Maxims of s M Doubt lathe n,o.ttheend.atwlsdnun. 0 Man 14 DAGB belhnlntr a idiriiiiraiion Scope llnsetiled; Cabinet May Settle Problem Today OTTAWA. (OP)-B0090 of action iar the umpire in the union-ra.ll- any contract dispute remains uri. iieiilod as the cabinet and the rail unions prepare to deal with the Lgslis at meetings today. while both sides have reached a an-lire-averting agreement to ac- cept rulings of a government-ap- pointed arbitrator. informants said TllP5dHy that as yet neither has rrpressed its views to the govern- ment on terms of reference for the arbitrator proposed by the cabinet inst Wednesday. The cabinet hopes to get general azrccment on these terms-defin. ing the powers of the arbitrator-. lwrrc writing them into an order. ruin a ""11 Hill. union chief. has stated the unions want srbll:-ation over the whole fieldofthe original dispute, without narrowing it to the difference between the parties when negotiations collapsed as was done with 1950 post-strike Iafbllgg. ilm The rlilw-vs are essentially of the same view. according to in. formants here. Gunman Fails In Bank Holdup ,,.rovincii and announcing the MONTREAL. (CPI---A masked .-' eir-giiarded name of the ap- K"""""l "90 Tuesday following porree selected last week. an unsuccessful attempt to hniii But whether this can be done up A Notre Dame street west today is problematical. The cabinet rnulri act promptly if its tentative rrrms were accepted, but there is iii certainty that they will not need I'M”l.Sl0ll. rviox COMMITTEE Mum; branch of the Bank of Montreal. Police said the bandit, believed '0 be A youth. entered the bank late this afternoon and shouted "holdup". He fired a shot into the floor when the bank's 16 employ”; 5,1,1 . bout a dozen custom fild tr .3 5 V era aie g h E the mmm'e" me” h"9- to pay attention to him. l.P 105-man general conference wiim A Cu,m,,,,,. mm, A duh cnnzm ttee of the 14 unions in Lhg nzspiiie will go into session at unntreal to discuss the terms of IPIPITIICC and other questions re. 1n'::.s: to tha dispute that threat. cried a strike until the unions' not-"'-atinr; group agreed Aug. in arbitration under pressure of ii YT!”-"iii? tmsrsencv session of Pnvliainclit The arbitrator's terms of refer- PW” 35 PmP059d by the govern. mrhi have not been disclosed, bu; government informants say they no basically in line with the ex- iirwssrci views of the unions and mm. Hurricane In The Bahamas; Florida Alerted p.iilAMT. Fla. (AP) - Hurricane il'1T;id1D"3i:0fEl Past San Salvador TM: fl-ll 7”: L living that Baha. :.-..-.. 8- 'm-"ms .;:i.. i.';:::"”:” W . a Tinririn mainland. award the wum Cyril .- at at him he turned and ran. Labor Paper Takes Slap At Aneurin Bevan LONDON (AP)-The Dally Mir. '0? Tualdly called Aneurin Bevan "the irresponsible master of the indefensible statement" and urged him to keep quiet when he has "nothing useful to say." The Mirror. a big - circulation tabloid which supports the Labor D&rty's moderate element. recalled left-winger Bevan's recent denial of statements attributed to him in the Japanese press and added: "Why doesn't he try a little self- denial? "Why for example did he open his mouth in Japan to say this: 'We believe We in Britain have much to be ashamed of in our imperial past. You also have much to be ashamed of in your imperai past.'? min” Gentry. Miami weather "Why didn't he remind the Japs ;hl”;1 :l”5l's";Td '0:0CIt!:ei;. scgid the gist India. Pakistan, Ceylon and ' ' - ,. .'.. ,l,!anca N urlqa have sl yeved. self-gov-. ””'"' "I 3”" SHIV! or. e Iirsnenrsince - if? xcni-imhun made his first landing n the new world. at 7 p, in EDT Highest winds. over a small area. near the storm ceniez. were 115 ii” "5 Mr hour. Hf: ” Pi m- the his tropical blow W-”.'hrcn red about 190 miles east. -Past of the British colonial rapiial of Nassau 1-he norm.” "lp'a'"i'Vl!-Iles are expected to reach W-rt. assau area early this mor- Nm S-1lt' ri ' - mm” 1i:h:ll:rnl:n'lnI'llbllQd only "NTRICANE SIGNS or Hurricane warnings flow through '::mRI1h8l;!lIl and residents were ” I 5i Wlllblo precautions ,'f,::'l" dilnlerous winds and high T.