‘is/EPTEMBER 12. r,_ Louis Signs ilontract For llon-title Bout NEW YORK, Sept. 11 -(AP)- Heavyweight champion Joe Loués. through his co-rnanager Mairsh ll MrleS. today signed contracts for hi. sc-cailed lo-round nori-tltl bout against Jersey Joe Walcoti a “adlgnn Square Garden. Nov. 14. Males said Louis understands ;hnt if he should be knocked out in his bout. he will lose the heavy- “fight title. However. the c011- flcls stlpuiatrd that it will be “a ill-round. non-tl-ile bout." all par- {lcipantg having agreed to this in lrrordance with the New York 5....» ruie that Itie boats m is i5 rounds. Royals Lose Third in Row To Syracuse SYRACUSE. N. Y.. Sept. ll- iCPi/SXTBCUSE Chiefs took a com- manding 8-0 lead in their sessil- linal international League Clover- nors' Cup playoff series by whip- ping Montreal Royals 7-2 tonight. The Chiefs need but one more vic< tory in the best-cf-seven playoff to clinch a chance to meet the winner of the Buffalo-Jersey City series for the league playoff title. Claude Corbitt. little Syracuse shortstop, thrilled the capacity crowd of il.0l'i by collecting three hits including a triple, and drove in {our runs. Hank Sauer hit a hose-empty homer in the eighth, his second of the series and his 52nd of the year. Young Herm Wehmeier went the route and scattered eight hits. be- ing in real trouble only in the fourth, when three hits, starting with Ed Stevens’ triple, netted the gluiyais‘ two runs and tied the score briefly at 2-all. illics Two Up In Finals Vice went two up on the Alerts when they won from their rivals 1T to 6 yesterday 1n the Knights ll Columbus finale. Trailing 1-6 going into the eighth the Vics staged a batting rally that caught the losers fiat footed, they ran in six runs and in their half of the ninth went on another spree of batting that netted them five more runs and 'the ball game. For the winners Don Drew and Cecil Roberts gave smart support to their moundsman, Ronnie Le- Clair_ while for the losers Harold - Pineau and R. Clarke gave Kenny Julie on the mound, good backing. The Vics have only to win an- Qjiiiher to give them the champion- ship oi the Centre. However the LAlerts are not out yet and claim Jthcy will be in there until the last but 1947 They lined up as follows: Vlcs: G. Joseph, M. MacDonald, C. Connors, D. Drew. R. LeClair. J C. Roberts, L. Crabbe, H. Mur- '. liaghan, A. Coady, R. Drew, W. Le- l Clair. Alerts: H. Clarke. K. Tulle. H. i Pineau, D. Clarke. D. Nicholson, - E. Gallant, D. McNally, P. LeClair. “ E. Kays. o'clock. The girls comprising the All Stars will divide up this evsnlns st 5.46 for an exhibition game. I Kramer llas Dloso Dalila Tournament NEW YORK, Sept. 11—Tennis player Jack Kramer saw 800.000 flying right out of the window today, and he went through a bad hour and sweated plenty before he manasea to haul back the sr- rant greenbaoks. The near disaster occurrsdwhen he locked horns in the fourth round of the United States nat- ~' lonal championships at Forest Hills with James Brink, tousle- wirgd southpaw from Seattle. as . The supposedly invincible 'Jaks” Bnslly pulled himself together and won out by scores of l-i. l-O. 0-7, ‘l-l. _ The B0 grand which Kramer IIW exiting in the third set re- llresents conservatively the money l" flinch lo reap within the next year as a professional. But lvsfything is predicated upon his Wlnnins his second straight nat- ional title and standing out alone . lmflfll the world's amateurs. :2. Tom Brown of San hancisco came throng today in a hoineric "Millie agai t Geoff Brown of Australia, s-s, 4-0, 10-8, 6-1. - John Brosnwloh, Australia's m‘. ' 0 l. star, and ‘Oanfnar loy THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Set Provisional Dates For World Series Classic CINCINNATI Sept. il-(APJ- The World Series will begin Tues- day, Sept. 30 in Yankee Stadium if the New York American League club and the Brooklyn team of the National League win the pennants in their respective circuits. Should the St. Louis Cardinals win in the National League and the Yankees in the IAmerican, however, the series would open Oct. l at Yankee Stadium. Two games would be played there. Oct. 3 would be an open date to enable the club to go to St. Louis. Games would be played lnSt. Louis on Oct. 4. 