a 1 PAGE SIX ___SPORT1NG uzws Bob Elliott ls Fined $50 \- 1 ~11 ntct 111 .11.“. l;‘i uutsltnz. hare today, u.‘ 111 1clnu.l‘:1\v'g rlocgcy Leugc cnal and b:- 11 Toronto GL1" fro 1_ either or Q.S.H.L.. of [ccretood to be rezdv for approval b15105); Hgnlgygnlfhamgs ch91. 1' '~ cu ctllty, bu. spctq bu". which mtgh, run into snags 11,1111 yefujn to 11 c.1 121 wht-n thegcverncrs discuss 1t. u}; n“; w“, f 1 :11 . .1, S1. Lou1s Cardinals and Boston Dates have o; been 59L bu; n .1 1:.» 1111M. 1111.0 such 11 plcn t1 Burt-rs spllt fl doubleheader at Sl- 5LeWflTd5 or the event aav 1t prob- _, Conny ‘111511111 cf 101111110; Louis. the Cards winning the ab“. Wm be held July 3-5, 5f, It 11: the llsmfs world, tngntcap, 7-3, after Boston took JUN a oneday 11351;; was belt-l s 11 1 11 '1 '1n 11111" 1110-1 lllv 01181181‘. O-l- _ with special cups offered for 1; i11t1r:1.s1c:."1 Thc ‘Cards remained in second’ u...“ ram; u ‘plncc, fire games beluntl the [LWE- The m“ [0111-413‘; Rgyal ycgatia 1t 1 .1 mils. ‘scum? Cubs. i was m 193p 115 general] Buster Adams of the Olrds hit ,_______-- :11:o. up ‘l a honécr in the third 111121111: of the, ~-- urc- secon game, his 22nd o the _vcar,; I - tn ul-i and scored behind Burkhardt and‘ ,,,,,,. W ,,,,,,,,,,_ Baseball Standings tilt‘ Nl-LL. y v.11 ‘ q.s.u.1.. prcsunvsd the N.H.l.. a f.1lrlv on} senzi-an-l 1r ‘lleculnlon 112a: vie dirzct cammef.‘ offer‘ 01' a! h 11:51 them ' rs favor- move National Hockey League Moguls Meeting Today NTlil-Lill, Sept. 6 1GP) -| agreement offer to the loop if it a variety of! was so inclined. ‘Fcmorrow the NJ-LL. cc-t in stmi-anttual session. bu unctncr the nmttef" of a mcnt with the Q.S.H.L. will com e1 -1 from Allowin its, Ed ihL‘ iv. Braves collected l8 blows, 12 off Charles against. l0 victories. attractive pCreenberg Says He Went Back To Team Too Soon. BY JOE REICHLER NEW YORK, Sept. 6 -—- (AP) — There is nothing the matter with the returning scrvlcenmmbull p1ay_ c1‘ that a. spring training trip won't. c1111 says Hank Granberg, slug- outfielder fgue-leadlng Detroit Ntllrnlng War veteran “You may call sp-Ltg training bnllyhoo junkets and utmecessaxy," urmv captmn said to. d.1_v, "b11". they do add 5O per cent That's 111-." form‘: t1: your precision timing. the thing a bull player finds tough- est to rcfqniz: nftcr :1 long absence fr.“ 1 (llnlltfllltl nctlvéty" I ow that \'.‘."1S 11nd still is my blag .1 problem although I am .‘f‘(’i__i.illlfl' down 1n the old groove I went into the lineup with only a couple of weeks of practice under m‘: 1x11. and discovered that l; was ton soon, I knew that. I was in goflzi crnditinn, my weight was Oetroit Splits Train ill With Yankees By The Canadian Press Drtrrl; ihgers split un Ameri. can league doubleheader with ‘iankccs 211 New York yesterday bowing before a violent home-run barrage in the opener, 14-6, but FOpptllg‘ up with tlve runs in the ate innings of 111* second encoun- ter. to win out 5 l. 'l‘11;= 5 14-hour tiispluy saw hcm- m Lhc 11m Zlflmc by Charley h. .1‘ and Bud Metheny and two by Aaron Robmson of the Yanks. Rov Cullenbinc replied for the Tlgers. 'l‘he_ tughtcap was decided in tho eighth when with the bases itllldfffi 111'» ‘nits and a walk 1111111; Grccnbvl snot a roller at thrrd. Osslc G us. try/in: for double play, threw to second, but the relay 1.0 firs‘. was late and two runs scored as Nick Elton held the ball, arguing with umpire Bill (a ' rn c. B .1011 Rod Sox hammered three C rclund pitchers for 16_ hits Willie piling up 2t 9-3 home vlcloly. The Bosox scored six of thrlr counters against starter Ed K110- mn during: his three innings of zctlon. The four batters to face that riulli-lrtnder singled and Bob Johnson's blox drove lu 1W0 r kins. g Philadelphia Attila-tics and Chi- cagn White Sox split a double- heads-r at Philndclphla. the A’: “gnnlyq- 1h,- 11~,1nn'r. 6-5 and the n5: buck 2-1, 1n the night- (".1 Eff. .10 A's, Wll-l bcwcd twlCv l0 U19 blll last their (I171- ganfc with oirzhih 211d 1w 111,. Sox's second lull baseball's Big Six (By The Associated Press) lo lrrs 111 each league) 1m. (i AB R l-IPct. .110 4.16 84150. . F141 116 103 50’) 105 168 . ." 