- vn:'ll0l Fltorida coast was placed on Hrglutir hand the weather bureau 1”; t at as the hurricane thun- MH. nn toward the mainland it A. nit”; innsize and windpmver. HTIHI Mmw. was about 350 miles lite storm was moving wagi- ”'irr;iri;:ertNat 12 miles an hour. Ca” .v orton. chief storm fora. - 9' here. said "I don't see how it can miss south Florida." Coming Events "Elwin; and cleaning timothy am-V' M9GUllln h Boyle. ."ReE"1I1' Dance Crapaud Rink. lirdncsday night, "Dulce in Mlllvsls l””""dnv- sent. a. "Dance in st. Andrew's lift. Stewart. every Thursday. "”"""- KoIy.i-niii Georgetown W"d””dM'- September ath. "M'- Ryan chicken sup per hsr W" postponed until Oct. 11th. ,,:.'J”'i:'lns timothy seed daily. 'x?” hlilltnt market price. E. : "DOUIIII. Vernon. ' ."B”Yl"il and Cleaning Timothy (,';'l ”''”.V- Paving top price. Elmer ' momlld. Crapnud. "Dnnca at Mt Ryan Hall at Jnhnat - ' BuIke.:n6mhl:vt1:.r every Friday. ."R'5'?V9 Monday. oatoaar lith ;:1C;;;i5 United Church Annual 53'"!!! Turkey supper. "Dance. at. Moxonna Bros. new ,”,i';1i”v "1 Road. Cardigan. Beptember Sch ool Hall, "Dance, Wat Royalty Hall g'fg1'::g:y.c Rollie asacxoaain Dmmn swnriitaon so:-vies I0-1.00 "Reserve ' to no . Thursday. September ' Obrnrv United Church Pic- ... CT 1'-"'lCh9l. hot dogs. games. n'”O'l:IfA1l':h'OlcCl.. and swing. at six mm! km-ye c Grounds. If rainy. "Provincial Plowing amen and 33- Dundee. sapeeraaor um and and "No full days of competition ,pn”n'i&;rntaIIa:err:t. Prise list on cmunn K I Acorn. losrstary. )--. "Why must he say the wrong things in the wrong place at the wrong time? "He insists on remaining the tragedy of the Labor party. The flamrooyant word Juggler whose words drop like bricks. The man whose promise always outruns his achievement. "It is ludicrous that he should aspire to be lsbor's leader." INDIANS RETURN MONTREAL (CF)-A group of Mohawk Indians from the nearby Caughnawaga reservation will re- tcrn home Tuesday following their annual pilgrimage to Auriesviile. N. Y.. during the weekI- end. Aurieaville is the original home of the Csugmnswaga Mohawk; who migrated to Canada after their con- Military Groups Replace Reserve Force Brigades 3? OTTAWA (OP) - Ibrmatlon of 26 militia groups to replace reserve force brigades is sche- duled for completion Dec. 81, army headquarters announced Tuesday. The reorgsnisatlon of the Canadian army reserve force. now called Canadian Army Militia, is the result of ,recom- mendations made after a sur- vey earlier this year. Three of the new militia group headquarters will be in Toronto and two in Montreal. Centres in the cast will be at St. John's. Nfld.: Charlotte- town; Sydney, N.5.; Halifax; Moncton, N. B.; saint John, N. 8.; Quebec: Levis, Que.; Sherbroolte. Que. Ship Fire Report Possible Error VIGO, Spain (APV .. Muiiime monitors throughout Europe heard a report Tuesday night that a large unidentified freighter was ablaze off the northwest coast of Spain. But vessels which rushed to the area could find neither the stricken ship nor the one which re- ported the fire. The first report of the blaze came from the British fishing ves- sel Suzy, which reported the big ship was burning some 15 miles north of Cape Villsno. The Suzy said she sighted an explosion followed by fire aboard the vessel at 8:05 GMT (4:05 p.m. EDT). but that because of heavy seas was unable to approach the burning ship. A short time later the Spanish coastal radio station here received a message from the 5,606-ion Is- raeli freighter Henriefts Szold say- ing she had proceeded to the posi- tion given by the Suzy and could find neither the blazing ship nor the fishing vessel. The Israeli ship said she sighted only three Spanish boats engaged in normal fishing operations. Other rescue vessels reported no sightings as yet. ccrivimroir Textile Plants OTAWA (C?) David Lewis. CC!" national chairman, said Tues- day the federal government should take action to prevent the closing of textile plants. In a statement commenting par- licularly on it shutdown at Mill- town. N13. he suggested: I. Reviewing textile requirements of government departments - rs- peclally defence-and giving prior- ity on any available orders to plants threatened with closure. 