5 and d. Should additional play be needed Oct. '1 would be an open date so the clubs could go back to New York for the end of th: series. if the Dodgers and Yankees are the World Series contenders, the first two games will be played at Yankee Stadium. the next three at Ebbets Field, Brooklyn and the final two, if needed. at Yankee Stadium. The decisions were reached at a meeting today between baseball Commissioner A. B. Chandler and representatives of the leading clubs in the two pennant chases. Former Mar. Athlete Passes MONTREAL. Sept. 11 —(CP)— Jimmy Humphrey. formerly one of the best sprinters and all-round anhletes in the Maritime Provinces. died here yesterday of a heart at- tack at the wheel of his car. He was 71. Employed at one time in the pas_ senger department of the Inter- colonial Railway at Moncton. NB, l-Iumpihrey was later transferred to Montreal and retired on pension a few years ago. ln the late nineties and at the turn of the century, Humphrey was regarded as the fieetest sprint- er in Maritime C nada and on one occasion establish a mack of 10 seconds defeating Frank Stephens of Halifax, another noted ruinner. in a 100-yard contest. . Humphrey played baseball and hockey wi-th Moncton teams and also was a lacrosse and football player. Three sons survive. Chandler Silent After Coniab With MacPhail CINCINNATI. 89M. 11 — (A?) - Baseball Commissioner AB. Chandler practised again today what he has been trying to preach to [any MacPhall-silence-after a conference with the president of New York Yankees in connection with statements MacPhail made about that forbidden subject, Leo Durocher. ' As was the case when MacPhail was called on his green carpet last April for criticizing the suspension for the season of the Brooklyn manager, the biig sihot of baseball declined to discuss today's confab ‘with the fiery Yankee president, which folio-wed a meeting to plan for the 104'! World Series. Interrupted in his talk about the Series by a question as to what the score was with the New Ycrk Yan- kee president, Chandler cried: "That's all: thats all." - MacPhall also was silent as to what took place. Chandler began an investigation several days ago into statements attributed to MacPhall last week concerning the Durccher case. The New Yorker was quoted as saying it was a 100-to-1 shot that Durocher would not be back with the Dodgers next season, and add- ing: "D0 you think that Durocher woud have been suspended i! Rickey (Branch Rickey, president of the Brooklyn club) hadn't want- ed him suspended?" When Chandler suspended Dur- ocher on April 9 he issued an or- der that no one in the controversy involving Durocher. MacPihail and Rickey could discuss the subject. Whether MacPhail is to be pun- ished lor statements he denied making for publication or whether the matter will be smoothed over remained a moot question tonight. PAGE NINE Fllchock llot Eligible For llamilton Team UITAWA. Bent. ll-(CM-The executive committee of the Inter- Pfovlllvifll Rugby Football Union has voted to automatically rule a. defeat every Elms Hamilton '11;- crs play with Frankie Filchock. their star American import. D. Wes Brown. Big Four secretary, announced tonight. Brown said that only the Ham- ilton representation on the com- mittee dissented from the main decision. Others voting were Ottawa Rough Riders. Montreal Alouettes and Toronto Argonauts. Decision of the committee came in a hastily-taken poll which foi- lowed the announcement’ by Ham- ilton football club officials they in- tended to use the former New York Giant professional star regardless of I.R.F.U. rulings. The swift-passing Czech was banned indefinitely in the United States lest season for failing to re- port a bribe offer. m-iii-i- Baseball Results NATIONAL LEAGUE First (13 innings) Boston 200 000 100 000 0-3 11 0 Pittsburgh 101 000 100 000 1-4 13 2 Sain and Camelli; Higbe and Howell. Second: Boston ".400 100 102p 8 14 0 Pittsburgh .....301 120 03x—10 13 0 Volselle, Lanfranconi, Wright, Beasley and Masi; Bonham. Sin- gleton and Kluttz. New York 000 011-2 i) 0 Cincinnati . 