MAXIMS OIA. MERE MAN ...'-...i'.r.:"'~ m ' _" Ff-“wf-m "" " "‘°" i "Tidal xiii? t to do. :__________i_____ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the-Dew. Iorllll III- “‘ ' - . c we» 1- M- ClilARl-OTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1946 1o PAGES mbscialzkloiznoaeetllvsrrgiflfil.‘ u“ M I - C? r ' ‘ i ' ' ' .. . .-r4'000 veierans 6f polish chdlllbfil‘ GDIIIIIIGTGE Jewish Establishments In Army. W'" Be Brought President Urges Study Palestine Placed Out of ' ‘ * I a LTD Canada Fm Farm wmk Nfltlflllai QIIGStIOIIS Bounds To British Troops %éivzijfi vaggérnszaixilgé mghfuemg? efimfifilbuaulggtjilldil; gilemfciiilistfitgfiiiiiifi°lawsE355 qMtglgé liig xi0df ilibf John Wash. is the latest Congressma Rep. M._ Coflee. Dern.. to come under Senate War vestlgating Committees scrutiny. The committee is studying a $3,- 500 check Coffee's secretary receiv- ed from s Tacoma. Wash. con- tractor five years agc. Coffee said lie “welcomed investigation." Bill Given Second 4 Polish arms will be brought to Canada for farm work co-iricided ted? with the presentation of bri s to the Senate immigration committee callm"; ior a cautious picsmted by the bor Congress and the Canadian Co ress of Labor shortly before Act ng Prime Mili- istor St. Laurent announced that a Canadian mission will soon leave for overseas to pick qualified agric- ulture workers from among the former members cf the Polish army. Mr. St: Laurent said those chosen would have to sign an dertaking that on reac Can- ada they will agree to be irectel to agricultural work for two years and remain in such employment for that period. Those filling such conditions will bs allowed to re- main in Casi-ads permanentiyn Anyone tailing to meet the condi- tions will be returned to the United Kingdom. He said the Poles will help relieve the shortage o4 agriculture work- er's in Canada and the move also will assist the United Kingdom in ‘Idiom-lei; his? ‘Trades and Ls find a domicile for those membeia. of the Polsh armv who do not wish to re urn to their homeland. Th briefs oi the llibor organiza- tions did not touch on Mr. St Laurent! announcement. The Canadian mngress of Labor. represented 11y its president, Aft Mosh-.. said the country's immig’ ration policy should be dove-tailed with a general ein loymerit policy. Reading In Senate (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. Jilly 35—The Senate today save second reading to the bill which would change the name of July l from Dominion Day to Canada Dav on the understanding that it would be amended in corn. mittee. _It is proposed to e511 it m9 Nltlmllll ROI-idly of Canada. When the question came up m. day Senator John T. Haig, Pm. grcssive Conservative leader, said b? W“ 110l- ODDO-ilng the second reading on the distinct under- aianditig that if it was not satis. fF-Clflrlly amended in, the commit- rending. _ senator Artlfur Roebuck (L- Olllaliiil sous-ht to move an a- mvudment to second reading but silvaker J. H. King ruled that 3,3 the Senator had already spoke on the second reading he could not move an amendment. v Coming Events "Talkies —- mud, aturday. "Cardigan Picnic A ust 7th. "Talkie: — Cane Cove. Friday. tonight. "Ice Cream Social, Cherry Val- lti" School, Saturday. July 27in. fBig Dance. Curran Ban, Friday, My nth. Rollie i/ickenzies orch- Istra. Dancing 9 to i. D. B. T. “Unloading car Inverness coal Colville Station ltoday, Friday. 20M. kitsch-ac Younker. "Movies it Bor "Dance of the season, Cardigan gill Hid-v nieht. July 2cm. Sale egfisaand Coffee. Webster's Orch- Sflce Cream Festival, Bingo, etc, M- Jams Church. Georgetown, “may evening July 29th. " Cream and Dance Emer- lGld Hall, Monday. July 29th. Mrs. - C- Green and Mrsl a. J. White. "Another Chicken Supper st N0 ' neSlé-lgiiliaigdfistllew Haven, Wed- ! "Reserve Wednesday, August ‘l, ‘Pgrkalllllldl United Qhuygh [g3 a; ..__ “Livestock Marketing Board Esra‘?! Mil at sll usual points W I Wick of July 29th. Contact ‘ml irepresentative at your lees". “Cellini! mint for trucking scr- "UVOfl-OBI Marltetiiil B0126 “lath-us hora at Montague Monday a ernoon. July 29th. List with the gaffrtflkllglé-‘dusnd starlet: wsillucsll and reunmlw.