MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN -:--u sees-at efaorrvw aufriead that folio rill ,ttis wsaa . , , .1; '5 Paper CHARDOTTETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6.01950 350,000,000 DEFENSE BILL PLACED BEFORE Tank-Led lied Troops (in Rampage (By The Associated Press) 10510. Sept. G-(Wednesday) ..A fast-moving Korean Bed of- rqnlve put the United Nations lefence keystone of Taegu in meat peril today. one Communists eaptured Yong- giu. a vital highway point the in sf which may make Tsegu utesable. That success stopped irsllo on the main highway. lead- bg out out of Taegu. at Ilsyang. snly is air miles away. Loss of Yongohon. 20 air miles asst of Taegu. was disclosed by mmiuy police shortly after the us. eighth army had acknow- ledged the Red capture Tuesday nimt of the east anchor .port of Patient. 'liank-led Reds. on the rampage in rainy weather which reduced the attacks of the United Nations air force. were eating big hunks out of the 45-mile northern front from Pohang to Waegwsn. Line Caves In The offensive (I) completely saved in the northeast end of the line for nine miles from Kigye to Pohang (2) allowed Red break- through forces to speed 13 miles west to Yongchon and 10 miles south to the viciniy of Kyongju on the main Taegu-Pusan high- vmy; and (3) forced the U. 5. let Cavalry Division into llmi-ted with- drawals north of Taegu. at one point to within seven miles ofthai base. iihosever-ed Oiljiway and rail ,!if;'carl-.ies similar from" Egan to the lst Cavalry. defending Tac- (contlliued on PIKE 5 Col. 5) Coming Events ""111 Your Film: to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "In stock. Handy ' killer for Mato tops. Dillon as Bplllett. "Provincial Plowing and Horse Show. september 27th and 20th. "Dance in Crapaud I-fall Wed- Mldli. Sept. 6th. Admission 35c. ;"Unloading Old Sydney coal and coke. Layton Green. Albany. "D-nee. Long mm mu. Wed- "'dil' night Door prize. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every WY nlsht. Dancing from 9 till 1. "W by Weston. aamblera. 'x N"Dance. Iona 1-lall Sept. -mi. h:Wl0Wn W. I. Mlllvlew Orches- ”Modern and old-time dancing in Int 65 Hall Thursday. Sept. 7th. Lunch served, "Hear W. R. Shaw lecture on Wilean countries. Canoe Cove 11. Thursday evening. Sept. 7. "C8 and Refreshments, new . St. Peter' , -nun. , mm mm ran day "W190-l-ins non for lwllt o - Win 00.. Ltd. every Monday. 0:3- 3. llsenonald. Brookdoid. '.Ia - -'l"'m Monday oo Ith min on ' - .1 hr. Vlcterlgvvm. 3” an nu:if".'i.f.?f..'.':'.i"a.l3?”'.-i.'..'”'.”.'; su. chaiason mm mot rm". 'I Gish. "Wells; on; hmnwgy oawmboaagg Iuilding. :",:'i- Gibtonibsr nth. Hours from -. "hllllulsr D3: in Burlington . HID tonisht (WNIIOEISY). Wit Good saute. llafrdanania in Wsdmsdgg. gg. . music. tegni Ovary Wednesday night lledsro and till i. Good Oaoilsatta. Riddell as Succeeding R. G. special assistant to External Af- fairs Minister Lester Pearson is Douglad LePsn of Toronto, above. During the war he was education- al adviser to Gen. A. G. L. Mc- Naughton. served as a gunner in the Italian campaign. He. served on the stud! of the high commis- sior.er lln London. lectured in Enulish at Harvard university. wrote a book of poems. and is re- garded as an expert in la. Marine Veterans Protest To Truman WASHINGTON. Sept. 5 (AP) - Presiden Truman today drew a storm of protest from mar- ine veterans groups and congress- men by charging that the United States Marine corps has a "propa- ganda machine that is almost equal to Stalin's." Truman served during the mat World War as an infantlry es The ' -' the statement an "insult" and de- mended a public apology. The Marine Corps Reserve Of- ficers Association said it felt. the statement must have been a "monumental misunderstanding"ou the part of Truman. gs: Vacant Hotel , Burns-in N. S. CI-Im'1lER. N. 5.. Sept. 5 - (Cl-') - R..C.M.P. tonight ' . eatlgated the cause of an early Sunday fire which destroyed the Dsuphlnee Hotel, long known as "the haunt- ed house." at nearby l-lubbsrds. Vacant for 26 years, the 76-year- old structure was constructed dur- ing the days