuesday morning. For informat- ion and trucking service phone or contact J. George MacKay. “loading hogs at Breadalbane every Tuesday morning. For in- formation and trucking service contact Earl Todd. "Collecting hogs at CherryVal- iey Monday afternoon, January 26th. For information and truck- ing service contact Sterling Inga. "Collecting hogs st Milton Monday afternoon, January 26th. For information and trucking service contact Robert Crabbe. "Loading hogs at Uigg every Monday. For information end trucidnx service contact Robert Brehsut. “Loading Hogs for Canada Packers at Trundle, Tuesday, Jan- iwry 20th. 2 to d P. M. Herb Muliin. “Loading Hogs for Canada Pack- crs st ‘Souris, every Tuesday. ‘rruoldng when possible. Roddie McIntyre. "Loading hogs at North Wilt- shire every Mondaymorning. For infonrnation and trucking service contact E. N. Easter and Ellmer Clcw. "task boss at unseen Iver Co-operstive store every Monday. ‘rrucivleaving at 1.00 p.m. Please list your hogs with Vernon Rive!‘ (Io-operative. "Loading hogs, at Charlottetown all dey Monday-Tuesday until l1 o'clock. Var information and‘ trucking service phone ‘I36 or i457. "Annual Meeting of D1104" Del Association on Tueedey- January 27th at 2 PM. L. 8- "WW3 Secretary. "loading hogs et Hunter River every ‘nfesdey morning. For in- lomsstlon ‘lad true-kins 1W1" contact Leas Orssweil- Gordon Methane-great bdcleod. , ‘sun-s L "Loafing ess ‘cf-l! every -1; " ma! afternoon en 1i!"- iii.- s “".’sa'i§. ‘gusset so rookies on»; _ . “Loetli “i. etwbumm m every nsn|€4;y°:r'ragning»unti1’t.i.oo P-M- Ilor information end truck- ins lsrvioe contebtlllobsrt Hoes- Ferry Wsush. ‘ ‘Attention Jersey Breeders -irhe l Meeting of u» e. n. r. be h“ “Breeders Association will of months and until further notice. _-__- Till ‘llhth ennuel pelt show o! the PEI. Fox Breeders and Ex. hibitors’ Association passed into history yesterday afternoon when the final class, the novelties, re- ceived their placlngs. Allin s1, it was perhaps the most lUCCG-slhll show yet sponsored by the Assoc- iation and it had the largest num- ber of entries. over eleven hun- dred fine pelts passed before‘ the lhOW ii-iddo, Douglas Bell. Al- though the veteran ranchers, such as McLure and MacKinnon, Em. est Mill. D. 0. Stewart and L. W. Hancock were among the main winners, honors were pretty even- ly divided with the majority of the exhibitors receiving recogni- tion. Many of the classes had very heavy entries. one class alone, the male pup piatinums, having sev- enty pelts on the table. It was a big job, well done, for the committee to classify the large number of skins and great credit is due to Messrs. Beecher McDougail, R. S. Humphrey. Ed- ward Burleigh, Etrnest Mill, Sew- art Wright, L. W. Hancock, T. D Curruthers, secretary of the Cana- dian National Silver Fox Breed- ers’ Association, and Walter Shaw, the secretary of the Fox Breeders and Exhibitors’ Association. These are the men who produce a smooth running show and have everything TEEHnuFITrTFLg-eni-{EIET " Hockey Hunter River Rink tonight. Southport vs. Hunter River. "Loading hogs at Souris every Monday. For information end truoklngsservice contact Clifford Peters. "Reserve Feb. ‘I for pantry sale. St. Joseph's Sodality and Alum- nae. Rogers Hardware. "Loading hogs at_ Miscouche every Monday afternoon and ‘Tuesday morning until train time. For information contact Louis Mc- Millan. ‘ "Loading hogs mt Melville ev- ery Monday. For information and trucking service phone or contact Charles Nicholson, "loading hogs st Murray Har- bour Monday, January 26th. For information contact D. Ray Brooks. "Hockey Long Creek tonightu Long Creek vs. Bonshaw. Skate after. Canroads to rink. "Hockey New Glasgow Rink to- night. North Rustico vs. Hope River. Game starts 8.30, Skate after. "Loading hogs