MAXIMS / OIL MERE MAN pfepflffll it for soothe . no prepares evil for himself who ._. Thgcinardian. Three Canto. liomlng Daily Founded 1081. . Canadian Parliament To Meet December 5th iieavy Agenda With Some Business 0f "Immediate" Concern Reported. Cierlottetown iiian Injured ~ In Accident cllarlottetown man was re- ‘ seiuously injured early to- .u illl automobile accident near cre Service Station. James 1g was taken to the Prince‘ received when a _ which he was a passenger unis iii collision With B. parked tn ‘n. It was believed the ca: was in by Blythe Murray, also of tic-town. C.‘ . n Checker Taxi car which .i‘.ed along shortly after the - ciir drivcn by Murray was l- cii lo have been meeting am- car when it struck the rear . i" parked vehicle. The latter was a cal", converted to a truck and wn slid i0 have been parked at the fol" a couple of day's. Both the l the irlick ovcre badly dam- (‘Tlliiiing Events s ., ,.. ~. Wood Islands Monday, "l!" Us; Shop." “i~ll'.'". UYWFi Cove Hall. Mon- ti.‘ ' ‘rclniicr 1 th. ""l'~‘l(‘h - Sturgeon, ‘fucscny. "i-i on..- Shop." L. lrrllacls Mill closed for rc- lYUlll Novrmber 3rd to 5th. ‘ store will be closed all day November 1st. Peters AllLLlCi. "mince. Vernon River Hall. \‘.l: <ls_v. November 5th, spon- s I l by CYW. L, r-‘llzlge Sal: Market Build- lurciay. November lst. 230 M. "it forget Dance and For- ‘oiling, Winsloe Station Hail Iwics _ Sturgeon, Tuesday. ' cf Old Wyoming” in Techni- Supper. Bingo and Bay Hall, Monday, nncr, Graham's Road School. October 31st. Sale of Lu: lics. d*'.\i..\'lcs - Bridgetown Satur- n}. V‘ on; of Old Wyoming" in icrir icolor, _ l l. "Lum and '; "50 This Is Wlshiflfl." "Buying daily, Cranberries. field Yllll or clean for pickups. Write P A MacDonald, Phone No. 1. st. oters Bay. "thicken Supper in Clinton Hsll. "tjllllv evening, November 4th. btslllllllig at 5 o'clock. Proceeds in flid of lhe Hall, "New Haven Poll, Liberal Meet- ilu n Neil Msokinnonu, November 3rd. in appoint delegate: to attend Convention at Kingston. "Tilis Store will be closed ell day smlrdfl)’. November 18$. but will be °P°ll Friday night. October 31st. lklglrlii 9 o'clock. J. I. Morris, Kin- a. » - I "Killsston Branch Canadian W100 will meet in Kingston School. Monday. November 8rd. agidP- M. All members pleus et- "Dundas and Annandaie Baptist llrciics. Services will be hold It Mllandaie 11 A. M. Duncan 730 ; M. Sunday. November and. Ser- "ts will be conducted by Lie. Bryon "flwlett, - R"We expect Albion Nut and dWIld COBi It Vifltbfll ill l fCW m. Kindly "we mo "W- I- o. woos. Orland. get your order in at will be our last shiv- ' > (By John LeBIanc) OTTAWA. Oct. iio-(Clai-Par- llament was summoned today into session for Dec. 5. seven weeks ear. liar than normal. to deal with q, heavy run of legislative business lMll-ldlns some or Wmmediate" concern. Prime Minister Mackenzie King, announcing the early call, declar. ed it was prompted primarily by Canada's newly-signed Qonov; trade agreements with l7 coun- tries but that the members would be asked to deal with other im. poi-tent matters needing early action. One of these. he said, would b; the extension of the Dcminion's worsens? wartime powers. An- biber "might" be Canada's dollar position, though he was cautious about discussing that subject. The Cabinet decided on the 099111113 only st. a meeting today, and Mr. King promptly announced it before he left here for New York on s trip to Europe and to Britain for the Royal wedding. MR Kill! 1n s press conference also announced: i. The Government has sp- pointed six new parliamentary assistants-to the Ministers of Health. External Affairs. Labor, Agriculture. Finance and Rev- enue-and intends seeking leg- islation to create four more for a total of l4. "(Continued on Page? Col, 7) Antigonish Barber Boycott Continues ANTIGONISH. us. Oct. so _ (CP) - The 10-day student boy- cott of Antlgonlsh barber: re- mained unbroken tonight after the barber: in a three-hour con- ference with spokesmen for St. Francis Xavier