356 4W 47113. 6112B. 0'1 346 50 106 .306 National League: Amcrlcan Len- '."1. C) ‘ '1 Tn -Nn‘,inurl 1x“- ; 11'1'l_z1‘1"", lflfl; Azurrl- ; Ettcn, Yankees, Ill. 11.1111"! ltunl Yl-w c1011" . of the American Tigers, highest salaried performer in base. ball since Babe Ruth, and foremost down and my 1884 were 1n fairly good aha/pa but. the old timing was yvay off Pitches I normally could hit out of the park were tying me up in knots It got. so bad, I was seriously thinking of quitting I thought I was all washed up “O'Neill (manager Steve O'Neill), however, kept me in the lineup and retty soon I began to meet the ball more solidly and right now I feel much more at ense at. the plate." Off to a slow start despite his home run debut, the native New Yorker has been climbing steadily in the batting column until now he lends all the Tigers in hitting with a mark around 3115 Though he joined the club late in June and did not enter the line- up until July l, he threatens to top all-his mates. except Roy Cullen. blne and Rudy York, in driving runners across the plate and may overtake both in the home run department Still ‘Bucko’ Hockey Veteran Tells Reporter (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Sept. 6--“How do you spell your name?" the reporter ask- ed the new member of Parliament. "M-C-D. "No. Your first name." “Oh, just, call me Bucko. ‘That's the name I mn under." Thus did Wilfred McDonald Liberal member for Parry Sound constituency, let it be known today that his new dignity would not mean the end of the name that stuck with him all through his National Hockey League career, 1Oo1l~gers Take 1Lea1l Over Oards In ll. R. Finals Smothering their opponents with ‘.32 runs, the Dodgers last night won their second game of the Holy Re- deemer softball finals, defeating the Cardinals 8-6 ln the third game of the best of seven series. The Cardinals scored three runs in the second and it was not until the third that the Dodgers got a run ln, when they scored a brace. They repeated in the fourth to take a ontnrun lend and from then on it was a victory parade for them. Pius Callaghan went the tvholc, Flame for the victorious tram while Cotmolly‘. who started for the Rod Birds was replaced in the sixth by] Murphy. '11):- iillp score: - Dodgers — 002 Z6] 434 - 22 Cardinals - 030 000 080 - 6 The next game will be Sunday ‘afternoon The bnttl: is scheduled to begin a1 l 30 and nlnycrs are nrtkcd to be on time as the umpire. in-chicf ls to leave nt 3.30 and it is desirable to have the game over then Remember When By The Canadian Pren Doug MacPherscn, speedy - nlng and plunging back of the Argonaut- Club's Interprovlncial Rugby squad, notified club official: ht- was finished with football six years ago today. Vital part. of‘ Conch Lew I-Inymnrrs backfield mtuip, MacPhersoti merely said he had had enough of football. fllh ANNUAL Will be held. in City Hall .. \(\r*6*¢‘4' ., ‘"4. . .-_ .»v\.\_\.\. W. rnu Alli) GAME ASSOO the 7111 11151.. at 7:30 o'clock. Full attendance is requested. \)\)\- 111110? s MEETING Chambers Friday evening. H. TIDMARSH. President. t, ‘I '9-7-11. i l governors’ 11 ag1ce- un there remained in doubt. lune at. the mam concern o1 the hockey moguls was expected to be the 1045-46 schedule. which is un- Cards but ttireei ight won his fifth vic- thc Q.