‘ D- cs w. rep- ‘ "Livestock Alerts Board him“! . lamb: an calves at Léllffly ver Monday. Julggtb. botth stock with Gladstone _ in. ‘my NDIOlIhlIl-NO» "Noticc:-All.~partice interested in tiled w- ut."°?&i.-t°‘islt;'a"“él.l..él§ 5221mm“ 3m as: the church ‘Ilka-m fil- gfifillyatlfl ",1"! producers. attention: gilt wont to m the gneet "I'M cries or our h wool t-“i.o*~é°".i'..r:.v.°""a"~i "<1 iiniy m cacti-i- Brits-Wynn s uni at reas- ccnfl _ gfml 4b $9M a used mic: wagons: " it! 110V; “at IOU jhousirig, labor c e and securit - defined. or nationality social y. The Trades and Labor Congress submission, made by its president. Percy R. Bengough. favored the acceptance of selected immigrants as they could be absorbed. Mr. Bengough said his organization favored "exclusion of all races that cannot be properly assimilated in to the national life oi’ Canada." "It must. be recognized that there are citizens of other coilntries who may be good brothers anti sisters. internationally, out yet would not be acceptable as brothers and sis- ters-in-law to Canadians. Earner- ience has clearly demonstrated that because of this fact- certan nationals who have in the past linen-admitted, iriul .,Canads.-,. as a distinct race and will remain a roblem ior future generations." C.C.L.-. on the other hand, took the position that “racial dis~ crimlnation should have no place in our immigration policy " "People from some other coun- tries may. Déclttirft‘. of their back- ground, education or customs fl" into Canadian .l.le more easill‘ than people from some other coun- tries, and such factors may prop erly be taken into account." the Congress said. ‘But ‘nice’ however _’ot'ght not to be considered at all Gambling Operator carrying out the undertaking to, . altnrunsl. around .55 scents nation's Top man among the Shriners is George H. Rowe. of Buffalo. N. Y.. New York State Supreme Court justice. At the frctem-itrs Victory Convention in San Francisco. he was unani- mously elected imperial Potentate of the Ancient Arabis Order of Nobles of the Mystic Quins“ Survey Shows Rise In Prices llnly Moderate By R. J. Anderson Canadian Pres: Staff Writer NEW YORK. July 35 —(CP)- Note to the little woman: C'mon home out of your Tor- onto hideout. The all clear has sounded and food prices seem to have settled down, st least for the time being. And you can get but- ter. new. Remember all those storl-cs of skyrocketing prices here when the Office oi Price Administrat- ion iegally passed out of exist.- ence almost a month ago? Well. it's not so bad-not too much above prevailing Toronto prices, at that. And, say, the stores even have window posters advertising meat! I hhven‘t yet tied into a ' steak. a nine-cent Jump over when meat trays were bare. It‘s not all sweetness and light though. The automat, for instance, hasn‘t a five-cent dish of K26 cream any more. It's a dime. And most drug stores have boosted the price of pies and cakes by a nickel hut, shucks, their basic prices haven't changed much. A quick swing through the market-where the morning line- up for a quarter- ound of butter used to start form rig an hour oe- inre the store's opening-showed that canned products. such as O l‘ 2'7 in Toronto. are up a cent but two to 18-17 cents s can, that's all. The neighbors say that-a fort- night, ago things were pretty stiff but most atorekeepers now are Fatally Shot . ___._ MONTREAL. July 25 -(CP)- Harry Davis. 4|}. owner of a hook- maklng establishment and re- ported to be cure of Montrcals leading gambling operators. “Y” fatally shot tonight in his beak-v rooms on West-Central BiBnIGY treet. Davis died in hospital. whore he was taken by friends, from three bullets fired into his body. His assassin was reported to ugve walked calmly from the ncttmi! place while others in the buiirliiig fled wildly through a back door. Police said they were dctalnliiz seven men for questioning, nont- of whom admitted having seen the shots fired. Police refused to say whether they believe Davis‘ killing signals an outbreak of gang warfare oi" whether it resulted from a per- sonal feud among the higher-ups in Montreal's underworld. They said Devi-s was owneriind “b " oftbc