University's 400 male students" rejected a proposed price compromise. The boycott was clamped on or- iginally when barber: refused to heed a student request for s re- duction from 60 cents to 40 for haircuts. At today's meeting the bsrbers refused to compromise be- tweenjo and 60 cents. PS. — The students are letting their hair grow. Ramadier Gets Confidence Vote PARIS. Oct. 30 -—(AP)— The Government of Socialist Premier Paul Rsmsdier. which he pictured as a mi-ddle-of-tlhc-lrond regime, received a 20-votc majority on a confidence motion in the National Assembly tonight l-n the face of Communist and DeGaulllsropposi- tion. But many parliamentarians. and even associates of the Premier, cded that the Rcniodier Cabin- et would have to be reshuffled soon. Approval of the Government's motion by 300 votes to 200. with 18 sbsentlons, cache at the end of two days of near-riotous debate merit- ed by booing and name-calling. Premier Jones, Mr. iEiacKinnon lie-Nominated For the fourth utive time Premier J. Walter Jones and Mr. Dugsld MmeKinnon, M.I...A., were last night unanimously ‘ ted cc Councillor and Assemblyman respectively to contest the Fourth District of Queen's as the Liberal standard-bearers. There were no other nominations. In a speech which lasted over an hour, the Premier told the con- vention that as of the strikers at the local Canada Packers’ plant had gone beck to work yesterday, not as members oi the Union but as individuals. "I don't care if Labour knows all about it," the Premier said. "They can't bent us.‘ Wages had to be cheaper in Prince Edward Island than in; other parts of Canada in order to bring industry to the Province, the Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the “Dew QHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1947 4m Bandits Get S1 10,000 In Boston lioid-up BOSTON, Cot. 80 -—(AP)— Six obviously well-rehearsed bandits held up a ll-lyde Park factor office today and escaped with $110,000 in stnall bills-tho payroll of the Sturtevant Divis- ion of the Westinghouse Elec- tric Corporation. Wearing overalls, five of the Premier said. He stated that for every $1.11 the Ontario farmer re- ceived, the Quebec farmer receiv- ed $i.08; and the Island farmer 0i cents. since other classes in the Province did not receive the some amount for the same service as the Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary came classes in other parts of Csn-' ado, Labour could not receive it either. “Unless the cost of Labour is attractive," the Premier said. "other companies won't come here." Aileginig the striking workers had called Government workers in the Canada Packers plant "scabs",'the Premier said the Government woilld not tolerate such abuse for ‘it is putting us all in the same class. I don't see why 12,000 farm- ers should be dictated to by 70 strikers." ‘ The Premier's nomination was moved and seconded respectively by Milton Furness, Vernon. and R. C. McLeod Klnross. That of Mr. MacTinnon was moved by Wil- frid Furncss." Vernon, and second’- ed by Joseph Ryan, Avondalc. The Convention. held in the Eldon Hall, was presided over by Mr. Stewart Ross. Eldon. Predicting this year's surplus of (Continued on Page B Cal. i) Princess Elizabeth Christens New Liner GLASGOW. Oct. 30 - (AP) .- Prlncess Elizabeth, standing in a bleak drizzle, today urged a throng of 150.000.to keep British unity sllve "at all costs" as she christ- ened the llner Caronia st its launching. With her future husband Lieut. Philip Mountbatten by her side. the heiress presumptive to Brit- aian’: Throne used phrases rem- inlscent of Winston Churchill's wartime speeches as she exhorted her countrymen to win their eco- nomic battle for themselves. The Princess reminded her hearers of the battle of Britain in 1940. when “we stood alone, and we had to fight for survival in the skies." “Today our battlefield is in the factories, the fields, the mines and the shipyards," she said. "But as in i040, we have got to win this battle ourselves." The 84,000-ton