‘ tcry of the year in the opener. The; tRedi Barrett: who pitched eight innings. It was! Barrett's 11th loss of the campaign‘ I Baseball League PITTSBURGH, Sept O - (AP) — ‘Third baseman Bob B11014, of the Pittsburgh Pirates was fined $50. by president Pbrd Prick of the National League wduv for pushing Umpire Barr in lust night's Pirate- Dodger game. Lorie Regatta To Resume Next Year t LONDON. Sept. 6 — (GP) -—The By The Canadian Prose AMERICAN Detroit 001 220 000—-5 l0 I . New York 014 221 Mx-IA 13 2 Tobin, Wilson, Pierce. Caster and Swift; Dubiel and Robinson. Balm“ O00 OOO 230-5 B O New York 020,000 000—Z 3 9 Mueller and Richards; Zllber. Holcombe and Robinson. Chicago 010 400 000-S B I Philadelphia 101 002 011-6 I0 I Lee and Tresh; and Astroth. Rosar. Knerr, Barry Chicago 000 010 010-2 ‘I 2 Philadelphia 010 000 000—1 1 Grove and 'I‘resh: Custmo; Christopher and R0581‘. Cleveland 000 I00 002-4! I0 2 1 Boston 231 ozo 1011-9 15 o Klleman. Center, Salverson and Hayes. Desautels: Woods and Helm St. Louis O00 000 000-0 5 2 Washington 002 O00 OOx-Z 4_ 1 Shirley and Mancuso; Nlggelmz and Evans. St. Louis 000 000 020-3 9 3 Washington 110 O00 001-3 9 0 Kramer and Hayworth; Leonard, Pierettl and Ferrell. NATIONAL Brooklyn ZOO OOO 201-5 18 2 Pittsburgh 233 504 0011-17 14 1 Gregg, King and Sandlock, Dan- tonio; Strlncevlch and Salkeld. New York O00 I00 000-l 7 2 Chicago 011 020 OZx-S 12 0 Volselle. Adams and Lombardi; Borowy and Livingston. Philadelphia 000 000 001-1 6 0 Cincinnati 000 I30 0011-4 7 O Leon, Foxx and Seminlck, An- drews: Fox and Lakeman. ton 000 010 116 - 9 l8 O SLLoula 000000100-130 Wright and Mast; Barrett, Don. nelly, Berly, Partenheimer and Rice, Odea. Boston O00 10f) 010-3 11 I St. Louis O03 M0 OOx-‘l l4 0 Lee, Hutchlngs, Whitehead and I-Iofferth: Burkhardt and 0'Dea. INTERNATIONAL Rochester 010 010 0-—2 ‘I 0 Montreal 100 200 x-S l 3 Gabbard and Ferrell. Trotter, Dwyer and Crumllng; Buffalo 010 OOO 024-7 l1 I Toronto 000 200 0001-2 9 2 Oana and Mordnrslci; McCrabb and Pruett. Rochester I00 ZOO 010-4 6 3 Montreal I20 008 ZOx-IS I1 3 Shope. Wagner Dtvyer and Dev- in. Mlady and Ferrell. i Newark O11 012 100-8 l2 I - Baltimore 000 002 000-Z 1O 2 i Drews and Steinecke; Hooks and l 1 Lollar. Jersey city ooo mz ooo _ a s o Syracuse 226 020 00X — l2 I3 0 Erondell, Astorlno and Toncoff; Blue and Just. To Be Organized _ Mr. S, F. Doyle. tor for P.~1n:-.~. E: lust nlght mat 11 . may be fczcned today, the tznmcs to be played header Sunday. Teams composing tho league w be the Navy and All Stare frog Charlottetown and the R.C.A.I". in Summerside. Officials have not conferred on the matter 11s yet, but 11 meeting will be held today. Mr. Doyle hope; to get the league organized soon enough to have u. double- header on Sunday afternoon. It is likely that. ,if u league is formed, an Island champion will be decid- ed in play this fall. MoKinnon-Smith vs. Oullon-Peters Tennis Finals 1on5 coordina- 19841111?’- llYSt 111 a (IOLIDIC-i The finals of the men's doubles in the Holy Redeemer Tennis tour- nament will be played at 6.15 this afternoon. The finalists will be McKlnnon and Smith, and J. Cullen and Peters. These two teams wan their semi final matches yesterday. McKinnon and Peters defeated Strain Ind Keys 0.7, 6.4, 6-8. J. Cullen and Peters defeated Oll- ladhan end latter o-a, 7.5. Today's match will be the lull. of the tournament. Champions in all dither sections have nlrudy been decl ed. IDNDON -(CP)1- ‘rowan! the end of the war the British Red THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN Cubs Toke Byflmcauadlnnrreuo combined yesterday to 31v; me Notional League - loading Chi- cago Cubs their fifth straight tri- umph. dumping New York Giants. 