010 011 00x—8 ‘I 2 Post. Koslo and Cooper; Raf- fensberger and Lamanno. AMERICAN LEAGUE First: Cleveland 001 140 130-40 15 1 Boston .002 121 200_ 8 12 1 Black. Klieman, Dorset, Steph- ens and I-Iegan: Deal. Murphy, Zuber. Harris and Baits. Second: Cleveland .. Boston 025 10x-8 12 1 (Calledmat end ‘t... 5v. innings). Yanks A Step Nearer With Win Over Tigers New York Yankees moved a step nearer the American League flag yesterday when they divided a doubleheader with Detroit Tigers, winning the second galme 11-5 at- ter Hal Newhouser had beaten them 7-2 in the opener. Yankees’ split. together with the dividing of a pair of games by Boston Red Sox and Cleveland. re- duced the magic number to four. That is the combination of games Yanks must win or Red Sox must lose to insure the flag for Yanks. Yanks spotted Tigers four runs in the first inning of the nightcap, then came on to score four runs in the third and six in the fourth victory to qualify for a meeting in tomorrow's quarter-finals. Mul- loy ousted Torsion Johansson of Sweden, 8-3, 0-2, 6-3, while Brom- wich annihilated Eddie Moylan of San Ilmancisco, d-2, 0-1, 6-2. Meantime nMrs. Nancy Bolton of Australia,‘ looked impressive in hanging a 6-4, 6-1 defeat on Mrs. Patricia Canning Todd of Hidden volley. Oalif.. ‘P their quarter- ,covsusA PURSE mllliami. sash racked. an our is». THE PARLOR TRACK Big Two - September 17-18 S4500 -' m runsss g_- sssoo -CLASSES— \ FlEE-FOR-ALL-PURSE $T,(XN.DD 1:24 PACE STAKE (Closed) VALUE $1,000.00 JUNIOR FlEE-FOR-ALL-CLASSIFIED-TROT 8r PACE- lnnlngs to win. Joe DiMaggio. held hitless by Newihouser in the opener, connec.- ed for his 19th home run, a double and single to lead the Yankees. Boston Red Sox slugged their way to a 5 1—2-lnnlng 8-3 victory over Cleveland Indians in the sec- 0nd game of an American League doubleheader alter the Indians won tihe opener 10-8. The second game, called because of darkness, was a victory for Dave Ferriss who was making his first start since 24, after being spiked accidentally by a teammate, Joe Gordon set a Cleveland rec- ord for home runs by a right hand- ed batter by polling his 27th of the year tn the opener in which he drove in six runs. Catcher Nlatt Baits. “called from Toronto, caught his first major League bail game and got five hm in a row. two‘ in the opener and three in each of his three trips to the plate in the sec- ond game. Matt homered for his first ma]- or League hit in the first game's sixth inning. o .m§' l! Day Meet $500.00 5 CLASSIFIED EVINTlS-NDDDD EACH’ The Victoria Driving Club vlll present rile following prism- S38.D0 to the driver of the hone peeing the fastest mile. $31M to the driver of the hone trotting rho fastest mile. $11M to the caretaker of the hone pacing the fastest mile. ' STUD to the caretaker of the tom trotting the forms mile. Entries close September Iiill with’ i CHARLES WILLIS, Manager Confined lace Track. AUB. . Gettel, Llnde. Groth. Gromek and Hagan. Ruszkowski; Ferries and Baits. First: " ‘ " 001 002 400-1 S 0 New York D 0 Newhouser and Swift: Shea, Drews. D. Johnson and I-Iouk. Second: Detroit 400 000 100- B 10 2 New York .. 004 B01 001-11 1d I Overmire. Benton. Trout and Wagner; Wenlofl, Bevens and Lol- lar. St. Louie 020 D00 000-Z 8 1 Wsshlnizmn 000 000 coo-o e l Zoldak. Mvuncrief and Moss; Haefner. Candini and Evans. Chicago . 300 012 010 '1 18 D Philadelphia .. 