when Nova scotia was a flourishing sea trading province. It numbered many would notables among its guests. "Unloading car Purina Hog Grower today. N. A. Cutcllffe. "Be at Canoe Cove tonight at 8.05 and enjoy a good laugh. see Joe E. Brown in "Wide Open races." Also color cartoon "Don- ald Duck." "l-lave car Old Sydney Coal (Princess) to arrive soon. Order now. for prompt delivery. Russell Driscoll, Mt. Herbert. "llhe Vernon Legion is pre- senting Dwan'a Mobile Movie. in, "The Man From Texas" at their gpen ah theatre. Vernon, tonight. pm. "Unloading mt bulk wheat at our warehouse Water street West. summer-side, Thursday. September 7th, 00.80 per owt. bulk. Bring baga.,-Full line mus--Gain feeds new on hand. Also buying feed bags. P. L. Mirth. Kinkora. . "st. Peter's Pariah Annual Bas- aar. Wednesday and Thursday. September 0th and 7th. in the lesion Hall. 5 Petal-ta Bar Dup- pers from I 0' ook. Gaines. Amuse- ments. lien-eaismsnts. . "Free Enlargement with every roil- of mm mailed or left at Burkfs Studio. lliti Great George street. Yellow cab Bulidlnl. Char- loutetown. bank: "will be leading boss at the folio points each 111130017: lirner ra. braeamna. untl 11.30 A. is. llorden Denali. Hunter liver. until noon. summeraida until 1.!) P. If. and Ianainst until 8 F. H. llaonwen and assets! ' .,"loaringl New Rink. Geome- iewa, Thursday. 3000- Wk Flfli Wit 0.I0'p.ltI. lain bout eight ' )tanvy."Kid" Poulton,wel- A champion P.l.l..vs. Bud Q . Ill IMM- . -orrawa, Sept. 5 -4 (cpl - econom- .House' Defeats .P. (2. Motion Of Non-Confidence The Commons. completing s five- day debate on the address in replv to the Speech from the Throne, today voted 147 to 59 against a Progressive Conservative motion of non-confidence in the gcvemment. The motion charged the govern- ment -wlth having "failed to pro- vide adequately for the defence of Canada" and with failure to take steps to "deal with inflation and the rapidly rising cost of living." It was supported by the Pro- gressive conservative, C.C.F. and Social Credit parties and by RE Gagnon. (Ind.-Chlcoutlml) and Dr. Raoul Poulln (Ind.-Bcauc). it was opposed by the Liberals. A C.C.F. motion of non-confld- ence in the government was de- ieated Saturday 93 to 018. it was similar to the Progressive Conserv- ative motion but in addition called for the relrnposition of price con- trols and, the revival of subsidies on essential products. it urge! economic aid to backward count- rise. No Formal Vote with the non-confidence motions defeated. opposition members agreed to adopt the address in reply to the speech from the Throne "on division"-without a formal vote. The address simply thanked the Governor General, Viscount Alex- ander, for having read the , ” from the Throne at the opening of this emergency session Aug. 20. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) 68 Deaths Over i.aborJWeeir-End . The number of persons who died in fatal accidents in Canada during the labor Day week-end was fixed at 68 in revised figures compiled by the Canadian Press. It was one of the blaclsest holiday week-ends in Canada's history. The list showed that Ontario with 31 deaths suffered the most militias with traffic accidents ao- counting for 21 of them. There were l4 deaths in Quebec. nine in British Columbia. three in New Brunswick. three in Nova Scotia. three in Saskatch vvqaa. two in Newfoundland and none in Prince Edward Island and Manitoba. The worst accident was the death of five persons in a train- car collision near Nbw Liskeard. Ont. A man and his wo'.fe and their three children were killed when an engine struck thelrtruok. Father And Son ' In Hospihli RIC!-IIBUGTO, N.B.. 5893- 5 - (OP) - A heroic boy and his father were in hospital here tonight re- covering from injuries suffered in a shooting accident while the No were in a small boat at nearby Little Aldouane. When Loo Doucet. la. tried to shift a. shotgun. it caught on I DR.-it of the boat and discharged. The blast almost severed the boy's right arm and numerous pellets struck his father, who collapsed. Able to use only qnrsrm while trying to stop the flow of blood from the other arm and also aid his father. 