2. Removal of the 10-per-cent sales tax from clothing. Mr. Lewis also called for federal help in the establishment of new industries in communities where textile plants have closed and ROME (AP) -- Fast-multiplying mankind was told Tuesday to look to solar energy rather than atomic power as a substitute for his stead- ily dwindling natural resources. But experts on both those power sources warned the United Nations conference on population that no era of cheap and widespread solar or nuclear energy "is Just around the corner." Scientists from 70 countries looked into the problem as one solu- tion to the rapidly expanding needs of a world population. increasing at I rate of 100.000 people every 24 hours-361500.000 a year. At that rate the world's present 2,500,000,000 population will double in less than a century. Walter lsarli, of Massachusetts Institute of Technology. and Vin- cent Whitney, of Brown Univer- sity, reported to-the confarnce that "the capital cost of atomic power plants will probably exceed that of comparable steam stations based on either coal or on." They said the principal fission- able materials. uranium and thor- ium. sppear to be in adequate dis- tribution and quantity "to consti- fuie rt sizable reserve. despite their IEPEI: IMAGINAIY IEDI KARS, Turkey (AP) - NATO”! "keystone" manoeuvres testing the defences of southern Europe wound up Tuesday with Turkey's 8rd army turning back a simulated Russian invasion across its eastern border. six thousand Turkish rc- aervists took part in the man- oeuvres in which United States. British. Canadian. Italian a nd Greek forces Joined. HALIFAX, (OP)-The Sheet nar- bor bridge spanning the last river win be replaced next year, high- way officials Ina ounced Tuesday. one of the longest spans in the province, It will cost IPVOIlI'l&M- Suggest Solar Energy Best Future Source of Power. But Sound Warning rather low concentration," but they warned the population experts. ”It is not likely that by 1975 atomic power will have made a major contribution towards sup- porting expanding populations." Highway Officials Plan Conference HALIFAX (CPI-Highway offi- cials of the four Atlantic provinces will meet at Ingonish, N. 8., next Tuesday and Wednesday for the first annual meeting of the East- arn Canadian Association of High- way Officials. J. L. Wickwire. chief engineer of the Nova Sectia department of highways, will preside. The asso- ciation. formed last fall. will dis- cuss problems common to the four provinces. Founded 1372, onsawrrsirown, csnsns, wsznmssnsv, sriemsmszn, is. 1954 ti Covers ' Wrince Edward island kc, The Dow PRICE do. SEATO Treaty Signing Nears Despite Differences Dewey Will Not Seek Re-election Governor Dewey NEW YORK (AP) - Governor Thomas E. Dewey said Tuesday night that under no circumstances would he be a candidate for re- election this fall. The Republican governor said in a prepared 15-minute television speech: - "After the most thorough and even painful consideration I have concluded that the time has come for me to return to private life.” He did not indicate whom he would support to succeed him in the post of governor, which he has held for 12 years. Fire Desire 5 Huge Goodyear tore PQUGHKEEPSIO ,. . Y. (AP)- A esoo,ooo firs Tu av destroyed a huge store of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company and dam- aged adjscent property. seven Del”- sons. including four firemen and a paws? company repairman, re- ceived minor injuries. News Briefs From UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. (AP) -The Soviet Union is expected in make a strong diplomatic counter- attack in the Security Council to meet the. United Stntcs' call for UN action in the shooting down of an American bomber by Rus- sian planes. is "the (AP)--A Dian erect. NEW YORK. hung considered to largest structure in the unrltl" on version to the Roman Catholic there is no likelihood of their asrly we um 01 Grand Cpmml up renvnni reopmmi minal, Robert R. Young, chair- man of the New York