Ceronls. costing more than 23,000,000 ($12,000,000) and accommodating 1.000 passen- gers. will join the Mauretanis, in the trans-Atlantic service. HALIFAX, Oct. 00 —- (OP) - Ths Public Utilities Board today approved an increase of two cents a quart in the price of milk in all areas of Nova Scotia where it has jurisdiction. The new totes go into effect’ tomorrow. In the Halifax-Dartmouth ares milk will increase from 1d to l’! cents a quart. In Sydney. Glace Bay and adjacent colliory towns the new price will be l0 cents. Lowest price in the board-con- trolled areas will be 1d clntl In Amherst. Bridgewster, Kentviiie, Truro, Windsor and Yarmouth. The Board listed thus three factors u responsible for the price jump: - ‘i. The price of dairy M!" foods hos increased an svofllo of B2 per cent since Ads. 1w llfl. Milk Prices Advance In Nova Scotia Centres B. The recent butter price in- crease and consequent increase - in butterfat prices has mode the creamory s more attractive market for the producers. 0. To stimulate increased production roi- the tibia mil: market during the lesson of short supply. Producers supplying milk to the Halifax area will receive in in- crease of d) cents o hundred- weight for milk testing 9.1 butter- fst. The board-fixed price to be paid the distributors will be $3.00. The announcement of increases follows application from milk pro- ducers’ orglnilltionl for hither prices touneet rising costs ol pro- duction. . The total increase granted un- ounts to ‘l’! cents with I) cents goinl to the producers and 11 to the distributors. men entered the plant grounds with workmen. They walked in- to the rmain ofice about 8:15 n.m.—o few minutes after psy- msster W-R. Marshall and five assistant; unlocked and entered a large vault to begin counting out the wages 0f 2.000 W014i"!- Tho bandits escaped in an automobile in which the sixth man waited at the wheel. While one man knocked down n police guard and kept watch in a hallway. two others forced telephone operators to lie on the main office floor with 20 other workers. Another pair went to the vault, forced Marshall and his assistants to stand against the wall, and pushed the bills into I bag. “This is no Halloween nasty.” ou‘e'0f the men annourlwedr Wu don't want to hurt anybody-Wt! just wcintthe cabbage.” The bandits left behind rolls of coins which Pia?" “"5353? Gardner Derry said amounted l9 $2,000. . 0e Valera Candidate Suffers Defeat DUBLIN. Oct. 30 — (C?) — Premier _de Valera Sl-lfllered 8 major political setback today with the defeat of his candidate in the key county Dublin by-eleetion by Sean McBride, leader of the new- ly-formed Clann Na Poblachta (Republican Party) and it is be- lieved in some quarters that the Government will call an immed- iate general election. Prime Minister King's Overseas Itinerary (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Oct. 30—Prime Min- ister Mackenzie King said today he plans to visit France. Belgium and Holland while overseas for Princess Elizabeths wedding, but time would not permit him t0 visit Italy and Southern Europe. Mr. King said lie expected to arrive in London Nov. 6. He plan- ned to spend the next two days in Paris. The following two days h would spend in Belgium and the next two in Holland. He will sail from England Nov. 20 on the Nleuw Amsterdam and will arrive in New York Dec. 3. two days before the openin! 0i I new session of Parliament. names REPORT rtAMisrmci, Oct. so - (AP) - Dr. Werner Heisenberg. Nobel Prize winner and noted authority on atomic energy. today‘ denied that any attempt had been m!