bookie establishment- be een Dotchcster and 5t. Oct - erlne streets in one oi the hits-rat sectlcal of the city, crammed with night clubs. restaurants and stores. m 0f s n "tiqiisiiii pggtiiciiic some. July ‘i5 _ (AP! — 0y the third anniversary of the full o! medium the properties of Ben- ito Mussolini have been confiscated an banal: or the Italian people- Plc of ll Dilcc’: widow. Doruia inch , and uf his children that they would be left without means of support if the entire estate were men for Ii men's sins. were over ruled. No indication of the elite of the Representatives of durin a supreme court sass n. form denied report: that Muss- olini‘s y st children. Romano and Anna aria. Id W9" I cabaret in s fisher-man's hut It f labia. Vito Blhissoiini, nephew 0f the dame was released from last nlg t undor ths recent “amnesty UIAIGIIIWITII MUlDI-l x-(Alo-Trus Gainer-gala ‘this... l-lcirens. i1. giiiiisc"? t me.» l mil“ lic: ca’ trailers. y . displaying self-restraint. Some “commodities like meat have mov- ed out of black-market channels -\vhere sirloin steak was 95 cents to $1.25 a pound a month cs0- lnto the shops. PS-Cigarets now are 18 cents a pack. though, a one-cent ‘lump. PPS-Caution: Don't take his as an argument for or against O. P.A, Its proponents argue that es are Just the start. I. dcn‘t know about that. Blames Dominion Government For Housing Shortage HALIFAX. July 25 -—(C P)_- Blaming the Halifax housing drf- iicultles on the Dominion govern- ment, Mayor J. E. Ahorn said to- day the whole "grim picture" had resulted from “bad handling m. Ottawa." A two-hour duneerence of the mayor and civic oiil-clsls today failed to reach any solution and found their ho es of acquiring the exhibition ulldlngs for oin- ergency housing faced with de- lay. C. H. S. Dinlmore. director of the Lands and Buildings deport- inent of the War Assets Corporat- ion at Montreal told the meeting that Whill the buildings had been declared surplus by the Army. they would have to go to Grown assets before War Assets could handle them. Possible bright notes came into the picture when Prank Creed, federal emcrgen shelter officer here, said he w id ark Ottawa on possibilities of the city taking ovcr a number cf vacant buildings controlled by the Federal Qqy- ernment. ' Mr. Dlnsrnorc said efforts would be mode to make i5 government A§ACIADOI ‘I'D ITALY ‘Jill! QIIBIUIG W York. assistant - ' tary as amlsnador to Italy sirloin that one-time rarity. but iifitwif; vegetable soup that sells two-fora these comparatively moderate rls- m bulldln at Boll lick 1 . m 1mg”. a lvai able Il-(AP) cy the _ uncut of James 0 Dunn 21f the system of government which that business operates- ac- cording to-Mr. C Gordon Cock. shutt, president of the Canadian Chamber of Commerce, who ad- dressed the Provincial Boards oi Trade at. the Charlottetown Hotel yesterday evening. . The meeting was presided over by Mr. F. W. Hyridman. president of the Charlottetown Board of Trade. Among those seated at the main table with Mr. Cock. shutt and Mr. Hyridman. were Mr. D. L. Morell. executive secre- tory of the Chamber of merce: Mr. A. R. Brennan. rep- resenting the summersido Board; Col. G. E. Pull. and President K. S. Rogers. of the Maritime Board of ‘Trade. - Mr. Cockshutt told the gather- ing that the next four or five years will decide whether or not the Canadian business rnan is worthy oi’ leading Cans a to greater heights of prosperiy, or whether that task will be entrust- ed by the Canadian people to the- cxponents of socialistic govern- merit. “We fought a war." Mr. Cock- .