Central Railroad, said Tuesday. This would mean rszlng of the present terminal building. BONN (Reuters)-Konrad Ade- naucr. the West German chancel- lnr, Tuesday proposed pnstponina the British-sponsored nine-power nation conference on European Defence to Sept. 17 or 18. an auth- oritative source sald Tuesday night. LIVERPOOL. England (Reuters) -Roman Catholic Archbishop Ger- ald Eerry of Halifax arrived here Tuesday to spend a few days in England before setting off for Lourdes and Rome. where he hopes to see. the Pope. OTTAWA. (CF) - The cabinet meets today and is expected to set Oct 25 as the date for by-elections to fill six vacancies in the House of Commons. SAINT .101-IN. N. R.. (CP)- A man believed to have been long- shoreman Joseph Coyle. 52. of Saint John lost his life Tuesday afternoon when he fall into the harbor from the big, new Puglsey terminals. tries taking part in the ation talks here are reported The eighth country Zafrullah Khan. Nine of the 10 articles in the United States - sponsored treaty were approved Tuesday by the for- eign ministers and ministers of state attending the closed talks which opened Monday. Today the delegates will hold an- other closed session in the mor- ning before the conference is thrown open to the press for the formal signing. In addition to Pakistan. the coun- tries taking part are the United States, Britain, France, Australia, New Zealand. Thailand and the Philippines. SET UP ADMINISTRATION Under the treaty. a military planning administration will be set up to decide how any aggression in the treaty area should be met. Although Manila will serve as a home for Southeast Asia Treaty Organization documents, the mil- iiary planners are not expected to have a permanent headquarters. Instead, they probably will hold periodic meetings in member coun- tries. The vital article four of the pact has been divided into three parts. The first provides that in the ev- ent of attack anywhere in the treaty area the member countries would take action in accordance with their own constitutional pro- ccsses. The Philippines had pressed for a clause which would have made an attack on one of the eight coun- tries an attack on all. The second part of article four provides for consultation on sub- version from outside-the treaty area. The final part enables member countries to name other areas to come into the scope of the treaty if the areas named approve. In the military planning. mem- ber countries would be free to take part. or abstain as they saw fit. Home And Abroad SHANNON AIRPORT. Ireland (AP) - A KIM spokesman said Tuesday night it quantity of dia- monds and "much other valuable cargo" were still aboard the air- llne's Super-Constellation whim crashed into the River Shannon Sunday, causing 28 deaths. BONN. Germany, (Reutersi -- West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer Tuesday asked that the nine-power conference on Europ- ean defence proposed by Britain for Sept. 14 should be put off for three or four days. TEHRAN (AP)-A new wave of arrests swept through the Iranian army. air force and federal police 'niesday. The total number under arrest in the tvio-week drive to break up a Communist spy ring passed the 400 mark. BAIGON (Reut.ers)- Gen. Paul Ely, French commissioner-general and commander-in-chief in Indo- China said Tuesday France has decided to give the state of Viet Nam full independence before the end of this year. MANILA ilieuierai-Sir Moham- med Zafrullah Khan, Pakistan for- clgn minister, said here 'niesday night that Pakistan would help her neighbor India if India was threat- ened by any kind of danger, includ- ing a Communist attack. VIENNA (Rsulors) - Australian Chancellor Julius Rash, wi'l pay an official vL-lit to Canada in Dec- ember as the guest of the cans- dian government. it was officially announced here Tuesday. (By Graham Jenkins) MANILA; (Reuters)-All but one of the eight coun- Southeast Asia Treaty Organiz- ready to sign the pact today which would bring a new defence system into being. is Pakistan. whether to sign the security pact for Southeast Asia and the southwest