at St. Peters ev- ery Monday. Contact George Mc- fnnis. For infonmatiorfand truck- ing service contact Roy McLaren or Sterling Squires. "Collecting hogs at Moreli ev- ery Monday. For information and trucking service contact Ernest Miu-phy. "Loading hogs at ‘j ‘ ev- To Co-ordlnate Belief Work Cf Social Services A decision to co-ordinale the relief work of the various social service organizations in the City wee made et e. meeting of rep". sentetives of " those organizations held last night in the City Hell. IiieuL-Coi. P. B. Fielding, mp. uty-Minister of Health and Wei- fare.- presided. Among thoee participating in the discussion were, the Right Reverend P. McMahon, rector of St. Dunstazrs Basilica; Rev. (3.0. Webster, pastor of Zion Presby- terian Church; Rev. EdwardBald- Win. 0833-. rector of Holy Re- deemer Chumh; Miss Iphigenie Arsenault of the local Red Cross; Mr. J. A. Iipllerton, City Clerk and secretary local Board of Health; Mr.“ John Trainer, Do- partment of Veterans’ Affairs, and Major T. E. MaoNutt. secretary of the Free Dispensary. Upon the suggestion of Mayor B. Earle MacDonald. present in (Continued on Page b Col. '1) Says Cov’t Policies Led To Price Advances OTTAWA, Jan. 22 — (CP) .- John Bracken. Progressive Con- servative leader. charged tonight that Government 110110.85 had made it possible for speculators and piofiteers to increase food prices in Canada. Mr. Bracken said that ‘when Parliament met last month the Government announced that "new food contracts at higher prices had been signed with Britaim some two weeks after the ses- sion adjourned Agriculture Minis- ter Gardiner dlsclosed the new prices and it was shown they were about 25 per cent higher than in the previous contracts. "The Government had announ-I ced that prices would be more-ESP ed." said Mr. Bracken. “But it was many days before it told what the increased prices would be. Are any of ua surprised when the Govern- ment set sllch, a stage for the spe- culator and the profiteer that some people took advantage of it? Broadway Producer Killed In Explosion NEW YORK, Jan. 22- (AP)- Max Jelin, do, Broadway theatri- cal producer, was killed late today in an explosion which wrecked his apartment and damaged two oth- ers- on the 14th floor of a newly- constructed luxury residential building in mid-Manhattan. The blast crushed the walls and blew out windows of the two other apartments. The apartment building, one of the first luxury dwellings to bc erected since the end of the wer, is located on 57th street. I Police said the explosion was caused by an accumulation of gas in the Jelin apartment. Four jets were found open on the kitchen stove. .- St. Laurent Makes Plea For Unity Chief Justice lleaiis Provincial Committee Chief Justice Campbell OTTAWA, Jan. 22—(OP)— Six provincial chairmen were named today to head provincial commit- tees Jor the Canadian Appeal for Children which will launch a na- tion-wide campaign Feb. 9 to raise $10,000,000 to assist children in aver-ravaged countries o'f Eur- ope and Asia. Maj. Vincent Price, co-chairmazi of the appeal, said similar appeals will be conducted simultaneously in 26 countries. Chairmen named included: Prince Edward Island~Chlef Jus- ticeThane A. Campbell, Ci-ar- iottetown; Nova Soothe-Harvey R. Donne, Halifax; New Brunswick-- Judge J. Bacon Dixon, Hederio- ton. Actress Given Prison Term Los ANGELES, Jan. 22 — (AP) ._ Film actress Madge Meredith. her appeal for probation denied. was sentenced today to five years to life in Techachapi Women's In- stitution on her convlcton of kid- napping and assault. Plane Makes Mercy Flights By JACK AVESON . Jan. 22 — (OP) — External Affairs Laurent tonight made a strong plea for national unity through practical application e1 constitu- tionei laws. Earlier, he indicated to report- ere that