~hutt said. “because we felt we wanted to have our own freedom. freedom to do things in our own way. We have the greatest living standard of any country the world. but unless we are prepared to devote some of our time to a serious consideration 0d the sig- nificance of national questions. someone else will take over the leadership of this country. If you don't take action. somebody is go- ing to take it for you." Mr. Cock- shutt added. Immigration 47 Immigration was a questiomMr. Cockshutt thought. which should be studied by every Board of absorb them to great advantage," Mr. Cookshutt said. "Moreover, the world is not going to stun-d for such a country n, canned hi"!!! only twelve million of a copulation." The economic prosperity of Canada. Mr. Coclcshutt said. de- pended upon her ability to main- tain the world markets she hm enjoyed during the war Ybars. To maintain economic prosperity. Canadian industry had to have an annual export buslne-Ss of two billion dollars a year arid agricul- ture a like amount. The total in- ochre of the Canadian people in i944 had been a-pnyoximatelv rili-ie billion dollars, and in that year. Mr. Cockshutt said. the volume of Caifadian exiport business had amounted to three billion. three hundred million dollars. Urges United Action _In closing. Mr. Cockshutt said tne Boards oi Trade in Prince Edward Island could contribute to the welfare of the whole country by uniting more closely with the other Canadian Boards of Trade were active units making up the national Chamber of Commerce. He emphasized again their need tc develop a political conscious- ness so that they could not only strengthen the national body in its influence on government af- fairs but also to wield a benefic- ial influence on the people throughout the Province. A vote of thanks. moved by Co‘. G. E. Full and seconded bv Mr. E. T. Hlggs. was tendered the speaker. A brief address was also ‘deliv- ered by Mr. D. L. Morell who sut- lzested that the local Boards oi Trade should be well represented Trade in Canada. There were 150.- 000 Polish people who could he brought over at any time. Some oaortjf-xrrcnnu “ u“ rim sun Writer OTTAWA. July 25 (OP) -- Acting Finance lMllllim‘ 555°“ n in the Common azieed to consider opposition susswtlws that farmers be allowed to avefl-GB their income loi- taxation purposes over a. five-year period instoad of v-‘hréeetyears a, pfuposdd in Hi5 bu 8 . Mr. Abbott made the statement in requesting that Robert Pair (SC --Bat.tls River) withdrew 1Y1 W- endment to that effect on the ground that only a member oiph. government cou.d move a moduli that would increase or dearth-w- revenue. The cliscussi-l arose while the House in commit-tee si-BEE W“ eeudylng the budget resolution which would authorize farmers an fishermen to average their income on a three-year basis. iti-osrmlifi Conservative, 0.0.11. mil 5°91?“ Credit membe -, iolned 1r- "r81"! that the averaging period be ex» to five years. Mr. Pair withdraw his motion the understanding that. the matter will be ltouildltfld b? ""1 mnleter and the other members of the cabinet." The resolution itself was stood over urtil tomorrow af- ter a two-hour discussion on its merits. Mr. Pair argued that crop ml" urea which sozizetimes extended over four years made it essential that the omner w: allowed to aver- age his income over a live-Yul!’ period. ~- JA Ross (PC——8ourls) suplwfir ed M1‘. Fair. Before tho amend- ment was ruled out of order and then withdrawn. ED. Fulton (PC LKamloo s) end Stanley Knowles (OOF- nnipcg North Centw argued the govsmment did 110i- know whether it would make more or less if the amendment was ac- tod. l! Cupid v Cltes nun. Act Mr. Abbott said under the Brit- ish North America Act it was un- constitutional for a ‘private meni- be: to sponsor legla ation dealln! with money. Solon low, Social Credit leader. asked the ministor if the M18899’ tlon was not. a roasonsblc one and that the Canadian Iederatlon of Agriculture bad mowed we I prod/listen Abbott uis he was willing u» listen to filslestlons that the b by those prominent in the indus- trial. commercial. civic. and sari- cultural affairs of the Province. Five Year Period For Averaging Farm Income Urgedfty" i " period be extended to five years but he must ask that the motion be withdrawn _ M1‘. Ross also suggested that when s. farmer sold his head of cattle it be regarded as capital rather than income as at present. Mr. Abbott sale this rnd been -now numbering over 400—wuilcli* 5 G. GORDON COCKSHUTT President f th _ b" of cogmergeCanadlan Chain 10 Ships Sunk By Underwater Explosion By HOWARD BLAKESLEE IAN. Bikini. July 26—(Frlday)_ lAP)—To “hat extent the giant hand oi the atomic bomb laid its deadly Brill on 75 target ships Bflfillored in the radioactive wat- srs'of this lagoon