.% ___ ___ _ __ MAXIMS . OIL MERE MAN \ govern. The King reigns but does not - ,___ Charlottetown Guardian. Two Cents. . , Morning Gllrdlln, Pounded "81. 1\ , S Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JULY 22, 1941 12 PAGES It is vein to seek s remedy for lightning i’ Maxims ', or A A, MERE MAN " Subscription Delivered 88.00. '. Hall ISM, other Provinces A U. l. A. 01.00 -_-__ Pat Sullivan Head oi C.L.S.ll. ls Assaulted l MONTREAL». Juli’ 3i _(CP) — Three men said by police to be lnombers of the Canadian Sea- men's Union were arrested tonight follouiing two attacks within a. half-hour on J, A. (Pat) Sullivan loader of the Canadian Lake Sea- mvns’ Union in the waterfront dis- ifirt. ‘The second attack occurred while police were escorting Sullivan and John Chapman another officer of ' the Sullivan-headed union to a cafe in an effort to identify the mcn who had administered the iilSi. beating The three arrested gave riamcs as: Frank Henry, 20, Joe Davis, 5i, and Frank Daulby. 22. AlLWcre charged with disturbing tile peace by fighting in the street alvhoilgh it was reported that Sul- livan might lay additional charges Baler. Sullivan resigned last March as ‘(Continued on Page 5 031?;- Corning Events "Lot 65 Picnic, July 23rd. “Madam Doyel Readings. "Show, Malpeque, Tuesday, "Show — Morrll, Thursday. "Show, day. "Dance in Auburn School Fri- day, July 25th. Canoe Cove, Wednes- "Boll game and dance in Au- burn School July, 25th. "ice Cream Social, Fredericton Hail, Wednesday, July 23rd. "Dance, Tracadie Hall, July 23rd. Rollie McKenziog Orchestra, ‘ "Dance in Forest Hill Hail Thursday. July 24th. Webster's Orchestra. "Come to Cornwall-York Point Women's Institute Ice Cream Pes- tlral Tuesday, July'22 at Cornwall Hall. "Modern dancing at Leo's Dine snd Dance in Borden, Tuesday, Julv 22. Music by The Modem- flifES. "Regular Dance, Montague Curling Rink every Thursday . Al. Blanchard‘: Orchestra. Modern and Old Time. "Unloading car bulk wheat Wednesday. Thursday and Fri- day. Special off-car price. Bring bags. Livestock Feed Agency. "Dundas Y. P. U. present their B-act play, "Have A Heart" in Vernon Bridge Hall, Wednesday. Jilly 23rd, "In Stock. Potato Sprays Blue-stone, Hydrate Vme, DD.T.. Arscnate of Lime 5r Perenox. Mor- cli Co-operalive. "Opcfl Air Dance. Covehead Rink, Tuesday, July 22nd. Modern and Old Time Dancing, Sound 5y:- icm and Refreshments. "Collecting hogs for Canada Packers Ltd by truck every Thurs- IIY. Phone N. A. Cutoiiffm-Hil- Pfiifilflh. or write me, D, V. McDow- e "Attend Hospital dance held lPillilar Thursday nights. Matthew (c McLean's ‘warehouse. Souris Olrl time dancing, Chaissons Or- chestra. Modern dancing Cliff Peters’ orchestra featuring In! Alexander. "A meeting of the Progressive- Conservatives of Fort Augustus Poll will be held in the school ‘Tuesday evening July 22nd at 2:30 o'clock. If you are l vow‘ —1fldy or gentlemen-we Want loll therei Candidates will be present. i? "Loaditll live Hols l! : Summerside till 1.30 P. M. Kensington till 8 P. M. Bordcr Bagnsll. Hunter River Thllffldly ell day. Elmer Wilmvl’! Brudslbene. Thursday till train time. Trucking service when roads Demiit. MlcEwer-i and Ceseley. "A special meeting of ratepay- IP! of Brackley School District M- 85 will be held in the school- house on mesdsy, July h. at s o'- clock p. In. for the re-considers- tiob s! some business transected Il- the snnuel meeting. xdwsrli Ssillclr, , e1- of g ilfldly their . llliemae Inquiry Stands Adjourned HALIFAX, July 2i —(CP) _ ‘The ‘Transport Department's pra- llminary inquiry into last Wednes- day's collision between the des. troyer Mlcmac and the freighter Yarmouth County was adjourned today but Capt. A. W. Hilton of Yarmouth, N. S., presiding. said it might be reconvened later. Capt. Hilton sirid he had com- _pieted taking evidence from crew members of the freighter and had asked the