he was prepared to ec- cept future leadership of the na- tionel Liberal Party _ if it is free- iy offered him. ‘The unity about which r am tllki-nl is not the kind shown on the statute books but the kind whfcir1nakes"""every"canadfan”glad he is a Canadian," he said in a speech lo the annual convention o the Manitoba- Liberal Progressive Party. "National unity is possible and desirable only if all our citizens. descended from the two prncipal races of our population. and our other citizens as well, enjoy a sit- uation of absolute equality, equal- ity not only in the text o1 our constitutional laws but practical equality in the daiy applicafon of these laws." ‘ His address was the first deliv- v ered in Western Canadn gince he was elected to Commons by Que- bec electors in February, i942. No direct reference to his possible candidature for Federal leadership was made in his speech tonight al. though political observers consid- ered it significant that he spent considerable time discussing the KTOWUHQI Liberalism under s5;- Wilfred Laurier. ‘ In this connection Mr. st. Laur- ent slid: "I am not the one‘ who i5 trying to wrap Laurlers mantle B5911! hlm- It is the whole Liberal Party, from one ocean to the other, that is proud to be enfolded in this mantle because we ell rising that as ‘long _as"we remain faith- ful to the memory and policirg o; this great Canadian. we will be wisely and usefully tending to the pest interest of the canadign “a- on." Then he added: "I think the Liberal Party made one or the first great steps (in the.directinn or national unity) when it chose Wil- frid Lsurier. a French-speaking Cathol c. as the leader of all the Liberals from the Atlantic to the Pacific." g yesterday of Alex McDonald. 28. Miss Meredith. appearing spright- ly and unruffied in a grey-tailor- displayed no emotion as sentence was pronounced. She was conwcted of engineer- ing the kidnapping and beating of Nick Glanaclis. her adviser, and who claimed he was instrumental in getting her started on a film career. A smilar term in San Quentin was given Albert Tucker. her friend who allegedly carried Price Ceilings 0n Meat llot Yet liesdy Prices Board official said that it will be another 10 days at least before the new price ceilings on meat products are finally work- ery Monday. For information and =truoking service phone 0'1 or '10-‘ B2. James McLeod. "Loading hogs mt Cardiloh w- ery Monday. For information end trucking service contact ldnwood MnNeiiL. , trump; hogs et Bt. Teresa every Monday afternoon until 0.00 PM. For information and truck- ing service oonteot Ernest Brad- ley. "Don't ndas the big game st Hunter Blvd!‘ Rink comm. south- port Reanblere vs. Hunter ‘River Royals. Gems starts I #0100!- M“ after. '* . - -_ “mivutook pan-mg; Board will be ioedihgfiloll t BWM Station Tueedly focenoon. JIflil-~ ery nth until‘, VI! M 9W4?“ train, Snow’ ‘ weekiyJor winter months and until further notice. List hogs with John B. norms-re. em!- i "Livestock Marketing Boon! will be ieedlfll hole at York Ste- tion Tueeby forenom. Jenner! 11th until arrival of ensue-n train. lease service vastly f6! "l"? Irvin!’ By JOHN PATBRSDN LA sARRELQue, Jan. 22 -(CP) _'.l‘he worst power shortage in 28 years has struck the aemm region and life in half a dozen towns o! Northwestern Quebec has reverted afmost to pioneer dayl- ‘rhe shortage is ‘attributed to s long. dry autumn. Fills-IA III" Power Company. which woolle- eieotrieity to seeldentrof towns and rural sreee s10"! "ti! I_'_°"°" of the Canadian National B. , transcontinental line. new is re- lionlng power to e. maximum 9! U, minutes each two hours tbs-billb- out the 30-hour dey- - ‘rhrtewn of Norlnetei and the mine of the some name new been gen ti power with diesel unite since 11-November when till supply frcm the power company