001000 020 l B I Haynes. Gebrian and Tresh; Coleman, Savage and Rosar. INTERNATIONAL PLAYOFFS Jersey City s00 011 000 0-5 9 1 Buffalo 010 I00 0J2 1-6 12 l (10 innings) Cain. Ayers and Yvars; Shirley, I-Iausmanh. Gray and Mordarski.. Buffalo leads best of seven ser- ies. 3-0). llerman May Be Dusted From Pirates’ Team PITTSBURGH, Sept. 11 ——(AP)—- Fl‘ L Bi-lly Herman, who may be facing the ax because of Pittsburgh Pirates‘ sad showing. bent his back for the blow today by refusing "to allbP-although the club makeup gives him reason to seek a reprieve. “I wasn't an alibi player and I'm not In alibi mqgiagcr," aali Her-man, regarded as one of base- ball's greatest infielders during a 19-year playing career which took him to Chicago, Brooklyfii and Bos- ton in the National League before he earns here as manager. His club is wallowing in seventh place a half game out of the cellar. "Unti-l I talk with Mr. McKinney (Frank McKinney. Pirate president) I haven't anything to say," l-ier- man went on, "I've done my best -hhat’s all I've ever done for 20 years. I never loafed a day as a player and I've never leafed as a manager. I'm perfectly willing to shoulder anyblarne if the owner- ship believes it Qiould be pointed my "w. McKinney said in Indianapolis Wbdnelday he was prepared to bu! up Billy's two-year contract by paying the 828.000 due Herman for next year if he decides the Buccos‘ plighbis the manager's fault. Mc- Ki-nney said he was "bitterly dis- appointed" in the club. IyTlsaOlIwlhlPreI Lawson Lille, 26-year-old San Franciscan blasted Canadian open golf records when he shot 72 holes in 271 strokes at 8t. Andrews. Tor- onto, 11 years ago today. Giving pai- a beating in every round. the burly shoemaker finiiied eight strokes up on Jinlny ‘Thomson. Shawnee- on-Delaware ace. Tote Against Financing Di Newspaper GLACB BAY, NS, Sept. 11... (CH-The membership of District 26 United Mine Workers (C.C.L.) ihad voted almost 2 to 1 tonight against continued financing of 34W their newcgiaper, the Glace ly union-operated dolly Gazette. in Canada. 0f the 30 locals voting, only two, Caledonia and Victory in the Glace Bay area. cast their ballots in favor of continued subsidlzatlon of the eight-page newspaper. Ten other locals, most of them the big ones. ballotted agalmst. Of 3,601 votes cast. 2,338 said "no" to til-ie question: "In view of the loss entailed in operating the Glace Bay Gazette during the past year, the strike period included, are you prepared to finance its continued publication?" "Yes" was returned by 1,263 miners. Freeman Jenkins, managing ediit- o-r of the Gazette and District President of the U.M.W., was not immediately available for comment but Adaun Scott. general secretary. said "the vote certainly indicates they don't want the paper contlin- lied." "There will be no statement to- night but we hope Mr. Jenkins will be able lo make one tomorrow." he added, Mr. Scott was asked whether the U.M.W. had been approached by any interests on tihe possibility 0i purchasing the newspaper. but he would not comment. Neither would he say anything on the future pub- llcatlon plans. Approve Report Despite Soviet Opposition By Francis W. Carpenter LAKE SUCCESS. NY. Sept. 11 —-(AP)-—Tihe Unit/ed Nations Atom- ‘rc Energy Commission disregarded bitter Russian opposition today ant’ approved its second report stating general principles for creation and operation of an lntemational atom- ic control agency. The roll-call vote was 10 to 1. Russia's Andirei A. Gromyko said "no" and Poland abstained. Canada, the United States, fiance, Britain, Brazil, China, Be-l- glvim, Australia. Colombia and Syria made up the majority. The ballot came after the Unit- ed States‘ Frederick H. Osborn answered a volley of Russian ol-iarges with a counter-charge that the Soviet Union had impeded the work cf the Commission since its start 15 months ago. verses policy-any atomic treaty based on the principles approved by the majority Ln this report. Drooketl Gambling Layout