Department if Navy personnel should ‘give evidence. Pending s. reply from Ottawa the inquiry was adjourned. , The Navy has also held a court of inquiry into the accident. worst ifi the peacetime history of the Canadian Navy, but the evidencn in both courts has been heard in private. ‘ Death toll in the collision is ll, including six dead and five miss- ing, all members of the destroy- er's crew. 0wyer's Bakeries Ltd. Sold to Toronto Firm SAINT JOHN. N.B., July 2I— (C?) - Controlling shares in Dwyer's Bakeries Ltd., Saint John, have been sold to General Bak- eries Ltd., of ‘Ihrontcr Aubrey T. Snodgrass, proprietor of Dwyerb said today. ,. Mr. snodgrass will continue as manager of the bakery. CHILD KILLED BY TRUCK BATHURST. N’. 3-. July 21 — (c?) - Jean, Claude Pitre, three- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pitre was killed today when he rar into the path of an oncoming truck. Coroner L. D Densmore investigated and decid- Llmplng into Halifax harbor, the destroyer 0i i-Wisted steel. Search crews are digging in the s in: after the collision. Six others were killed and 16 inlllfed- ed no inquest was necessary. -Micmac Limps Into Halifax Harbor Two Men Micmac is seen here with its ‘bow a crumlllfld m“! battered bow for the remains of five men miss- ? Critically lniurcd In Accident Two Women Less llllfli Tffliil Al"! Truck In Vernon Lea, l8. of Charlotte- town, sufferirrg flrom concussion, was still unconscious yesterday evening at the Prince Edward Is- land Hospital and Elmer Smith oi Webster's Corner, with internal injuries and shock remained in a serious condition at the Charlotte- - town Hospital as the result of a collision betweerww-Prince Edward Island Libraries truck and the Murray Harbour train. The accident occurred 9.40 yesterday morning Millview crossing. Two others, Miss Grace Camp- bell and Miss Alberta Bryant both of Charlottetown who also were riding in the truck at the time were less seriously hurt. They are at the Charlottetown Hospital. It is understood the Library truck was proceeding east to Annandale when it was hit by the Diesel-powered eastbound train. The force of the impact threw the truck across the tracks and caused it to knock down a. railway switch before it careened from e telephone post and finally came to rest about ten feet from the tracks on the east side. Lea, who, it is understood, was riding in the rear of the truck, was thrown through the roof a distance of 342 feet into a nearby grain field. Miss Bryant was said to have been found lying on the ground directly behind the truck. The other two, Smith and Miss Campbell were found trapped in the front seat. The Library truck was proceed- ing to Annandale to move library supplies to Souris when the acci- dent occurred. . about at the Wallace's WASHINGTON, July 21 -— (AP) -—The House of Representatves committee on tin-American sctivl- ties asked a witness on Commun- zst activities today for his records on "The New Republic" magazine, of which Henry A. Wallace is edi- tor. "llhe witness, Walter. S. Steele, chairman of the national security committee of the Armericsn Coali- tion ~of Patriotic Civic and Frat- ernal Societies, said he would be "glad" to supply them Questioned by Rep. Karl E- Mundt (Rep-SD). Steele nid the New , '-" is flnamced llmost 98 per cent by foreign capital, and that Wallace Pappesrs to be the mouthpiece" for the Progressive Citisens of America. He ail-led this organisation to be e reorglnl- zgtion of “political Red fronts" iri- tended to penetrate other political par-tie; or to launch a third party. Replying to Steele's testimony, Michael Straight. 