Pacific is not expected until the treaty has been referred back to Foreign Minister Sir Its decision on Mohammed :..:m............. The treaty also provides for econ- omic aid on s bllaierlai basis, sim- ilarly involving no commitments. The words "Communist aggres- sion" were deleted from the final draft of the treaty. but the United States is expected to make a sep- arate statement indicating that when the U. S. says "aggression" what is meant is "Communist ag- gression." Population Figures Given OTTANVA. (CP)--Canada's pop- ulation gaincd 41,000 persons dur- ing Junc to reach 15,236,000 on July 1, the bureau of statistics estimated Tuesday. The bureau also said the coun- try's population is gaining at a faster rate than a year ago. The increase during the first six months of 1954 was 201,000, 1'1- per-ccnt above the gain in the first half of last. year. The July 1 figure of l5,236,000 compares with 15,035,000 at Jan. 1, 14,821,000 at July 1, I953; and 14,649,000 at Jan. T. 195.1. There was no estimate of pro- vinclal populations as of July 1. The bureau said the population increased at. the rate. of 2.8 per cent in the year ended Jilly 1. compared with a rate of 2.4 per cent in the preceding year Miiiidim. B. Cuts Expenses MILLTOWN, N. 8.. (CF) Far- ed with the closure of the St. Croix mill of Textile Sales, Ltd, its only industry, this Charlotte county town acted Tuesday even- ing to pare civic expenses. Mayor Ralph Eagan said the closure an- nouncement. had practically dried up tax payments by worried citi- zens. The mill has employed about 500. A council meeting cut salaries of the town clerk, town marshal. sir:-of commissioner and fire truck drivers and planned to fire. one of the two policemen. It. will an- ply for water rates reduction. rc- rlucc street. lighting and lay off nth:-r employees. Department ha-ads wr-rs asked to suggest fur- ther cuts. New Bfitish let Very Fast Plane LONDON. (AP)--Britain's new jet interceptor fighter plane, lhc P-i, slipped through the smlnd barrier hv "misiakc" recently. Duncan Sandys, minister of sup- ply. said. ”There was such sence of buffering that the pilot. who was not intended to fly supersonlcally. found he had got well beyond the barrier without noticing it." Sandy: told the So- ciety of British Aircraft Con- structors Monday. The P-l. hullt hy Electric Company. is British jet to smash the sound barrier in level flight. The firm announced Aug. 17 the P-l had flown several limes in level flight at speeds exceeding that of sound. The speed of sound is about 1.087 feet a second in dry air at 32 degrees Fahrenheit. complete ah- ihr English the first Other details of the P-l hath not been officially disclosed, but some reports place its maximum speed at 1.000 miles an hour. OTTAWA iCPi-The government next week will reduce its 1954 wheat crop estimate possibly by 100,000,000 bushels or more in the wake of heavy prairie rust and continuing bad harvesting weather Federal authorities said Tues it will be the most drastic out n many years. with deteriorating harvest conditions forcing a slash of the original 513,000,000-bushel crop estimate. The original estimate was hand on conditions as of Aug. l and the new one. to be made 54-pt. T5. will be based on conditions as of Sept. 1. Authorities tentatively estimated the wheat rust damage at 85.000,- ooo bushels and said many more millions likely will he lost through ly . frost in the next two months. Even with a big cut in produc- tion. Canada will have formidable supplies thiayear, having carried over 567,000,000 bushels of unsold wheat from the last crop year which ended July 31. It was the biggest end-of-year stockpile in ii years and lust 'l.fXi0.000 bushels be- low the record wartime carryover of 594000.000 in 1043. Nevertheless, federal auihoriiirs feel that the anticipated pmrlucim.