'l..eo nevertheless rowed two miles to shore and then walked three-quarters of a mile for help. The wounded arm had to be m- rU.;)REAi BEDS AIM AT TAEGU AGAIN - vital supply port of Pusan. Tito Condemns , Red Aggression ' BELGRADE. Sept. bk--(A P) - Po-e'.nier"Tito"s Governrnonf tonight condemned North K0tt3ii,1'l,l.i8Sres.i- ion and said it brings the peace of the world into danger. Yugoslavian position was made clear in a statement. by Edvard R. Kardelj, foreign minister. to the newspaper Barbs Just before h..- lefi; for New York 2 to attend the United Nations General Assembly. It was the first time Yugoslavia has taken a. position on the Kor- ean war. Kardeij said: "Those who are to be blamed for the war in Korea. must know that such a war will jeopardize the world peace. stir up all the pow- ers of aggression. start the war machine of the great powers and on all sides sharpen the internat- ional confllct. - "The Korean war is a. strong blow to peace in the world." lilhuanian Prelaie ls FeareiSiain VATICAN CITY. Sept. 5--(AP) --'llhe Vatican radio said today Lithuanian refugees fear that Blnhop Palirokas has been slain. The Bishop of Panevezys. 75 years old, was the last Roman Catholic Lithuanian prrelste "who remained at liberty after the slay- ing, deportation or death of all other members of the Catholic hierarchy in that unhappy nation," the broadest said. ' xonnan CASUALTIES HONG KONG. Sept.5-(Reuters) -North Korean headquarters in Pyongyang estimates more than 40.000 South Korean and Americ- an troops were killed or captured in the two months of the Korean pucatea. x o MIAMI-. l"la.. 5090. I --(AP) - A small hurricane boiled up to the West Florida coastline today and stalled, spinning its vicious winds for many hours over the little fishing villages of cedar Keys and Yankeatown. . . Cedar Keys. 52' miles southwest of aainesviile with a Wlntlon of 1.000. was battered by do which th highway patrol reported res lt- .12i miles an hour. 0 for more WIT. Hurricane Hits Florida A With Winds 125 M. P. H. The hurricane bit the coast at 9:30 A. M. EDT. Nearly seven hours later. -it had progressed only to the vicinity of Gulf Hammock. a crossroads only is miles inland. Radar at the University of Flor- ds at Ciairnville was tracking the ghtly-wound centre. -Late today the t bureau fixed the forward movement oi the centre at three to five miles an hour. but gave no estimate of the wind velocities. Poised like-an uncertain care. the hurricane had the exam-I guessing what it might do next. But the weatbu bureau osiieved itrlil that the storm would ra- i ahtbeastsrly oourne. insrib. sienna ' of this Wile Wm" Vt? . Counter-attacking Americans wiped out on enemy spearhead near Yuchon (1), only 35 miles west of the Meantime. Reds massed troops in four areas (broken arrows) for new major drives on Taegu (2) and Pusan. on the east coast (3). North Korean forces have entered P0hanS- Nell” Changnyong (4), where Communist bridgehead was erased. American patrols are active along the Naktong River. Opposition Leader Urges Secret Defense Session (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. Sept. 5 - George Drew. Progressive leader. asked the Government to- night to hold a secret session of Parliament on Canada's defences. He said he did so.becau.se Op- position members have been get- i.in8- no real dnformation about defence-matter: and because the Government-; 40: no sufficient- csuoo. has rejected requests for a defence committee of the House. 