011111101101‘ B! Th0 New Republic, said in s statement in New York: "These are stale charges which have been brought up repeatedly end which have been repeatedly disproved. Representative J. Per- nell Thomas must have heard that The New Republic is about to print an article about him." Rep. Thomas (Rep. DJ.) is heed of the un-Americsn activities com- ll-littes. Steele else sold the group is eon- nected with one in California heed- ifllmes. - . as by Robert xeruiy which lies Reveal , Records on proposed Wallace for president. On other topics, Steele testified: l. Mon wiho were war-time el- Derts on liomlc power since have taught on the subject. in C n- ist schools in this country. 2. The- Communists have devel- oped two new teowiquee in the ee- tablirhlng of radio outlets and spreading of propaganda through recordings. 3. Several of whet he termed "red-frontec" radio commentator- have left the sir for one reason or anothsnHe named among them: Robert St. John. Johannes Staci, selden Menefee, and Prank King- on. Still on the air, he said, are Sid- neg Rogers and Norman Corwln. teele also told the committee: 1. There are about 5,000,000 Com- munists or members of Commim- let front organizations in the United States; 4.800.000 in the fronts, . ‘llwo months ego he gave the alnDepnrts-nent a list of 2,000 soi- dlfll. alleged members of the party or of fronts, The comlml we decid- ed against making the list public without a further check. B. Many Communist sympathis- ers are in the services reserves. subject to service in another war, although their "loyalty is to the Soviet Union." Steele testified the Communists have established party schools at New York. Ben Francisco. Holly- wood, Boston and Cleveland and use them for propaganda purposes. Collision At Mlllview. g ii. B. llas New Seed Potato Contract SAINT JOHN. N. 8.. July 21-(CP)--New,llrunswiclr po- tato growers were not quite lure today how they were go- lng.to fare under a new eon- tract from Argentina for 320,- 000 crates of seed potatoes. H. C. Greenlew, Millvills potato grower, said the mar- keting prospects were still in the “speculative stage" and added that in previous years the Argentine Government had taken as many as 750,000 crates of New Brunswick seed stock. In addition to the New Brunswick seed ordered, Argen- tine officials have announced that they would purchase 80,- 000 crates of White Rose po- tatoes from British Columbia" farmers. The crates contain about I12 1-2 pounds each. ll. S. Gas Prices To" Advance hall-cent HALIFAX, July 21—(CP)—An increase of one half cent a gal- lon in the price of gasoline sold by Imperial Oil Ltd., to Nova Scotia motorists was forecast to- day as the Public Utilities Board granted the boost at the wholesale level. It was expected the increase would be passed on to the con- sumer because retailers said their spread was insufficient for them tc absorb any of the higher price. The decision is effective Aug. 1 and, if and when, the increase is passed to the consumer most Nova Scotia motorists 'will pay 3C cents a gallon for grade t gasoline and 84 cents for grade 2. Pall r» Bomb llerigin Tonill TRAIL. B. 0.. July 21-(CP)— An unsuccessful attempt was made early today to dynamite the tomb of Peter Verlgin, famed Doukho. bor leader, at Brilliant. B. C. The blast failed to dsmege the tom-b_ overlooking the Columbh River, but caused considerable ‘will’! in the surrounding arse. $200,000 Fire In Ont. Co-operatlve SUNDERLAND, Ont, July Bl —(CP)—Losswng ‘ ““il.t lsctween $135,000 and $200,000 to- night in a fire that raged in titer quarter acre farmer's to-operu- tive buildings. just completed to- day. Sunderlnnd is about 35 miles northeast of Toronto. A. Aylsworth, manager of the (to-operative, who made the es- timate of the loss, said the one- storey wooden buildings and the groin elevators WGrc sgtoiiil 10b8- Firemen fought off a threat to the Canadian National Railways station. the station house and railway freight cars. One cai- caught fire and was lost. Leonnrd Oldfield, a baker in the COW!!! said the fire started in a hot box in a motor at the WP "i “"3 91°‘ valor shaft. Council To Correspondence