6-1. at Chicago. BOIOWY. the $100,000 itching beauty recently imported to Wri- gley Field. notched his seventh victory while --holding the New Ytgkers to the same number q! hi . At the plate. Nicholson drove in three runs. two of them coming in the fifth frame when he drove the ball over the right field wall while Stan ack was roosting on first. It was Big Bill's 12th homer of the campaign. ' Pittsburgh handed Hal Gregg his flf-th straight loss. routing Brook- lyn. 17-5. at Pittsburgh as another round of the Leo rocher-umpire Tom Dunn argumen resulted in Pirates Rout Brooks I 7-5 Hank Borowy and Bill Niel-wimp n] 5th Straight; b lahm t f th D068 Akin er .513 1.1112"<>1?... 1; 1.11. 2311111. 1'1.- 11g. Backed by a 14-bit attack inclu- ding a pair of three-run homers by Johnny Barrett and Bob Elliot: Nick Strincevfch had little trouble registering his 14th luccou ll- though he yielded 18 aafetlu. At Cincinnati, Reds whipped Philadelphia 4-1, behind a smart six-hit hurling job by rookie Bow- ard Fox, with only 34d paying has ln the stands 1o see the lelflle QHIIIG. Not until the ninth did Pox per- mit scoring. Then, Johnn Anto- nelll singled and crossed e plate as Jackie Powell lined a two-bug- ger. The Reds got seven hits from starter Izzy Leon but drove him from the mound in a three-run fifth inning, and got nothing thereafter from veteran Jimmy Foxx. Ben llogan Takes Lead . In Pro Ooif tBy The Associated Press) DALLAS. Sept. S-Bantam Ben Hogan battled influenza and p111‘ and took both to a cleaning today as he edged 1n with-a four-under- DBr 6O to tle broad-shouldered Har- old (Jug) McSpaden of Sanford, Me,_ for the first-round lead in the Dallas $10,000 open golf tourna- ment before a crowd of 6,000. Three other professionals were a stroke back-Leonard Dodson of San Francisco. 32-37-69; Jimmie Hines of Chicago, 36-33-69. and Vic Ghezzi of Deal, N. J._ 35-34-60. Byron Nelson of Toledo. the tor- rid Texan who h-zs won l4 tour- naments and over $50000 this yertr and 1op_ favorite ln the Dallas event, slipped to an even par with "the worst putting I have ever done." Tied at ‘I0 were Slammln‘ Sammy Snead of I-Iot Springs, Va; Gib Sellers of Hot Springs. Ark, and Jimmie G-auntt of Oklahoma City. Demand For BOT OTTAWA, Sept. 6 - (CP) —'I'hc war-developed insecticide DDT may have some dangers but there is a. large public demand for it, Ag- riculture De antment scientists and inaectici e manufacturers a- greed loday at a meeting of the Price Board's Insecticide Adviso- ry Committee. Entomolotusts 101a the meeting frankly they did not know the last word on either the benefits or dan- gers of DDT but it could probably be used with safety in low concen- tratlons in both household and fly sprays. They advised against its use in fruit and vegetable sprays, in terminal elevators and flour _mills and said its value in forest ,1nsect control was still uncertain. The meet-lug was unanimous on We "lull-i reported Practice of Spraying babies 1o make 1.11am fly. proof was unwise “Tflkyo Rose” Held In Allied Oustody TUKYO. S t. 6 - t _. Pref-W- Wflleg-old Amlgrelggerifbem g" $051M. known as "Tokyo Rose" tor er broadcasts to American migll-“éuiltlogylleyelgéletwrlélc. Ems taken fl intelligence officers. y y mum“ chtilhe dispatch did not say what large was brought against her.) "31 I Drefrly olive-skinned Jap- anese, with long black pigtails, w” 110m ln L05 Angcles and tvas g“. féliiflitgdnlfaroxrsihe the university ori a 111511 111' 1041. came to Tm“ °“| Jill!) Bayonet All Wounded To Death; Banquet Survivors YOKOHAMA. Sept. 6 — (AP) _ The Japanese victors on Wake Isl- and bayonetted all wounded pri- soncrs to death and than heartily banqucted the survivors for two weeks 1n an effort to pry flmcrican military secrets from 111cm, liber- ntcd Marine and civilian prisoners from Wake Isl-and said here today. Jflbanese intelligence offl ers and secret police questioned t em ilfildlly for 14 days of feasting during which they were given such wartime rarities as breaded velaé cutlets, butter and mllk, they ca . The Nipponese wanted to know about. American plane types. pilot facile-s. coder and communications SEEHDS- They were rticularlv con- cerned with the is and of Midway, where six months later they took a sea beating that was one of the turning points of the war. The questloners expressed belief the Americans had some sheltered pasaase into the island. wnnon _1o1=) 111111111" Gouge, ViClLCYlBiTIURIl of Saunders-Roe. Ltd. has been elected president of ihu Swirl/v 0f British Aircraft. con structure. Uniforms will be lleued. Cross was mending 91.000 (ubmt 04.600) every hour. ~ rurlrro STORAGE- ~ AIR CADETS NO. 60 CHARLOTTETOWN SQUADRON R. C. A. F. AIR CADETS All Cadets will attend Parade at Prince of Wales College Monday, lOt-h September, 1946, at llOO hours. New Recruits will be interviewed. F/O. H. C. BURKE, tConttmucd from Page l) cold storage experts from Ottawa to investigate the potato storage situation and that. they had named 1;; points where they considered the erection of warehouses advis- able. Among those suggested, the Premier named ’I‘lgniah, Oleary, Elmsdale and said there would be another warehouse at "some other point in Prince County not far from Portage " Two or three would be “on the Souris line and two or three on the Murray Harbour line." While Elmira wu not recom- mended by the Obtawa ezoperts. the Premier said that in view of its importance as a potato centre the Government had decided to erect a model warehouse there. He also told the Legislature that he hoped to secure at least oncdul! the cost o! construction, or even more, from the Dominion Government since the growers of Elmira had agreed 1o store only seed potatoes in the warehouse Liberals Pondering- Ltberuls are stlll of an open mind as to who the new party leader should be. On this I sought the cpmion of a man of broad experi- ence, not_ only because he is u life-long Liberal and a close friend of most of ‘those who play a big part 1n guldlng the partv destinies but. also because he has a peculiar Hbillly to analyze Political, situa- lions. grear. deal depends on when tContinucd from Page l) “A the convention is called." be told me. "If 1t were held tomorrow 1 do not. think there 1's a shadow of doubt but. that, Ilsley would be chosen. ‘The two who would give 111m the closest run w be St. Laurent and Abbott." However this Liberal was sure the convention would not be called for some time, possibly four years. By that time many things could lmppcn to change the picture. He regarded Mr. St. Laurent as the greatest French-Canadian to enter the political scene since Sir Wilfnd Laurier. a man growing in stature s0 that be might. be the d t- lng figure by the time a. convention u called. He_thought Mr. Abbott was de- veloping fast. and he listed as the others distinctly in the race, Re- construction Minister Howe. Agri- culture Minister Gardiner. Pre- mier Gin-son of Manitoba and Pre- mier Angus L. Maodonald, of Nova Scotia, until recently Navy Minis- ter. He did not think Hon. J. L. Ralston who broke with Mr. King on conscription would make a bid for the leadership. Many Favor Howe Many who know him think Mr. Howe would make an excellent party leader. He has survived the