1-iis request came late in the Commons' first full day of discus- sion on the Government's 3850,- 000,000 defence appropriation aris- ing from Korea. Mr. Drew said war-experienced members of the House could get. in secret session. the information they were denied in public meet- -ings. The Russians. he declared. knew more about the state of Canada's defences than Opposition mem- bers. They knew how many plan- es Canada h-ad. how many guns and vehicles. They knew a lot about Canadian defence. They had access to that information. It was. for that reas- on. inexcusable for the Govern- ment io use that excuse in its re- fusal to form a House committee. But since it had refused and since no member wished to be placed in a position of asking for information the. Government said was secret he wished to have a secret session. Members whose experience came from war were facrd now with smug indifference and chattering lsugihter while the House discuss- ed national survival. His words here. he sai covered Trade Min- istor Howe. ealth Minister Mer- tin and Finance Minister Abbott. Mr. Drew's call for a secret session came after Defence Minis- ter Claxton said the highly secret nature of much the Defence De- partment does is one reason why a House committee should not be appointed. - Korea will Cost Canada Between 40 and i0Miilion (By no Canadlan' Pres) OTTAWA. Sept. 5-Korea will cost Canada between 040,000,000 and 860,000,000 this fiscal year and possibly more, Defence Minister Claxton told the Commons tonight. That. he said in the first public official estimate of coats to Canada arising from that conflict. would cover the ops-stions of be three destroyed-r in Kouan. waters. of the-all-r u-ans-port squadron flying to Japan. of the several Canadian Pacific Air Lines planes ohartered for the Paoitlola-lrlifl. and of the army's special force. Mr. Glaxton made the estimate in a Commons debate on s resolu- tion for introduction of an appro- priations bill to grant the Defence Department another mzoooooo for the current does! use aiding March 81 pins uIl.000.000 in auth- orlaaii tot. damn .yaa-rs. na"i'.l'ii-ano iiietddas aaoo.ooo.- ooocoeolr ,Isaotarinafer Canada and Conservative . Fdhfngl Yofnfgchoinl Fall; Talegtut In LDireLPeriyI British Troops Go into Action On Korean Front SOMEWHERE IN KOREA, Sept. 6 - (Wednesday) - (AP) - Brit- ish troops are in action in Korea and one company fought its way out of a Red encirclemenl: early today. The British troops moved into front-line positions under cover of darkness Monday night. The Eng- lish End Scottish troops prepared for action Tuesday during a driv- lng rnlnstolvn. The Communists encircled one British Company Tuesday night but it managed to fight its way out before daybreak, A high-ranking American officer said it was "presumed" that the tommles suffered their first casual- ties of the war in this action. The British sector came under heavy artillery fire Monday night and again last night. The American officer said the Reds pumped a lcng barrage into the British pos- ition but no direct hits on emplace- ments were reported. Location of the British sector was not disclosed. It is manned by the lst battalion of the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders and the 1st battalion of the Middviesex Reg- iment. They are the first British ground troops to participate in the Korean war. Britain To Show Off Newllanes By NORMAN CRJBBENS FARNBOROUGH, England, Sept. 5 -- (Reuters) - Britain tomorrow will show of! her new and secret speed-of-sound fighter- 'a distance. , . , g t . During the next five days more .thaaL2il0.00iLpeuon.s.at the..sor:iety of British Aircraft Constructorsl annual flying display here will see the" rnachines designed to shatter enemy bombers. But elaborate precautions have been taken to ensure that nobody gets near en- ough to note details. ' No invitations have been sent. this year to the Soviet Embassy in London or to officials from any "iron curtain" country. Today the newmt type; of jet, planes roared over this sleepy Southern England town in a dress rehearsal for the display. which opens onioially tomorrow and lasts until Sunday. The shattering roar of 00 differ- ent types of aircraft, jet-powered and propeller-driven. momentarily deafened spectators and drowned the amplified voices of comment- aiof. describing each successive on t. Seeks lied China's Admission To U. N. LONDON. 