Between Council And Commission Fbllowing is the text of the cor- respondence read and discussed at last night's special meeting of the City Council: "July l7, i947. "Commissioners of Sewers and Water Supply, "Charlottetown. “Dear Sirs: Messrs. Cullen And Clark Are lie-Nominated \ Mr. Eugene Cullen. M. L, A.. of Charlottetown and Mr. Russell Clark, M. l... A., of Mt. Stewart, were renomiiiated at last night's. Liberal Convention in Mount Stewart to contest the Third Dis- trict of Queen's as Liberal candl- dates for Councillor and Assem- blyman respectively. Mr. Clark's nomination was moved by W. L McEachern, Mer- maid, and seconded by OW. New- scri. ‘Brackley. Mr. Cullen's nomination was moved by Charles Ellis, Dunstaff- page. seconded by Joseph Doyle, Mt. Herbert. and supported by Mr. Lemuel Jay. ' Included among those who spoke at the Convention were Premier Jones. Hon. G. H. Barbour Attor- zrey General P. A, Large. Hon. Thomas Cullen. Speaker of the Legislature, Mr. Ducald MacKln- non. and Mr. .1. L. Dvllilils- M?’ No other names were brought before the Convention. Colonial War in llldonesia Continues BATAIIIVIA, Java, July 21 —<AP) "I have been instructed by the City Council to write you and re- quest that you furnish the City Council with a written report on the break in your main water supply line, which occurred quite recently. " I am, Sirs, "Yours very truly, "(Slgnedl J. A. Fullerton, "City Clerk." "July i8. 1047. “Mr. James Fullerton "City Clerk, Charlottetown. "Dear Sir: "Replying to your letter of July l7. i947. “The Commissioners of Sewers and Water Supply are an elective body selected and elected by the citizens to manage the Department of Water Supply and Sewer system of the City of Charlotte- town. Annually, they submit to the citizens a report of their act- ivities and a financial statement. The Mount Edward Road incident will be referred to in the usual annual report when submitted for I947. In, the interval, this Depart- ment wiil be managed in the same efficient and satisfactory manner as it has been conducted during the past fifty-nine and one-half years. "Yours faithfully, "Commissioners of Sewers and Water Supply. "(Signed) J. A. Webster, “Chairman? "July 2i. i947 "Mr. J. A. Webster, Chairman, ‘Com-missionefi of sewers Water Supply, "Charlottetown. "Dear Sir: "I have to hand your answer to our request for a written report on the recent disruption of the and -Netherlands planes “‘ ' " In- donesian airfields in Java and Sumatra tolay, and President Suekarilo of the Indonesian Re- public said Dutch military might was attacking by land, see and air. The Dutch. claiming their mili- tary forces were taklng "police action" against the republic, urged ‘Indonesians to lay down "w" arms. Republican officials accused the Dutch of starting a full-scale "Colonial war." Indonesian troops were ‘ordered t9 "counter-attack" wherever they were attacked. Three Killed In Train-Truck Crash BADEN, Ont" July 2i - (0,) — Three young. men were killed to- day when a Oanadisn National Railways rnai train crashed into the side of a. light truck in which th were travelling within the lim ts of this village, ll miles cast of Kitchener. Killed were gruber, 14; Ray Snider, i2. Ernest Roth. 22 all qf Baden. BRAZILIAN AVIATOR DIES Glen S-zhwartzen- and JAV, Brazil, July 2i - (AP) - Joao Bibeiro de Barron, noted Bre- zllian aviator, died here List night. first flight by a. South American pilot across In I90’! he made the the south Atlantic, _ flying from Rome to Brazil. - (Continued on Page s 001747“ Fog elays Search For Missing Plane HALIFAX, July 21. - (OP) _ Search and rescue craft were standing by here tonight wait- ing for a coastal fog to lift and enable them to resume the search tor two missing naval airmen who disappeared in their Firefly air- craft Thursday 40 miles east of here off Nova Scotia's rugged eastern shore, The fog