“ go kidnap him in Goettlngen in the British zone and take him l" the Soviet sector. [9550 CANADA FLOUR AJAX. Ont.. Oct. 30 — (Cl?) — Although there is no known phys- ical defence against atomic war, the world is "a long way from the push-button type of warfare described in the sensational mag- azines," Gen. AOL. McNaughton said tonight. Canadian representative on the United Nations Atomic Energy Commission, he pulled no punches us he described the awful havoc of a future atomic -war in an ad- dress prcpared for delivery to the University of Toronto Engineering Society at. this post-war campus community M miles east of Tor- onto. However, he said, there was no need to “fear its outbreak on any significant scale for a. while yet," and expressed optimism that in- ternational control of the atom bomb still could be fdund through the U.N., despite the reluctance of Russia to agree with other na- Articl-e In Trade Journal Leads To Drastic Action LONDON. Oct. 30 — (AP) _ Garry Allighan, Labor member of the House of Commons, and s London newspaper man, was ex- pelled from Parliament tonight for "dishonorable" conduct in writing an article for a newspaper trade journal alleging that mem- bers of the House accepted bribes to tell what went on in secret party caucuses. Arthur Helghway, editor of World's Press News. which pub- lished the article last. April, was called to the bar of the House .where he admitted a “serious er- ror of judgment" and expressed his "sincere and humble apology." He was found guilty of "gross contempt of the House" and was reprimanded by the Speaker. Expulsion of Allishml. member for Gravesend. Kent. was the first since i922 when a member was voted out after he was convicted of a criminal offence for which he was sentenced to prison. Aillghan, who once was on the (Continued on Page 5 C01. 7) (Continued on Page 5 COI- 3) Canada Opposes LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y" Oct. 30—- (CH-Canada late today opposed the Russian Korean proposal call- ing for early and si ltaneous evacuation of Soviet an United States forces from the Far East peninsula and declared that “pre- rnature withdrawal of occupation forces would serve only to pre- cipitate chaos and disunity." Entering the United Nations Political Committee debate on Korean independence for the sec- ond day running. Joseph A. Bradette. member of the Canadian delegation and Liberal member of Parliament for Cociirane. Ont, said that Canada would support the United States plan for Korea. rather than the Russian one. Conservatives Make Bid In Civic Voting LONDON, Oct. 30-(Reuters)— The Conservative Party is making a strong bid to reverse the left- ward trend in the annual polls for City Councils of Britalnsmunlcl- polities. Polling takes place Saturday in 300 English and Welsh boroughs, London objected. Elections in “the 200 Scottish municipalities will take place next Tuesday. Conservatives in a large number of cities have adopted the recom- mendation of the recent Conserv- ative Party conference at Brigh- ‘ton, Sussex, that they should pre- sent themselves to the electors under their national party title as onservatives. Austerity Program For Trinidad Pienned PORT OP SPAIN. Trinidad. Oct. 30~(CP)-A program of aus- terity for ‘Ih-inidad-"which will icduce the standard of livinl f4 i. level comparable with that ex- perienced during the war"—wss officially announced by the Gov- crnrnent today. The Government an ncement accompanied publication of a list of "uncssentla? articles barred from import into the British col- ony to conserve dollars. Have Plan To Use More Fish, Con s erve Grain (By The Associated Press) _BOSTON, Qet. 30—-A "M11553. chusetts plan" to- stimulate fish . consumption and aid in conserva- ~--RilS=Si3iL!i3ii' UQJLWQLKIEi-il W111. lhe ‘inaugurated Monday. The plan, sponsored by the Epi. curean Club, calls for the flight of five chefs to five cities east of the Mississippi where they will pre. Pare fish dinners for club lunch- eons. lice-packed cartons of fresh. caught haddock, cod, scrod, and other specimens common to the North Atlantic will accompany the culinary experts. In exchange for the fish and their services, the chefs will be paid ln grain to be turned over to welfare agencies for shipment a- broad. The chefs will leave Boston Mon. day with fish cargoes supplied by ‘the Massachusetts fishing Indus. ry. The chefs and the cities in which they will serve the