-i drop. combined with s strengthen- lnl of overseas markets. will help stabilise Canadian Wheat prices and possibly reduce the delay in closing up the 1001-54 wheat pool. They said that Britain. Canada's top wheat. customer. already is in- "MIMI orders for Canadian wheat. A London dispatch Monday quoted finaaeial experts as saying iExpeci Cut -In Wheat Crop Britain almost certainly will buy more wheat from Canada in the current crop year. Reports from Britain are that she has run through her grain re- serves and also is experiencing bad harvesting weather. Britain. in the last crop year. purchased some 02,000,000 bushels of Cans- dian wheat and flour. just about two-thirds of the. l22.0m.000 bushels .-he purchased in 1051-33 crop year INTERIM PAYMENT COMING Canada's total exports in all countries were reduced last year to 256,100,000 bushels of wheat and flour from the near-record high of 385000.000 in 1002-03. The drop in salsa. combined with the heavy carryover, has stalled closing up of the 1053-M wheat pool. Farmers so far have received Estimate i It has been usual way through the crop year. 54 Trade Minister Howe has 1053-54 pool is closed and any re maining p r o f l i a distributed it prairie farmers. On the basis of current last year. Sl.40 a bushel, basis No l Nnrthrrn al the Lskehesd. for their wheat, to add an in- ierim payment of 20 cents mid- hul there was no such payment in 1953- incli- cated the interim payment may be made before next Christmas it may he Mtrly next year hefc-re the PIIL mates. it would appear that the 1054 harvest may drop to less than 400,000,000 bushsls. lower than the 423.000.m0-bushel average for the last 10 years and well below the ili4.0m.000-bushel bumper harvest Nationalists Claim By SPENCER MOOSA TAIPEH. Formosa iAPi - The Nationalists struck by air and sea Tuesday for the second straight day at a menacing Red buildup near their island fortress of Que- may. The defence ministry announced the planes damaged more than 100 illllllary Junks. a gunboat and five motorized vessels. This is the sort of first which would be used in any invasion of Quemoy. 120 miles across Formosa strait from For- mosa. The ministry also claimed that when planes and warships has done their work, anti-aircmft fire ceased on Red-held Amoy, seven miles from Quemoy. Fires raged in two fortresses at Amoy and on nearby Tatung island. Peiping radio in broadcast for home ccruumption sairl A2 Na- tionalists planes and five Vi'r"il'5hll'l5 took part in the attack. It claimed one plane was shot down and 19 damaged. It said ill persons were killed and two injured by the raid- ers, who dropped 62 bombs. REDS IlETl'RN FIRE The broadcast. heard in Tokyo, said the warships and artillery on Pearson Urges West German Entry Into NATO TORONTO. iCP)-External Al'- falrs Minister Pearson said Tues- riav the only solution to the prob- lem of German reagnameiit is .n- cliision of West Germany in the North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- Linn. However. he added, such a solu- tion would lint. commit the other 14 NATO partners to a tiniflcntnnn of Germany by force or restoration by force of lost German territories. Mr. Pearson was speaking at the International and Health day luncn- eon at the Canadian National Ex- hibiiion. Mr. Pearson stressed that I. sold. lion in the German problem must be found soon "if the Atlantic al. liance and with it our best hope for preventing aggression is to ho Wilt. strnnz: or. possibly, even, to bc mainiainrri at all.” Meyer Receives Prison Discharge CAMP FRIEDLAND, Germany (CTN---Former German Maj-Gen Kllrl Mfyer obtained his official Prlsoncr-of-u'ar clischargc paper: here Tiicsday within a few holim of his rclease on parole from the government said. I'1('Ciiil.!C he us.-: -.hc only remaining uar GI-rman criminal remaining in custody (fill- sidc llIS' nwn cniiniiy. (':imp uiiicmls Snlfl that hcciriru dlSFllalKf' papers the. fr-imcr tank i37l.40i and a still of clothes They said Meyer is also cntiilerl in 4,000 marks 1si,i42I (own. WIFE. l'NCI.Ii FRITZ THERE Waiting fnr Mc)'Pr' whrn walked out of Wart Canadian from Mnnrinn. who would as llnclo Fritz Meyer's wife and about N Ii 10 uvcll man had horn illrgallv imprison:-ri it was hr who ward fur legal mma,-. insirimwntnl In sailing May-r (rang, the Mont-ion man said Friends sairi Mayer plans in talu- a vacation with his wife and five children. who now live in Nieder- kruechien, North Rhineweslphalia. and then go to work. Former com- rades said he probably v n iid iakc commander was given .100 mark: for the i0 years he spent as a prisoner but must apply for this from his home ho prison was ;. identify him-soil only With him were gave Mr-ycr a warm welcome and fold reporters hc heir!