was still being determined today, . This much was known-ll) ships inciudiriit the battleship Arkansas and the aircraft carrier Satatcga were resting on the bottom. sunk by Thursdays first underwater atomic explosion. Six more, including the heme- ships New York and Nagato, the light carrier Independence. heavy cruiser Pensacola, destroyer Hugh- es and trans-port Fallon. were damaged. Observer ships can-yin; Selene- liis and navy men eager to assess the full damage to the guinea pig fleet re-entered the lagoon Thurs- dai‘. less than nine hours after ti’; underwater blast was touched c . Crows were on the alert, how- ever. to move out to high seas again should radioactive waters drift south from the north-east section‘ of the lagoon where the bomb was detonated. Preliminary damage assessments showed. how- ever. ihat the l5 target ships sunk or damaged were all close to the detonation centre. Tlh= first box-score showed these vcawls sunk:- The 33-year-old battleship Ar- 5Col3l under consideraziop by the De- parment for sorre time. althoogh no satisfactory solution had been found. The proposal for three- year averaging should afford some r relief John Hdokett (PC-Stanstead) said he wondered whether the sov- ernnront had considered what. was done about farmer's‘ income tax in other agricultural countries. Mr. Abbott said he could not say from personal knowledge but he knew the department gave study to the taxation systems of other countries. He would look into the d matter. 0.P.A. Bill Signed Rluctantly By President Truman WASHINGTON July 25 — (AF) —President Truman today "reluct- antly" signed in‘o law the _0ffice of Price Administration bill l-ie announced also ‘at. a press conference that he would make Dubllc its three-irlcmber price con- trol board shortly The President made the an» riouncement five minutes after ~18 signed the olli, telling reportors he was sending a statement to Co ress within a couple of hours Olltl hing his ‘views. Mr. Truman said reporters could quote him as saying he signed the one-year extension "reluctantly." CUT DOWN ON TIPS ATLANTIC CITY. N. J.. July 25 tAPi-Sign of the tlmes-vacat. toners here have cut down on tips to boys, waitresses. boot- blacks. taxi drivers and other ser- vlcs workers. Night club workers. most disappointed of those who earn the major portion oi their income from gratuities, Bay the wIr-tiniselpendsr ls been re- laced ‘by ' flle- ."tipless t-ippler." n 5:0 dime has beconic a popilll-l‘ . time he was . Jewish leaders on the problems -Palestine and European Jewry. ‘out elaborating. sai-d the ABOARD U. s. s. APPALACI-l-o Airman Lived Iln Blueberries ‘ For 26 Days (By The. Canadian Prowl BLIND RIVEJt. Ont. July 2s- A haggard. 25-year-old a man wearing a tattered uniform s um- bled out of the dense bush coun- try around Flack Lake 26 miles northeast of this lumber town, early tcday and startled a visit.- lng American tourist tvlth the re- mark: "What date is this? I've been lost since June 29 and am I ‘ever glad to see you." The incident marked the re- turn to the land of the living for Fit. Lt. W. (Bill) McKenzie from Winnipeg and St. vital. Man..who lived on blueberries for 26 days after his Diane crashed and sank in the waters of tiny Pielenbar Lake. three miles west of Flack. First word of the safety of the veteran of overseas air service came ln a dramatic announce- merit to the House of Commons today by Air Minister Gibson. shortly before noon. McKenzie and his jet-propelled Meteor Glos- ICI‘ ilgfitEI‘ lliSiippflbl-TEQ Jiillli 2U on tne ixapus-itasing-‘rororito leg of a llignt from Toronto to Eu- momon. So far. McKenzie has had little opportunity to tell the story of his Z6 days of hardship during uiilcn lie lost. ~21 pounds. Ile was given a breakfast oi toast and soft-boiled eggs at Laurentian Lodge on riack Lake and was quickly put to bed on orders oi two QOCEUIS spending a holiday there. They refused permission for liim lo speak lo anyone. However. before his first rest in a comfortable bed in nearly iour weeks he had a chance to toil some of his story and it was re- layed lo the outside by MrsJames Berry. who operates an Ontario forestry branch telephone ,ex- change st the machine shop une White River road, not. far from ihelake. ‘ When he sat his plane down on l-ielenbitr Lake, so small it does not appear on most maps. it sank quickly but hemsnaged lo swim tn shore. His matches were all _ wet. but he had a lighter. It light- ed only once. Just enough to start s fire which he kept burning un- - til three dsys ago when it was doused by a heavy rain. He had no food but subslsted on blueberries which are plentiful in that country although Mrs. Berry pointed out that for most o! the there the berries would be green. » After his fire went out he de- .cided to try and find some sign oi civilization. Although Helenbar Lake is onlv three miles in a direct line from Flack Lake he wandered for three days, before, Palestine ls Suggested Division Of Holy Land Into Communal Units Seen Solution Oi Prob- lem By Barton D. Pattie LONDON. July , —‘-‘- P17- Persistent. but unconfirmed gre- ports said today that Britam would propose a partition of .al- estine into communal units of Arabs and Jews. and the Foreign Office announced plans for an early conference here of Arab and with- confer- vnce was being called as a result .f an agreement between Brit- llill and the Arab League that the league be consulted before _.i de- cision was reached on the imple- mentation of the Anglo-American committee recommendation that 100.000 Jewish refugees be ad- mltted to Palestine. A Foreign Office spokesman said invitations were issued today to the Arab League states of Egypt, Iraq.‘ Syria, Lebanon anci Saudi Arabia to send atives. No date has been fixed, but the spokesman sat-d it was hoped the conference would be completed before the Uiriited Nations as- sembly convenes Sept. Z3 in New York. The announcement followed as- sertions by Arab informants ‘in London that Britain was exerting all possible influence on the United States in an effort to “seli" a plan to spli-t, Palestine into com- munal units of Arabs and Jews. These sources said they had been informed privately that re- cent violence in the Holy Land had convinced Britain there was no hope of establishing a peace- ful state in which nel-ther Jews nor Arabs would dominate. Britain was said to be striving to win American acceptance of a "half-way house" in which Pal- estine would be di-vlded into Jew- ish and Arab areas similar to North American countries. Next Move In Discussion llp To Russia By LARRY HAUCK NEW YORK. July 25—-(A.P)- The 11BX71 3WD in the debate over a United Nations atomic energy control system appeared tonight to be up to Russia in~ the face of Government spokesmen. all Jewish-owned shops. dwellings. restaurants and entertainment ea- tablishments throughout Palestine placed out of bounds to British troops. and tension appeared in- creasing. The radio station of the bile Jewish underground organization Hagana declared it expected Brit- ish troops and police now would try to destroy the Jewish resist- ance movement in what it called the "second phase" of the govern- ment‘; “attack on Palestine Jew- m” The broadcast asserted this sec- ond phase was planned before the bombing of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem Monday. The death toil in that bombing had risen today to 63. with 55 persons still reported rriisstng. (Reuters News Agency placed the dead at 66.) Meanwhile a Jewish agency spokesman s h ar ply challenged British charges that some of its leaders had ordered sabotage and violence in Palestine, while an Arab official demanded that the Jewish agency be dissolved. In Tel Aviv the newspaper Had- nshout Haerev declared there nev- el had been any agreement among Hagan-a, the largest Jewish under- ground. and Irgun Zvai Leumi and ttie Stern group. It said l-Ia- gana opposed any action which might cause loss oi life The paper is the evening edit- ion of Davar. the official organ of the Jewish labor party which ten mirrors Jewish agency views. Dr Hussein El Khalidi. secre- lflfv of the Arab executive com- represenl.