heavy respon billtles of the Muni- tlons and Su ply Department and loolc as fresh as he did when the war started largely because of his capacltv to delegate responsibility. Mr. Gardiner ls probably the greatest debater in the list and some think the greatest cam- paigner altho h his reputation in this respect su fered when his con- trol of Saskatchewan slipped to the C.C.F. There is said to be a strong feel- ing in the west. that Premier Gar- son ls the man who would stop the swing away from the Liberal party on the Pmlries and British Columbia and that is important. Mr. Maodonald is greatly admir- cd by the rank and file of the Liberal Party. It seems generally fel: he would give a vigorous and aggressive leadership and would an ornament to Canada in councils of the nations. llouse To Adjdurn Today Until Monday OTTAWA, Sept. 6 — (OP) - Prime Minister Mackenzie King said today that. when the House meets tomorrow various dollar!- mental report-s will be tabled and then the addresses of the mover and seconder of the add-recs in re- ply to the Speech from the ‘Ihorne will be heard. Wing Cmdr. Willinm Benediob) son. Liberal member for the Keno- ra-Rainy River 11nd Liout. 1e0- pold Langlols, rel member for Gaspe, have been selected to move and second the address. ‘ Following their addreuel (h! House will adjourn until Monday when it will be asked to vote suf- ficient money to carry the Gov- ernment through September. When the money has been voted the Throne Speech debate will be con- tinued mtll its conclusion. Comlllllling Officer. Pooefbfli z k014i. rem. o! mvurnmont from Premier A. . thallium tomorrow or as- uroloy Ill soon tonhht follow u of the Ca 0t lenllth nylon council, wdu might. have a Movement. to make stre h oEITRAl. lillllllllltlli Ii"'1...'21""i'f'1.3-{"‘""'1»-1 5W1 fl ‘lvwlmrtl-yltrlofl! DI! ' able in alums. cmuwllu m mourn"- UONFEDERATION IJFI IN‘ UBANOI. Tllll ANNUAL memorial parade 1.9 the cemeteries by e Charlotte- town branch of the anadlan Lel- ion will be held this SundnY- Pa" tlculars tomorrow. LEFT 0N VISIT T0 MONT- REAL — Miss Cnttusrine In BM Mn. mm MacKin-rlon 1m thlfl morning for Montreal violtiM m‘! “tier! two dauihlfifl. 1W1 "l4 fen-l, Mrs. Harold MacCallum. ‘r0 ASSIST IN suuvnv -Dr. SC. Hudson. Economics Divllifln-i Department of AKPWl-llll-ll-‘I otmwml 111 111 Charlottetown when l" m’ next two weeks he will mist D11‘. on. Latumer 111 his tax survey of the Province. nucclvnn DIPLOMA - 11- mung 35 nurses receiving diploma! at the Halifax Infirmlifl’ 4nd“!- tlon exercises held the N0" Scotlan Hotel ballroom. Hallflax, Wednesday evening wasMissflegn Trainer, of Albany. P-E-I- T e diplomas were presented by New enant Governor Kendall. I MADE I-IIGIIIEST MARK-Lead.‘ ing the Island with 1M ntarks.‘ Mark McGulgan, Jr.. was 111511 men- ln the junior matriculation exam-l lnatlons this year. He ls a Grade Three other pupils of class were also among the WP "in in the results 111w were 6°"? Mullins, 152; Maurice Flynn. 147. 41nd Ixawrence McInnls. 145. RECEIVES san NEWS - Mrs. Warren Inmarr Hampton. his 1'8" ceived a wire informing her of ‘the sudden passing away at CHEF-FY. Alta" on Aug. 30. 