-ved the Gor- More Than 100 Red Naval Craft Sunk 0r Damaged Qucmoy openPd upon Amos and Communist shore guns returned the fire The defence minzstry communi- qua reported the Nationalists spoi- ted the concentration of surface craft at wuyu island, near Amoy, and at the coastal base of Chih- moi, uhich lies behind Amoy. The air force said Natonaiist planes also made leaflet raids over ihP mainland in the last days of August Leaflets dropped in flood areas said Russia sent incom- peicnt technicians to help the Com- munists with flood control. They asserted Russia was being paid for tnis work in food while millions of Chinese starve. County Court House Entered KENTVILLE. N. S. (CPI-Police reported Tuesday that the county court house, only a few hundred yards from the county Jill and the town lockup, was broken into idur- ing the week-end. Only thing taken was a small sum of money-from the office of sheriff C. 0. Steel: PlanNStr-ike Vote At Ford WINDSOR, Ont. (CPI-Charles McDonald. president of Local 200. United Automobile Workers' Union CIO-CCL said Tuesday the big Ford of Canada local will conduct a. strike vote Sept. 9. A union membership meeting previously gave the negotiating committee authority to call such s vote when it considered the state of negotiations warranted it. WEE COMES A TiMl-1 IN EVERY. WOMAN'S LIFE A MAN NEEDS -I-rEN DOLLARS TORONTO ICPW --Minimum maximum temperatures" British war crimes prison at Werl M111 MIX Meyer, now 45, was captured it) Dawson . .. 38 01 years am and later sentenced to V'anrmn'er 52 , GR do by a Canadian mlitary cnurl Vlclm” 53 M for the shooting of 18 Canadian P30010010" 47 0" prisoncrs of war. The sentence was CRUZ-"HIV 40 33 reduced in life imprisonment andiRPlZin-1 33 53 on Jan. 15 last year. Defence Miu- Winnipeg . 44 60 lstcr Claxtnn fold the Canadian T0l”0i"- 01 V- House of Commons it had further OHRW3 - 5" 7' been rcriiiccd to 14 years. Willi MHITTIT-11 51 30 time off for grind hchaxior, Tiics- QUf'l)0l' ("TY - 55 53 day was the earliest possible dalc S-W11 -it'll” 37 5” that Mcvcr ct-iilri havc bccn frcr-Ii, Iiinnr-ion 37 62 He has served two-thirds of his Halifax '9 59 sentence. 'Frcdcricinri 36 Si WAS IN DORCIIICSTER Olfharlotteiown I3 60 Mcyer st-ivt-d half nf his time lrilsldwv 'l 41 M piisun --iioin ll)-J6 uniil 1951 in '..ic'YJimm"h " .3 M icriaral penile-niinry at Dorrht-sici, SL Jnhnls ls 60 N. B. NC was lr.1nsfcri'cd back in ,- - Germany in 1951. the Canadian HAL” Ax icplgrhe Dommmn public weather office here says a idisturbancc ccnired near Montreal is moving rapidly cast. It will be msi of (ope Brcion by this ove- lililll Alwnrl nf iiic ccniic lhnio arr SiTiIit('l'K and v. l"l"',? !c1lirr""l thun- dcisinrms Gradual rlraiiiig will follow the disturbance A high rcssiirc .'li'NI over the Prairies in- dicnlcs that all regions will have sunny weather Thursday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Overcast with showers and widely scattered thunderstorms until mid-morning: than variable cloudiness; little - c I! a n g e in temperature; aonllu winds is becoming northwest T'- ihla morning. bow-ltlglt at Phar- l lotletown M and 05. w',s.h,"5 b"':'"'z..”W?”' . Eastern N. 3. counties. lnwsi Lncle PH” udtinhhed 1" St. John river valley: Variable Mnncmn as Fwd I'”htc"h"z' cloudiness and a little warmer. light winds becoming north )5 this morning I,mi--high at Mnm-ton SIT -tnrl RR, Frvrlcriclnn and Saint John 53 anti RR imp mi. lnriar iii Charlottetown nt50i a m and'7.'t0p mu siimmeraioe Mfln eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. High tide today at the North Shore at 12.40 a. in. Sun rites today at 542 a. m and Acts at H as p m a position with - largo brewery in Hagen. V iThe time is Atlantic standard.) ans I 1---. .