~il'liil€fi. declared in a statement: "The Jewish agency and all it stands for must go. is h time that it became an unla ul aswclation.” Khalidi recalled that Britain dissolved the Arab higher com- niittee, arresting or departing many of its members, afta’ the assassination of a district com- missioner in i987. In London. a spokesman for the former new Zionist organization accused the British Government oi “dlshonesty" in issuance of the white paper. He claimed the gov- ernment knew all about Hagana the Jewish underground resist- ance organism .""IS“UIE‘"IUE office had cc-operated and asso- ciated with it in the whole period of the ivar." BEOKBNHAM. Kent. limgls/nd — fCPl- Children here are to st- tend regular clasnes in t-lic proper use of a public library. it"s tiwaws A MYsfaRY to Kiss‘ WHY Qaown Folks‘ TAKE MEDlCiNE Votunfanitv Soviet delegate Andrei A. Grom- I/kols refusal to accept key points ‘ of the United States plan, in- cluding elimination of the veto. Mr. Crornyko was expected to take the floor at another closed committee meeting tomorrow to open discussions on his plan for calling for immediate outlawing of atomic weapons. While continuing to press for adoption of the Baruch prognosis. a spokesman for the Unite Stat- cs delclatlon said: "We will now let Gromyko carry the ball for a while and listen to what e11 the delegates have to say about his proposals." The Russian plan is built a- round an international convention to outlaw the production and use of atomic weapons. It differs sharply from the American view that weapons should be banned‘ onlv after cfleciive controls have been set up. Advisers to Bernard M. Barmti. Unlted States delegate to the Atomic Energy Control Commis- sion. remained confident that their plan couid\be sold to the other powers. They disagreed par- ticularly wilh Mr. Gromykos con- tention that the roposcd atomic development aut ority would weaken the U. N. structure and hoped to present more “convincing arguments" on this point at a later stage. Meanwhile. it was learned auth- oritatively that Dr. Eelco N. Van Kieffens. new chairman of‘ the security council. would summon a special committee on- membership next Wednesday. 1t also was learned that a Siam- ese delegation would leave Bana- kok next Tuesday to present Slam's border dispute with French Indo-Chins to the council. ARBIVIZS AUG. 2d OTTAWA. July lib-wffl-Hon. LouLs 8t. Laurent, acting prime minister. announced in the Com- mcns today that arrival of Field Marshal Viscount Montgomery by ship at Halifax had been tenta- tlvelv set for Aug. M. y The Field Marshal had lo rot 4o Britain sent. l0 and in order o cover all of Canada in the short period available he would do most of his travelling by air. coupon )- _ —€0P Benn Adams has received congratulations from the King on mmpistihg ‘:1 yCl\‘B“'l|'|fl s p, m, he found his way out. of Sunday school teaching. (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX. July 26—(Priday)— Official inland forecast issue by the Dominion Public We ther Office here today: Forecasts valid until midnight eastern Friday: Prince Edward Island. counties. lower Saint John River Valley: Clear except cloudy with a few showers Friday morning. Slightly cooler and less humid. Liqht winds becominz north 15 m. ph. Friday afternoon. High Fri- day at Charlottetown 75. Mcrllcton 75. Fredericton 78. Saint John ‘l5. Summary: Mainly clear and a little cooler. Higih tide this morning at 8.4!! and tonight at 10.38. Sun sets this evening at 8.34 and rises tomorrow morning at 5.36. New moon July 28th. 7.53 A. M. Summer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. All! SCHEDULE Charlcttetown—Moncton — Leave Charlottetown i! A. M.. 10.30 A. M" 5-15 P. M. Arrive Ginrlottetown 12 P. M" 5.55 P. M., 735 P. M. Charlottetown-Halifax — Leave Charlottetown 12.55 P- M. Arrive Charlottetown 455 P. M. Charlottetown - New Glanow -- Leave Charlottetown 12.45 P. M. Arrive Charlottetown 5 P. M. Standard Time throughou CAB FERRY "PRINCE IDWASD ISLAND" smicuc This Leave Borden at 9.05 A-M.. 1 P.1d. and 4B0 P. M \ Leave Tormentine 10.30 A. IL. 3 P. M.. 7.30 P. M. Dttrs trips are mads between. on which automobiles are carried. v SUNDAY BEBVIOI Prom Borders 1 P. M. 6. 6 P. I, From Tormcntinc. S P. M.. I P- ll. woon rsLArvos-cnmou Daylight savior Lest ewcecrsisncscaiiy-rArs ea. M. 1lA.M..iP.M~3P.M hm lMClflboult-ld l-