Uncovered police raiding squad today up the biggest crooked city, police said, when they burst into a Park Avenue Hotel suite and found a swindler’; paradise of lo ed dice, trick mirrors and card t pplng buzzer devices. Detective Capt. Franklin Dunne said the elaborately-rigged suite was in the fashionable Hotel Mar- as workmen and bellhops. Police said they found hundreds system be- tools and an electrical whereby one gambler. sittlnfl hind a special one-sided cards an opponent was holding. Electrical contact was confederate. Four mevn. one gambling figure, were custody. Set Dates For First Meetings UITAWA, Sept. li-(CP) —II- itlal meetings of the regional ad- visory committees of the Fisheries Prices Support Board_ in session here since last Monday, will be held this autumn at Moncton, Winnipeg and Vancouver, Stewart Bates, acting chairman, and de- puty minister of fisheries, said today. The regional committees, con- cerned with interpreting regional needs to the board. which, itself ia concerned with broad national policy, will discuss poblems relat- ed to their work and their own part in the prices support program. The program -takes its authority from the Fisheries Prices Support Board Act, designed for the sup- port of prices of fisheries products during the transition from war to peace. The “ ‘ eeting of the east. coast advisory committ has been set roi- sept. 10. Mr. Bates presid- ing at all meetings. Members of the board will sit with committees from their own areas. I Itll PHILADELPHIA. Sellt. Ii old victim of a rare kidney silent. has been in hospital to hospital. The result showed clearly that Russia would veto-unless she re- NEW YORK, Sept. 11 -(AP)—A broke gambling layout ever uncovered in New York guery. The raid followed two weeks of sleuthing-by detectives disguised of pairs of loaded dice. carpenters mirror. could signal his confederate what made throughspecial shoes worn by the known taken into (AP) - Ralph Mathias. teven-Ssllll- . c five years. But yesterday was his birth- ly and he was permitted to spend t at. hccne. Today he had to return To Prevent LONDON. Sept. 11 —(AP) ._ Hugh Dalton, oihancellor of the ex- chequer. told 30D financial experts from 4.4 nations today that Eur- ope's battered economy qgrrnq, p, restored wl-tthout outside help. Declaring “the tides of 1m are 104$ Tum“!!! Dill." he appealed to directors of the International Bank and Monetary Fund to provide some of the financial assistance he said was necessary m’ prevgmf, "economic collapse and social a“. solution." "Each nation can, and must, go a great way along the road l... re- covery through its own efforts," he sald.ln formally opening the bank and funds second annual meeting. “But, unaided, most can't go all the way." Dalton did not indicate whether he would press for revision of the world bank chairter to permit loans for purchase of consumer goods and foods. Rumors persisted that Britain would seek such a change to tide her over her dollar famine, but John J. McCloy, American president of the balnk, declared yes- terday the question had not been raised by the chancellor. At that time McCloy, explaining that bank loans were restricted to "productive enterprises." said ilw could not be used as stopgap meas- ures pending fonnatlo-n of a Mar- shall plan, "While we aire meeting in Lon- don," Dalton said, "the represent- ives of many nations are meeting in Paris to prepare a plan in re- sponse to tihe bold and generous in- itrative of Mr. Marshall. This urg- ent effort to avert an econcrnic catastrophe which. if it were allow- ed to begin, would soon engulf us ail, calls for many contributory ap- proaches. One such approach is through the discussions in Paris. Another is through our discussions here in London." Dhange Df Dfliccrs Dn Canadian Druiser OTTAWA, Sept. 11 -(CP)—Be- cause of "grievances" of the crew, tiriere has been a change of exe- cutive officers on the Canadian