which has hung over the area for more than a week closed in today as the R, C. A. F. vras to send eight planes to Join two naval vl-ssels and fishermen who have ben searching 01¢ since the plane failed to return Full ExplanationFrom Water, Commission from a homing exercise. (By Carter L. Davidson) JERUSALEM. July 2i —(AP)- British authorities placed 90.000 Jews in most parts of Jerusalem under dusk to dawn house arrest today as a new wave of terror gripped the Holy Land. The night. began with a new outbreak of violence when a Jeep was blasted from the highway at Haifa. Three British soldiers and a Jewish interpreter were injur- ed seriously. The Jeep was carry- ing n loudspeaker system announ- cing curfew instructions to resi- dents. With a quarter of its Jewish population under 10-hour nightly curfew—in Haifa. Jerusalem and Nsthenya-the Holy Lend was more tense than in many months. One of the latest incidents was the attempted sabotage of the Iraq Petroleum Company's pipe- line near Haifa on the historic plain of lhdrseion. Only sparse de- tails were availlble, but a Gov- 90,000 Jews Placed Under House Arrest Press For Decision to press for an unequi- vocal answer from the chairman of the City Water Commissioners to the City Council's written request of July i7 that information be furnished it respectinz the recent breakdown in the City's water supply was unanimously expressed at a special meeting of the City Council last night. Ali Councillors except Coun. N. W. Lcwther who was absent from the meeting were in their seats when His Worship, Mayor B. Earle MacDonald opened the meeting bv reading a letter. dated July I0. which the City Clerk had received from Mr. J. A. Webster, chairman of the commissioners of sewers and water supply (This letter and oth- er relevant correspondence on the question appears elsewhere in this issue.) City Councillor W. R, LePage said he considered the letter a "girect insult to the City Coun- c _.. Coun. P‘, C Dougan-"The way I look at it, gentlemen. is that we are elected by the people of Char- lottetown to run their civic busi- ness. It. seems to me, therefore. that since we are responsible to them for all that takes place in the City affecting their welfare, that we should have a clear-cut, definite statement on this water question from the Water Commis- sioners." Coun. J. D Stewart: "I agree heartily with Coun. Dougsn's re- rnar ." Coun. J. G. MacDonald: "I _cer- tainly do also. The citizens are entitled to know just what. caused the recent breakdown and also to have some reassurance that such occurrences do not occur again if their avoidance is physically pos- sible." Coun. M. A. Farmcr-"It is to (Continued on Page ll Col. 2) __,,._______ Everything 0. li. 0n Plane After Trouble . HALIFAX, Jilly 2i - (OW-A wesobound Constellation aircraft on s trans-Atlantic flight tonight reported "everything ok" after sending out a message earlier re- porting one of its four engines was "out and three were running rot- ten." The second message, relayed to the R.C.A.F.’s Search and Rescue Unit here said the trouble had been due in short circuits and the plane was proceeding normally towards the Newfoundland sir- port at Gander from Shannon, Eire. The position of the plane, es given in the first message, would have placed it about 660 miles east of Gander. Search and Rescue said it had no information on the number of passengers or the airline except that it was "American." CHILD DRJOWNED SAINT JOHZN. N.B., Jilly 21 — (CF) — Lela Rosemary Hamer, li- year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harrier of Floral Perk, New York, drowned in the Keimebecasls River near here yesterday. Titre young victim. who could not swim, had been wading and drowned in deep. water before help cmild reach her. ernment snnoumement five hours after the incident seid eight Jews hsd been arrested. Explaining the new end