5699- 5---('Reuters)- Britain has decided to continue pressing for Communist C-hina's admission into the United Nations. it was learned today. The cabinet had lengthy re- views yesterday of the foreign situation. When Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin leaves for New York Thursday he will have full cab- inet .support for his Far Eastern policy. ATHENS. Sept. 1 -- (AP) -- Grecce will send a brigade of soldiers to fight in Korea, a Cab- inet souroe said today. L LONDON. Se-pt. 5-(CP)-The King and Queen plan a royal tour of Australia and New Zealand in N52, Buckingham Palace announ- ced today. A Palace spokesman said Prin- cess Msrgsret probably will so- company her parenie. Princes Ebizabeth is expected to remain in Britain. As heiress presumbive she will probably become a member of a Royal Council to act for the King in his absence. illness of the King caused poet- ponemeni of a tour to Australia and New Zealand in me. Details of the 1002 trip are still to be ar- ranged but it probably will be made during the first half of the year. The tour is in response to in- vi-tations issued originally in lldii by Prime Minister Fraser of New Zealand and Prime Minister Ohif- ley of Australia. Both Fraser and Giidey now are out of office. H-Atlantic Allin. v The tour will be the first of a planes -- at without God's presence. wealth are bags of eases; wisdom but folly. pleasure: but pain. Maxims or 4., MERE MAN, ' 12 PAGES lubaerlipffona Dalivarsd aaooasaii sues 6"MMoNs I I1. I. I7-I0 Four-F old Iii-oz-lqsure Likely To involve New Tax Boosts" 0'l'rAWA, Sept. 5 - (GP) Finance Minister Abbott placed a stasserlns 38.00.000.000" defence ap- propriation bill before the Com- mons today and said he plans to finance the 1060-51 phase of it without going into the red. Amid parliamentary expectations that tax boosts are in the offing and on the heels of his own state- ment earller today that tax changes will be made. Mr. Abbott told the chamber: "I think I can properly say at this time that I am not planning on a budget deficit for this year. despite the large increase in de- fence expenditures." Beyond that, the Finance Min- later did not go. But Opposition speakers who fol- lowed him in the debate on defence financing made clear their accept- ance of it as a hint of new tax levies and zuggested where the money should be raised, Mr. Abbott won quick support for the proposed expenditures from the C. C.F'. and Social Credit part- ies, but. George Drew, Progressive Conservative leader, called-with out committing his group - for a detailed breakdown. The appropriation bill is a four- ply measure asking parliament to vote these immediate and prospect- ive sums: 1. s142.200.000 for the three arm- ed services - 858,492,837 for the R. C.A. F.. 054,171,283 for the Army and 329,536,130 for the Navy. 2. S300.000.00o for the purchase of arms for Canada and her North Atlantic allies. Much of this, Mr. Abbott indicated, will go to the North Atlantic partners "without navmmt-” 3. 5,310,000 for defence research and development and 32,000,000 for expanded R.C.M.P. land services in the vital and vulnerable coastal areas of ,3.-man Columbia and New- foundland. I A 4. Authority to make comma- inents totalling u00.2tl'l.B21 in lut- lgg years for the purchpgevgnslr- craft, ships and guns for the ,arm- ed services. only the authority - not the money - is sought at this time. . These sums. - totalling sass,- 'I6B.021 - are in addition to the s42.':.000.000 decfence budget, at that point the highest in peacetime his- (continued on Page ii col. 6) Russia Assails American Iiepori" LAKE SUCCESS, N. Y.. Sept. 5 -(A?)-Russia today assailed as "provocative" a United states re- port that a soviet lieutenant was part of the crew of a plane shot down off Korea attacking a United Nations sir patrol. The report was laid before the security Council by Warren R. Austin, chief U. S. delegate. who said he had no information beyond the fact that the plane bore the Soviet Red Star and theta de- stroyer had picked up the body of a. soviet officer. Jakob -A. Msllk, Soviet deputy foreign minister, listened hnpass- ively as Austin read the report. Later in the session he marie his brief reference to the plane incid- ont. Mallk did not deny the report, but called it a "provocative state- ment made by Gen. MacArthur and the War Department" to cover up the