Cruiser H.M.C.S. Ontario, now on the West Coast foliolwing post- commissioning trials, Naval Ser- vice Headquarters announced to- night. Headquarters did not detail the “exchange in executive officer." but it was learned that Cmdr. J.V. Brock of Winnipeg has been replac- ed by acting Cmdr. P.D. Budge, D. 8.0. There was n0 elaboration beycnd a ISO-word statement on a “report of crew dissatisfaction on board tihe cruiser," which headquarters de- clined to amplify. llewsmen Receive Suspended Sentence I HULL. Que. Sept. 11 —(CP)—- Three Ottawa newspaper photo- graphers were gi-ven suspended sentence after they pleaded 811ml? in Recorder's Court today to charg- es of causing a disturbance during attempts to photograph the mim- ager of a robbed bank. T. V. Little of the Ottawa Jour- nal, and Douglas Gall and Basil Day, representing the Ottawa Citizen. chased Gerard Caron, manager of the Ba-nque Provinciale du Canada. actress a street and into a. drug store after the bank was robbed of $3.000. They were arrest- ed in the drug store. still attempt- ing to get Mr, Cali-en's picture. A small crowd gathered to watch tlhe minor skirmish. Dontinue Search (By The Canadian Press) BUCTOUCKE. N. B.. SCPL 11- Pollce tonight continued their search for two girls who escaped last night or early this morning from the Kent County Jail at nearby Rlchlbucto. The girls. veronica Wilson, whom police said was a former resident of Burlington, Vt, and Irene Doucet, formerly of Buctouche. were taken into custody here yes- terday and moved to R-ichibucto to be held on charges of vagrancy. Both girls had been living in Moncton. N. B., police said. \ ales neighbor. Belly \""l 9"” Kea of their son tar... in the U. B. Financial Aid Necessary Praparingto face her husband in a Kitchen er. seen in Detroit with her rteodmshter. Cynthia W P-r Mrs. McKee, l1 Collapse Mrs. librcelsior, Minn.. is unopposed as Leo Hutton (above) of candidate for president of the American Legion Auxiliary. she l5 Shllw“ dim!“ 9- Dfess confer- ence Just before the convention 211215111111’ opened in _New York ll. B. Forest Fire l llow llnilcr Dontrol MONCTON, N.B., Sept 11 (CP) - Forest ranger John Mor- ton tonight said a forest fire which burned over i5 acres of forest land in the Fredericton road area, 21 miles west of here. was under con- trol. A crew of 3D men and a water tanker sent out from Moncton en- tered the fire area shortly after the outbreak was discovered late yesterday. They battled the flames throughout the night. and today sucfeeded in bringing it under con- tro . ls lleaiieil Toward Tropical Stonn (By The Associated Press) MIAMI. Fla. Sept. li-The bat- tleship Missouri with President Truman aboard continued her northward course tonight toward a tropical storm which the wea- ther bureau reported at 5 p.m. EDI‘ was 550 miles east of Guad- aloupe in the French West In- dies. The big "M," assigned to re- turn Truman to the United Stat- es from the l-‘tio De Janeiro con- ference. was miles away from the storm, but unless she reduces speed apparently was headed for rough, but not necessarily dang- erous weather. The weather bureau said winds near the centre of the storm now range from 50 to 60 miles an hour and gales extend outward from the centre for 80 to 100 miles. The speed of the storm on a west-northwestward course was indicated at 15 rnlles an hour. Suspett Arson As Murder Doverup KINGSTON. Jamaica. Sept. ll- tCPl-Police said tonight they sus- pected arson had been committed to cover up n. double murder early today. The charred bodies of Alfred Marshall. retired customs official. and his wife were found in their fire-destroyed home and police said an autopsy disclosed a wound in the woman's skull which could not be attributed to the fire. Action ls Dismissed (By The Canadian Press) HAHLIFAX, Sept. il-Jrhe mo- tion of E. T. Parker, K.C., to set aside the action for $15,000 dam- ages for libel brought by famed