was discontinued. - ng the lest two enonths re- ttri ¢ne have been imposed gre- dually. Itrst ell outdoor end commas- clot-display lighting sses banned. loon restrictions were extended to I, cluigmgstfifspfri. WOC" ‘m. em . , ' 1 ' i McDonald. n» that! tym- Northee-n Quebec Hit By Power Shortage and today the entire domestic, commercial and industrial supply is sharply curtailed. The power company spokesmen said towns effected, in addition to Le Serra and Nor-metal, are Amos. Taschcroau. Macamlc and Dupuie. He said Lake Mecamlo. the source of power supply for the company- is almot dry nndlthe only water comes from stream still feeding into the lake. ' " [93 at, -|i ril FLO more and more electricity users. CflNA A plane from Paul's Flying Ber- vioe, Charlottetown, made two nwroy flights yesterday, bringing patients from South Rustlco to the Charlottetown Hospital for treatment. A ski-equipped Fleet Canuok was flown, and s field near the Rustico convent was used as an emergency airstrip. On the first trip, with Pilot Ralph Yeo at the controls, a ornail boy, Eugene Gallant. was taken to the City. The llttio fellow. six or seven years old, was suffering from an acute attack of appendicitis. He was operated on shortly after he reached the hospital in mid-after- noon and later in the night his condition was reported to be good. ‘ilhe second patient was a man. Dolph Gallant, suffering frcm In- juries to his right foot. It was not learned how the accident occurred. 0n the second flight Paul Shar- e. proprietor of the Flying o0 flew the plane. A third fligiht was made to the same place to take in the father of the boy. Mr. Sharpe said yesterday's thaw made landing on the snow-covered field eomewi-lst tricky, but they had no trouble. With roads from Hunter River to itustlco blocked to oars, bite trip from Rustico to Charlottetown with the boy would have been difficult and dangerous. Ae it Wis the flight took only inn mlnuteei and en am- bulance was waiting for ids-n at the Charlottetown Airport. EXPORTS MOTOBCYCYBS , Greet Britain exported more 8,000 motorcycles to the United Btetes durin the f'.rst eight months of l“ . $0M-.. l) A UR Will Balance Russian Bloc ' In The East Bevin Speaks-As Foreign Affairs llebate Begins In British Commons. By JOHN DAUPBJNBE IDNDON. Jan. B3 -- (c?) _ Foreiifl Secretary Bevin today bluntly accused Russia of a "ruth- less" drive to communise all the continent and announced g, Brit- ish plan to draw "the'freo nations of Western Europe" into a. coun- tering defensive alliance, To pemiit the, domination oi Europe by any one power "will in- evitably lead to another world war.” he said in the toughest speech of his more than two years at the Foreign Office. dehvered to an in- tentiy-llstening House of Com. mons. He also announced that British diplomats in Belgium, The Neth- erlands and Luxembourg had been instructed Wednesday to propose talks with those governments aim- ed at closer relations, “I hope treaties will be signed with the Benelux countries, (Bel- gium. Holland and Luxzmbourg) making with our treaty with France an important nucleus in Western Europe." Bevin told the solegfin House members. Might Include liaiy Later the idea might bc extend- , ed to include "the new Italy" and» other "h‘storic European count. ries." As for Franco, Britain was Mt PFOPBSUIS a political union such as winsiflmQlulrchili offered» in the dark days of 194s but plan- med to "work for ever closer un. ity." The Anglo-French pact signed‘ (Continued On Page 5 Co], y)“ Seek llew Clues To l.auzon’s lifhereabiiuts * WINDSOR. Ont, Jan. 22 -(cp) —Possibie clues in the search for| three long-term‘ prisoners who el- ‘ coped from Kingston Penitentiary 1W2- 18 were sought by detectives today foilowind the arrest here and James Jasnieaon. (alias Lab. ard) 36. both of Toronto. who were i taken in custody for questioning. Alex McDonald is a younger brother of-Donald (Mickey) Mc- Donald, who escaped from King- ston with Ulysse Lauzon o1 Wind- sor and Nick Minlile of Ottawa. llallfaxvidurder Case Adlourned HALIFAX. Jan. 22 —- (OP) — No evidence was token in the pre- iminary hearing of 1.