1045. oi‘ her sis- ter Pearl (Mrs. Gordon Sproule). She was the elder daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Inman. Nine Mlle Creek, and had been a resident of Calgarv for the 11st thirty-five years. he is surv vcd by her husband, one son Nvrmlm. now in Wllhelmshaven Germany. and daughter Mrs. David Rimmer. Calgary; also her sister. Mrs. Wm:- ren Inman. Hampton. and brothm, Stewart Inman. Victoria, P. E.l' HOME FROM OVERSEAS-WC. Stanley McInnis, son qf 58$- L» A- and Mrs. McInnls of Charlottetown has arrived home from overseas. He served for four years Wlf-h flli‘ Royal Canadian Air Force and for almost half of that “m! WM 0V"- wlng t . ed more than 30 flight-s. over Germany- H15 1B5?» $118M b9- fore the Nazis surrendered was one in which food was dropped to £110 eople of Holland. W0. McInnls ihoerrupted his college course to enlist and now he expects to return to Prince Wales College by Christmas w resume his work. Meanwhile he is awaiting dis- charge He arrived in Charlotte. town on Tuesday- ll. B. Liquor Board Boss Found Oeatl MONOION. N.B-. Sept. 6 —(OP) _A_ Roy Spence. manager of the New Brunswick liquor control board here, was found dead this morning on the bank of a stream at Chockplsh. Kent County- He" a fishing camp where he bod gone on Wednesday. A search was in- augurated after he failed to re- turn but no sign of the missing man was found until this mornlag. An examination disclosed that . Spence had died of natural causes- I-Ie is survived by his Wife. W0 daughters, Mrs. Donald MacPher- son and Mrs. Pat Daniels, both of Moncton, and a sister, Mrs. Harry Redmond, Gordon St. Way ls Oloared For Operations Under llew Rousing Aot OTTAWA. Sept. 6 — (CP) — ht. that the way has been cleared for life insurance companies to make agreements with the Government for the er- ection of rental housing projects under the National Housing Act. with preference for ex-service- men's families. It was necessary to make certain technical amendments in the hou», all: legislation in order to full-i Rate lame scale emergency oper- ations by the life companies. The affect was to enable finun-l cial institutions to form subsldlnry~ corporations, for the purpose of constructing. holding and munc- glng low-cost and - rental housing projects and in particular where such subsidiary corporations were conftlned- to the minimum cost field with limited profits, to qualify them as limited dividend h corporations which ure eligible to secure from the crown long term loans at three per com interest. Angus L‘. May Take Ovor In ll. S. Today . 39D?» 6 — ICP) - that Hon. Anson L. . new leader of the Nova Llboml Pam and premier. to, might “he over tho HAWAII MI‘. Mid [hit b8 14% ‘K131i? 1g .21!“ k1: 1f1§i°'£.1;'£§ I- lllllll O-‘l-l 6 l6 111 .Ma1tonald Ire for _I Poison 9 pupil at Queen Square School.) the same; be Finance Minister Ilsley said in a b0 e statement last nlg Ship To Sail With Oargo Of fins CAIRNIYAN, Widows, , . OE-(ltouuloal- The ship " mu e m- pg" will have thin little wont Scotland hu- bor in a day: wlh a car- “ u! u: u: be dun - ed In the Atlantic Ind ll ref negfiwilfiofhofirdlirltlsh uhfpto ho scuttled In the prrlllllflllmllfifllfi: ‘forwelnouoofwloruloof l m: of 1r he "I the Allan-to with her. Other obsolete p: will follow with similar l I loads. Britain's poison Ill dumping begun days lgu and mull craft are mnklqg trip after trip out- ward 2O miles to the IOO fathom lea. depth line whore they jet- tison their deadly cargoes Spcclll t-mlnc are loaded at poison gm storage depots all over Britain and given priority night trowel facilities to reach Calrnryan safely. It is expected that months ‘ lo complete the Allies SEPTEMBER 1, 1945 ' V tonne“: crneens PURE WHITE 100 LEAVES Swift Punishment for Jap Murderers will he ‘ the tuk dlduflllllll/K‘ c gas. Rum and Molasses Oargos Bue Shortly j From West Indies MONT AL. Sept. O — (OP)- Three gguund punohconl of mohueo, nbpreoentlng some 300,- 000 gnllons‘ will he lauded ln Montreal early next month for use by Canadian housewives. Canadian National Steamship 11f- The molusel, first 4n enter Montreal flnco 1m. ls bound from Lhe urbados aboard the freighter filer Plfk- A cargo which will consist principally of rum will be brought from Jam lea in Halifax about the same me uboarfl the West- dalo Park, which nailed from Montreal terduy for the Wm! Indies of r maiden vnylllfi- Th9 ship will used In the Welt In- dies trade. Siamese Twins Are Losing Fight (By Tho Associated Prod) PHOENIX, Am. Bent. 6-1-0111“ and Mlcalln Miranda, Arizona's 11- dny old Sia 1ese Twins. today were reported 1 1n: around in "W" struggle for life. Rev. Emmott McI-oushllrl. su er- lntendent St. Monica"; Hosp ti!