efforts of the United state: to expand the Korean war bringing in troops from other countries. Malik said this is "one of a series of provocations" especially arranged for this meeting. Royal Tour Of Australia :And New Zealand In 1952 ....m.?..m:;m. reigning soverelgnto the Austral- asian dominiona. The King and Queen visited Canada in l030, a few months be'fora- the Second World War began. Neither Mar- garet nor Elisabeth accompanied their parents on the Canadian tour. Both went on the tour of south Africa in 1947. In Wellington. N. Z.. Prime Min- ister Sidney Holland said that the King had confirmed he and the Queen will visit New Zealand in 1052 "circumstances permi”' g." Holland had been asked to pre- 0 pare a preliminary itinerary. it was bndersiood that the Kinl's health will be taken into consideration and a leu strenuous tour will be mapped than that poev ualy planned. A oieingham Palace spokes- man aid today that the "King's medial advisers new consii him to be fully restored to health. or he would not be able to contem- plata.ibo trip." Third World War Warning Sounded T In Senaiibebale OTTAWA, Sept. 5-(CP)--'nha Senate heard a warning today that the darkening international 510' Spell: the "greatest crisis" in the history of the western world and one that could eventually bring about a iihird world war- this time between Russia and the West Senator John T. Haig, Progres- sive'Conservat-ive leader and vet- eran of 15 years in the Senate, said that witnessing ”aggre.sion. cold and unafnaid, attacking the United Nations" he had come to believe that a third world war is inevitable. There could be no mistake that Russia was the power that gave the mavrdiing orders to the North Korean aggressor-s and he, had. never believed that Russia would agree to anything that might mean peace. Further. -he had never seen a "dictator who would stop until he was shot." He found a supporter in Senatos J. W. deB. Farris (L-British Cola umbia) as the throne speech de- bate continued in the Uppel. Chamber. Senator Fa-mis said iii was beyond his ..u.....rehenai that the build-up of hatred and the armaments race between east and west could g on without eventually leading war. . Senator Wisharrt Robertoon.Gov- ernment leader..sa-id it was hig belief that Russia is msintainin 175 divisions and thousands tanks and planes not because a fear of the west but because as fear of the 195,000,000 Ruxlang (Continued 011 Page 5 Col. 0) - 5' Thieves Blast Sara" For 38.000 Haul -NIAGARA FALI5. om. Saphba (OP)-Thieves obtained 00,000 bilasbing open a safe at the Tauq Rock House near the entrance to Niagara's scenic tunnel. Maxim T. Gray. general manager of thd Niagara Parks Commission. sat today. Two masked gunmen ti a up a watchman. . ' .. .a its is GREAT 'fElti'tATi0ii 'lHiS TIME or YEAR 40; 'fI-lnow 'fi-iE SEED CAfAl.oc.s AWAY one REACH FOR furs. Roao MAPS 2 ' Ix I 00 ( if I -000?)? 'ronon'ro, Sept. s - (or) -J Minimum and maximum temper- L ” stures: Victoria bl. 6'1: lidmontorgl 30. '16; Regina. 50. 78: Winnipeg 68. 8'1; Toronto 46. 66; Ottawa 40. '09! Montreal 98. 08; Saint John 51, -- Moncton 60. G0; Baiifax M, to r-r...:.r 46. -: lsydneg iv 00; Yarmouth 53. 00:' St. .John' Nfid. 4'1. 50. HALIFAX, Sept. 0 - (C?) --;of- ficlal forecasts issued by, the Do: minion Public weather office iii Halifax. synopsis-The disturbance whicli brought rain to the southern Mar- itimee Tuesday new has moved (in! over the Atlantic, and is southeaal of Sable Island. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday, Prince Edward Island - cloudy clearing Wednesday evening. Little change in temper.......v. Light winds becoming north is Wednesday morning. low early Wednesday morning and high in" the afternoon at Charlottetown es and 02. Surnma y for Wednesday Cloudy clearing in the evening. High tide today at 353 A. M. and P. M. sun rises at 5.40 A. M. and set! at 0.43 M. aumrnerside tide eighteen mine uben later than Charlottetown. woop ISLAND: - cannon DAILY Ill!!! ' heave Weed Islands 1'I.M.IIuA.Il. II All. I I'M. I PM. I leave caribou "'9 I '1 A.M. I AM. 11 A.M. 1 EM. 8 PM. I II. - ' 4