- murder charge against Mrs. Kathleen s“. cary which resumed here today and the case was once more adjourn- ed. _ Hearing of the charge, in which the 34-year-old widowed mother is accused of shooting Philip Shiers of Halifax at her nearby Enfield home Dec, 2'1. will resume Jan. 20. The hearing wee adiourned lest Thursday and defence counsel Leonard W. Frller said "a sensa- tional development" had arisen. The lawyer claimed, "I know who killed shiers — it was not Mrs. Would Consider Cffer RT. HON. L. St. LAURENT WINNIPEG. Jen. ZP-(CH- Exlernal Affairs Minister Louie St, Laurent told interviewers here today he would give the matter serious consideration if asked to take over leadership of the Federal Liberal Party on the retirement of Prime Minister Mackenzie King. The Minister. mentioned as the most likely successor ti! Mr. King, said of hle feelings about nomination es cIndldI-W for the Party leadership: “If it was something which would further rather than re- tard Canadian unity l don't sec how I could refuse. On the other hand, if there was an)’ indication of a split in t!!! party on religious or racial lines I would not like to be l. party to such s. split." Ycar’s Sentence For. Posing As ILS. Citizen BANGOR, Me.. Jan. 22 -\AP)— Albert Harding, 60, of Greenwich, P.E.I., was sentenced by Judge John Clifford when he pleaded guilty today to "falsely repffisfifltl-YIS 1111315911 as a. United states citizen." Harding, a one-time resident of Maiden, Mass, last entered the United States at Vaneeboro. Mo, i" 194s and was apprehended .111 KW"- over last month vohile working as e Woodsman, enumeration offlclflls said. May Import ll. S. Cars 0n Cuota Basis OTTAWA. Jan. 22 —<CP)—1r.n- portatloul oi Auierlcon-madc auto- milbiles, now banned under Canada's dollar-saving program, may be pol‘- mitted under a. quota basis within two weeks. a. source close to the import administration said tonight. The ban crane in last Npvimbef- The spokesman said tonight no date had been set as yet for the quota system. Funeral Ship is Stlll Smoulderlng BOSTON, ‘Jan. ‘J2-(AP)-Coast Guard headquarters said tonight the cutters Bibb and Acushnet are battling 05-to-70 - mile - an - hour winds in their attempt to remain alongside the still-smouldering United States Army transport Jos- eph V. Connolly '170 miles east of Boston- Tho Connolly was s/wept by fire w-hile transporting 5,000 coffins overseas to bring home war deao. Her crew of 40 and one passenger Saccary but a third party acting to protect here." (By Clyde Blackburn) WASHINGTON, Jan. 26—(CP)— A responsible official with aoooss to the United Stefoo Covern~ ment’s most secret conferences. talking off the record the other night, said the War Department had information that, would. "ecere the deyiishts" out of con- gressmen. ‘ Pfobdbly he was ekeggereting s little and perhaps he wee not reading the newepepm. lietsnlns to the radio or attending oongres-l siczsal hearings. ongrees has been hearing a greet deei from the Defence pe- pertment and from experts of e1. kinda that, if they were not herd- ened to such things, should 400i’! them into urgent, non-political action. There is little likelihood that in this presidents! election year Con- were saved. U. S. Congress Deaf To Alarming Reports anything approaching what the occasion demands. no matter what they hear from the Pentagon Building. If both parties in Congress agreed to do whet the overwhelm- ing evidence. indicates they should do this year, they would have to restrict election cs ‘gning to minor ‘omestio ues or decide Congress has been told by the President, State Secretary Mar» eheJi and others who ere supposed to know about such things, that unless the country spends up- wsrds of $i'1,000,000,Q00 on Europ- een aid in the next four years, it might es well be pfepered to spend far more and also sacrifice Ameri- can lives in e third world war. Thetfs pretty trim stuff com- ing from such high authority but [rem will be stampeded into doing I _________L_._.