dinners are: Dominic de Salvo of the Parker House. Buffalo; Pasquale Mazzuc- chelli of the Hotel Statler. Detroit: Caesar Delollis, formerly of the Hotel Somerset,‘ Chicago; Nicholas do Petrls of the Hotel Manger, Cincinnati, and George Theirray of the Algonquin Club, st. Louis. Edward J. Doucette, president of the Epicurean Club, said: "Seafood is tasty and nutritious when prop- BT15’ cooked and if we can get enough people to eat it regularly, the food conservation program will 8o over with a bang." Catholic cn Ti? Suiibury Burliirecd BUDBURY. Ont. 30 —(CP)—T.iie Rcman Catholic Church of Christ the King was almost completely destroyed ihere today by I. fire which still in burning. it was one of the largest Roman Catholic Churches lm the north country. Communist Scare In Montreal Unfounded By ALANI RANDAL MONTREAL. Oct. 30 — (OP) - In a flurry of precautionary act- ivity police moved to protect the Roman Catholic Archbishop's Pal- ace and St. James’ Cathedral here from s rumored threat of "serious damage" by Communists, then called the whole show off at noon today when the rumor proved false. If some faces were pinkish at Police Headquarters tonight as s result qt the needless guard- rnountlngs at these prominent mid-Montreal Church buildings the blame was not entirely with - the’gendarmerie. The Canadian Press learned that last night while most. of Montreal slept. police received from an ex- cited nevwspeper reporter n nonc- ioo-clesr telephone account of a report from Quebec that a Com- munist plot threatened the Church edifices, or n-isunde stood on the receiving end. 16 PAGES Do an things u “ .' woe watching. MAXIMS ‘ 01A MERE MAN $80116 l SCALPED BY MACHINE . HAS HAIR SEWN BACK‘ Her hair and scalp sewn back on i a hall-hour after it was torn from her head. Irene Solvisburg, 27, is in Hamilton General hospital. Her hair caught in a potato- peellng machine at the Steel Co. of Canada's canteen on Wednes- day. Her scalp was left behind when she was rushed to hospital, but a telephone call brought it to the operating room. Man Killed When Tractor 0verturns WOODSTOCK. N. B.. Oct. 30- Wendell Shaw, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Scott Shaw, met death last evening when crushed by an ovcr- turned tractor he had been driving or. his father's-farm at Victoria Corner. Noveniber 11 Wil|_ Be Statutory Holiday ' OTTAWA, Oct. 3O —(CP)—By common consent, Tuesday, Nov. 11, will be celebrated-as last year-as a statutory holiday to commemor- ate the dead of the First and Sec- ond World Wars. Shortly after ‘JJ-Day, some dis- cussion arose as to whether a sep- arate day should be observed to commemorate the Second World War dead. However. a convention of tlhe Canadian Legion voted to keep Nov. ll as Remembrance Day for both wars, and Government of- ficials inclined to the some view. Three Face Charges In ii. S. Forest Fires SAINT JOHN. N. B.. Oct. 30- While New Brunswick forest fires remained under control tonight. forestry officials were reported planning to charge three persons with setting fires without a permiti in the Jaillet-Beersvilie arcs oft Kcnt County and a spot in Wcsi-i morlmid County. It. Was unknown; if the ofiences involved iiiccndiar-i ,ism or brush burning which went out of control. y Fires only smouldered in the Le- preau-Boniiv River-Musquzish area and were expected to be held in check until heavy rain or snow comes. unless a strong wind rises in the meantime. Another fire, difficult to reach, burned three,’ miles south of Bathurst but no community was reported immedi- ately threatened. Apparentiy not made clear at t e time was: l. That the Quebec report was no more than rumor; 2. That. it could not be confirmed anywhere in Quebec; 3. That it said no more than that Premier Maurice Dup-l lcssis was expected to announce in due course the uncovering some months ago in Montreal of an ai- lcged Communist plot to do "ser- ious harm" to religious buildings in Montreal. Montreal morning made this clear. , Not until noon whcn the