skipper Capt. Angus Walters of Lunenburg, N.S.. against Hearst Magazines Incorporated, was dis- missed by Mr. Justice John Dcull of the Nova Scotia Supreme Court in a decision handed down today. Mr. Parker had claimed Kee, left. and Mrs. m, part of the concern. Widely-known Mt'l Business Man Passes -— ‘l Ill MAITGUWIII. Qua, Sept. l1—(@)—Maj. William Robert Holt, widely known in Montreal business and social circles and I son of the late Sir Herbert Holt who was a leading figure in the Canadian financial world, died as his summer homo here late today, Mal. Holt. Who was 47. complain- ed of feeling ill while chopping wood. A niece called medical as- sistance but he died shortly after- wards. His wife, the former Mary Lucille Jeffrey, returned by pianl from New York City tonight. Third son of the late Herbert Holt. he was born in Montreal and received his education in England and at Royal Military College, Kingston. Ont. He was s former president of Norduyn Aviation 00., a. director of the Canadian Arena 00.. and a director of the company that launched the Montreal Royals of the International League nearly 20 years ago. He is survived by his widow; a. daughter, Mrs. Timothy Dunn of Quebec; and two brothers. Maj. Herbert P. Holt and Maj. Andrew P. H0lt_ both living in England. A son, Peter, was killed overseas while serving in the Royal All.‘ Force as a pilot officer. Short-tenn Measure BUENOS AIR-ES, Sept. 11- (Reutersl-The Argentine Govern- ment's suspension of shipments of canned meat to Britain is purely a short-term measure for no other purpose than to prod the British Government into a speedy settle- ment of problems arising from the suspension of sterling convertibil- ity. a reliable source declared here today. ' “Argentina has no intention of not selling meat to Britain, but she wants to know now where she stands regarding future trade be- tween the two countries," be add-, ed. News Briefs MOSCOW. Stilt, 11 — (Reuters! —More than 07,000 Russian prison- er! 01 war 1n concentration camp] near Warsaw, were killed by the Germans during the war, a Russlgyf investigating committee reported today. The killings were carried out "by means c4 insanitary corr- diticns in the camps. hunger. ill- ness. Polwlli-ng food. torturing bullying and shooting," the reporl sa . HAMBURG. Seat 11 - (Reu- ters) — The management of the - llvord Motor Company's German factory near Cologne, 1n the 3m. lsh zone, plans exteruforrg whim will make the plant ‘one "of! thy largest automobile factories in E0101". the German News “Agency in the British zone repolitéd to- day. ' ' NEWPORT, 11.1., Sept, ..‘_ (AP) — The Rhode Island Qhaphq e1’. sons of the revolution, today announced a country-wide $2,000,. 000 fund-raising campaign to re. store the historic frigate Constell- ation. the United States Navy! oldest ship. Admiral Raymond A. Shroance. president of the Naval War College here, suggested thug she be restored as a lull-rigged SLTMMERVIIaL-E. Gt. 8017b. 1'1 —(AP) — Judge Claude Porter dis- missed today an involuntary mim- slaughter aharge against Rev. Gor. don Miller, indicted after one qr his flock drank poison as a test of faith and died. The judge said tho fatal dose was taken by Ernggl; PAWS. Ki, with full knowledge that Pt was poison. Porter told prosecu- port the manslaughter charge. company could not be sued in Nova Scotla pnd that he was not called upon to argue whether any other person or corporation was liable. O. B. Smith, representing Wal- ters, said International Circulat- ion Company, which distributed the magazine (Cosmopolitan) in Nova Scotia, was an agent for the Hearst syndicate and therefore Ont. court battle, Mrs. Ivelyn McKee, centre, in R. shphflil, I 10211161‘ E408 A11‘- who is seeking custody from millionaire Mark Ms- sr. v--~.-~ ~'-~ m“? Root la xiiehener following separation proceedings 9°75 they lacked evidence to supf ______ . =-_..-..~»»u-¢-.r.~..,o- w...» .-_. ~. -