___.__.._ (Contlnuedloiu Page 5 Col. I» Action kin, ' Line With Soviet Policy By H. L. JONES OTTAWA. Jan. 2Z—(CP)-Oenn ada has denied Russian mill/tar! representatives in this country the privilege of visiting Canadian mil- itary establishments bec solitu- ifar pa-lviiegeshave not been u:- corded the Dominioni military attache in Moscow, it was en- nounced tonight. _ This change of policy was dis- closed in a Joint Defence Deport- ment-External Affairs statement announcing a proposed visit by foreign military attaches to thi big artillery camp at shilo, Man, next week which said that no Russian representative would b0 included in the ll-man inspection frvilp. The group includes nine unli- tary men representing foreign govemments but docs not involve any of the countries under the Soviet sphere of influence. The statement said that "in accordance with the principal o! reciprocal treatment. it now hel been decided that the Soviet et- tache will not be invited to visit military establishments in Can- ada. unless similar privileges era extended to the Clanadian mili- tary attache in Moscow. "when the Soviet authorities Kraut facilities to the Canadian military attache in Moscow sim- ilar to those hitherto granted to the Soviet representative ln Can- (Continued on Page 5 Col, d) Exiled Belgian King Sails For Cuba LISBON. Jan, 22 _ (op) .4 Leopold III, exiledjflng of Hg]; gium, 'saiied.for cubs today with his wife and sons. Royal sources in Brussels saizi 185i’. ‘Week the family was going on a holiday in the western hemisa phsre and might visit the United States. Leopold's brother, Princq Charles. is Regent cf Belgium. The K1118 was obviously moved and hla wife, Princes Rethy, shed tears as a Belgian crowd seem: them off cried "vive nctre roi." (no Avcaam: . Euaorssn , HRS Nofllint. f0 ‘m: But qcoo wit». 9 TORONTO, Jen. 22 - (up) -. Minimum and maximum tempers- tures: Vancouver as. d4; Edmonton 35, 38; Regina 10B. CB; Winmpo] 29B, 2i; Tloronto 15, 22; Ottawa B, 22; Montreal 14, as; Quebec 1'1. M: Saint John 28. 38; Moncton U. 8: Halifax 38. 40; Charlottetown U; 3d; Sydney I. M: Yenncuth fi C0. B-below sew. HALIFAX, Jen. ~22 -(CP)-04< ficiel inland forecasts issued to- night by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax and vei- id until midnight Friday. Synopsis: Skies were Ihneraily cloudy owl Nova. Sootia and Prince lidwsrd Is-I iaznd Thursday evenixu with teens pereturos Just above freezing‘ point. In Southern New Brunlwio emu snow is failing but in Northeast New Brunswick skies ere oleeg and iarnperatures near m. Very cold air covers Manitoba and Ontario Where tomperehirea are well below aero. This is likely to spread lnll the outcome by tn toss of s coia.. the Mlrltkme Friday resulting is! felling temperatures. Snowflueriee can be expected as flee cold ell erilvep. - -- i f 1 . Prince Ed d Island: Closfi: becoming overcast with snosvfim-r- lse Flrldewmoming. Clearing and much colder Friday evening. lumb- west winds 1b, shifting hi0 morning to northwest 25. Low earl Htday mor and iugih in th afternoon at rlottetown 15 e 20 nun tide this ramming at eat and tonight It 7.18. Sun sets this afternoon at d end rises tomorrow morning Pulls-noon January ma, s11 us Sisnrmerside tide eighteen mils utes inter than Charlottetown.