circum- stances under which police re- ceived the information clarified was the report put down as en- tirely unfounded and the Church guards were recalled. "We could not take anv chance-ix," staid Capt. Horace Thi- vierge who added that six to eight men guarded the Church premises or patrolled the district close to newspapers famed Dominion Square. Subscription Delivered $6.00. Mail $5.00, other Provinces d: U. B. FIRE CAUSES HEAVY LOSSAT NORTH WILTSHIR Labor Member Expelled From British House Qf Commons’ McNaughton Talks 0n Atomic Warfare World Still Long Way From Push-button Type; Still iio Defence Against Atomic Bomb. ‘ partially ibut it was believed the insurance‘ ‘would be only a $7.00. Two Large , Barns Are Destroyed Two large barns at North Wilt- shire, the property of Berrigsn Pros, were destroyed by fire early last night. Damage was estimated unofficially at approximately $10,- 000. Burned with the barns were four head of pure bred Jersey cows. and the year's crop. including hay, groin, turnips and a considerable quantity of potatoes. The roots and potatoes were stored in the seller under one barn. Origin of the fire was unknown. The loss was understood to be covered by insurance, fraction of the total loss. The fire was discover in the larger of the barns. iOO-foot structure, completed five years ago. Neighbors gathered quickly and formed a bucket brigade in an attempt to save the second building a M-foot-long structure licwever, the tremendous heat in- terfered with thcir- efforts and before long the smaller barn was blazing also. The wind was only light and blew flames away from the dwelling. The smaller barn was also on. the windward side of the big barn. but much of the wall of the letter fell outward and prevented Lrc fighters from keeping up their work. The owners are Morris Berrigan and Artemas Berrigan. The fire was reported to have been discovered by one of the lIYOLhEFS early in the night. Ha went into the smaller building- used as a horse barn-to harness l. horse, and noticed nothing amiss. when he came out s. few min- utes later flames were beginning to break out of the bigvbsrn. Nine head of cattle were remov- ed to safety and it was under- stood that considerable machinery was saved, along with the horses. But everything else was destroy- ed, including 100 sacks of potatoes graded yesterday for market. One observer said he believed the large barn could not be re- placed for less than $5,000, with another $2.000 required to replace the smaller one. ' The fire was visible for miles, with many persons calling the Guardian Office, some from the outskirts of Charlottetown, others from Winsloe and Milton, asking where the fire was located. MANY A Bic. Punvmn “(vans our 1'0 Br. Jusr Anofaea c PunK our.’ g “i? TORONTO. Oct. 30 - Minimum and maximum temperatures; Vancouver 44, 56; Edmonton 19, 46; Regina 30, 48; Wlnnipegfla, 52; Toronto_45, 58; Ottawa 44, 48; Quebec 34. 49; Saint John 39, 40; Moncton 24, 44; Halifax 41, 47; Charlottetown 32, 4i; Sydney 27, 42; Yarmouth 42, 47. HALIFAX, Oct. 30 -- Weather synopsis and official inland fore- casts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office tonight. Synopsis: Northerly winds are bringing cool air from Labrador and Quebec into the Marltimcs Thursday evening. A disturbance oil‘ the United States coast is mov- ing eastward and is expected to remain well south of Nova Scotia. Consequently rain is not expected to reach the mainland but the c.oud will appear over the south- ern sections of the district. Vari- able cloudiness is also to be ex- pected over the windward coasts as moist air from the Gulf reaches the coastline. Forecasts. midnight: Prince Edward Island-Variable cloudiness. Risk of frost in val- leys. A little warmer. North winds 15. I-llgh Friday at Charlottetown 46. lilglh tide this afternoon at 12.03 and tonight at. 11.35. Sun sets this sftenioon at 4.50 and rises tomorrow morning at 6.38. Last quarter moon November 5th, 12.03 P. M. valid until Friday E 22s“- “ ~1-