greater security precautions. authorities said the Jewish underground had three separate "excuses" for new acts of violence. Foremost among these was the mystery, so fer as Jews are con- cerned, of the whereabouts of three damnation ships bearing the 4.500 passengers of the former Chesapeake Bay ferry, President Warfield, intercepted nesr the Egyptian coast Friday. Other reasons for Jewis retalia- tion were the hanging sentences still pending against three Irgun men convicted in the Acre Prison raid of May l, and the disappear- ance and presumed death t/wo months ago of the Stern Gang member, Alexander Eubowitz. Rubowitz may have met his end st the hands of s special police group which took revenge on its cwn in- .C.L. PLANS T0 CLEAR colvlllllllilsisiliolll ilANKS a... smasher’ In Ranks of Canadian Labor By IOHhVLQBLANC UITNWA. July 2.1 - iCP) —-A showdown with Communist; with- lri its ranks was declared tonighi by the Canadian Congress of Labor. Suggesting that Reds wrthih the Union have been playing bull with the allegedly Communist-domina- ted United Textile Walkers o! America (A.F.L.), the Congress de- clared it was demanding “an imp mediate stop to this disloyalty." This disclosure came about three months after J.A, _(Fot) Sullivan, secretary-treasurer of the Trades and Labor Congrrss of Canada, had resigned that job and his pres- idency o! the Canadian Seamenk Union ('I‘.L.C.) on the ground the C.S.U. was dominated by Reds, The Sullivan resignation and m’ concurrent dscldsures of Corn- munism within Canadian labol ranks tvas labor's blggert bomb- shell in years, but the C.C.L. an.- nouncement tonight ran second to it. While the Congress I-Tlllol-lllfb merit was couched in guarded terms, it gave sure confirmation to reports current for some months (Corltinued on Peg. I Col. A) Argentine Plane Crashes, 17 Dead BUENOS ARIES. July 21-(0? --'I'he Argentine Government an- nounced today that 17 persons, eight cf them civilians, were kill- ed when a Douglas DC-i military transport crashed while taklni off from El Palomar military air- field here. Previous unofficial estimates had placed the death toll It as high as 50. The plane crashed as it became airborne and smashed into a crowd of spectators lining the edge of the field to watch Argentine Air Force manoeuvres. 80hr iciifsas‘ ,. Crux some lino 'll\r.\\\ nostst __ Rabuirt but’ host, 1cm DENY ‘flaws HAD Tesla time, ‘ Liilfab . -- l/ l‘ K TORONTO. July 2i — (C?)- Minlmum and maximum temper- atures: Vancouver 52, '14; Edmon- ton 50. 8i; Regina 4i, 80; Winni- peg 4.3, '16; Toronto 59. 'll; Ottawa 56, ‘l4; Montreal 6i, 80; Quebec 56, 82; Saint John 5'1. 'll; Mcrictcil 62, 71; Halifax 56, es; Charlotte- town 61. 71; Sydney 60, 70; Yar- mouth 57. 68. HALIFAX, JuLv 2i-(CP)-—Wel- t-her synopsis and official inland forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office at midnight tonight. Synopsis: There were showers over the Southern Maritimes Mon- day as the warm, moist air which had been pushed almost out of the district began to move north- ward again. The fog did not quite leave the south coast during the day and at night it began to spread inland. In the northern regions the weather was fine most of the day. However a band of rain moving eastward from Mont- real will affect these regions Tues- day. Otherwise not much change is expected. Temperatures below freezing were reported from North- ern Ontario Monday morning. Forecasts. valid until Tuesday midnight: Prince Edward Island: Mostly overcast with intermittent rain or drizzle. Fog patches at night. Little change in temperature. Light winds. High ‘Tuesday at Char- lottetown '12. ' High tide this afternoon at 1.49 end tonight at 2.49. rises wmerrovw morning at 4.34. First subtle;- moon July 24th, 5.54 P. M. aizlznmerside tide eighteen min- lt-iative. I utes later than Charlottetown. Sun sets this evening at 1.39 and -