“ said the t are 1n onl fa He said Mlcaia. the (a; two, ls suffering a bowel dlsor 1' and the ailment may be affecting the strength of Louisa. Truman Recommends Out in Taxation was-nun won. Bent 6 — W’) -President.qlkuman recommended to Congress todlly 51986113’ "l" ‘ ment. of o ransltionul toX bill l‘) rovlde "Ila-tied tax reductions or the cal dar YB!" 1945- 1-11; moo endation wu inclu- ded in u. 1B bl-word measatle leni- to Congress on the second day of m; poswwar emergency session, "Like the tax adlustment “Ml of 1945", the President said, f-he new p111 should aim principally at revomvtlng barriers to SPERM‘ W‘ conversion skid to the osyrpanlion of our peacqtiime economy. At the some time Mr. stressed. that the must reconcile itself to the fact that. tax-refduotlon opportunities are limited. e said “a total war be liquidated over- night." mlmatlnz _wer expenditure! f" the current fhscal year Will total a- ut 80.000.000.00 of total expen- ditures of 816.000.000.000 the P"- uident said that. with current re- ceipts estimated at only $36,000.- O00.000, "we ‘f-ace an estimated de- ficit of $30. .000.000 in the cur- rent flscal y r." Post War Ring of ll. S. llaval Bases llrgotl for Pacific WASHING-GUN. Sept. 5—(AP>- The N; re xnmended today that the Uni ates retain a vast post-war ring of naval bases an- niug e Pacific, including one base t at. wan formerly British. It also called for six ermonent mu bases 1n the At antic 1n- clu ing one o-n Bermuda and an- other at A nt-fna, Newfoundland. Streochin Jfrom the Aleutlans to the A allies. the proposed Pacific line buses would 11o athwurf. thot ocean to support I'll‘- Pronounoed by Byrngg. WASHINGTON, sepp km,’ moved set-gt]; The United States ‘Ia/PURSE w" today w 11111111111 a ter the State Depart- criminal]; ment. tod how the e » buried 111m 1.11111 11131125511511 carllw prisoners. ' o »se axute agencies - plating lls s of alleged war gfmfifi whom Allied forces are 1mm down tn J-a an and gmoughfi liberated As a, it was learned The agencies are the National War Crimes Council, strictly an American organization, com ed of State, War and Navy 99pm, mem, officials, and an Allied w“ Crimes Commission in China o; which Ambassador Patrick J, 1.1;", ley is United States PBIIYESEXIIQ. l6 another 11st o1 tlve. In making publ Japanese atrocities, 1n which crim. inals frequently were nnmqd m, State Department, said the '11»... would “be dealt with by the pm- perly constituted authorities." State Secretary Byrnes was mo,‘ blunt. The United States certain. lymust. see to 1t that. prosecution of Japanese we: criminals is car. riecl out {use a; in Europe. he aid, ‘The aroclty report was not | pleasant; story, Mr B . ymes observ- ed grlmly. It was not published until the war was over for 1m of additional Japanese reprlm alnst American captives, he q. p mined. The report consisted of a terlu of formal State Department pro- tests on the atrocities, sent to Tokyo by way of nctxtral Switzer- land. There worn -»bout 240 such rotests filed du: m. the tvar and requently they resulted in improv- ed conditions for American prison- ers, the report. said. An exumgle of the atrocities: A1. a P ilipplnes air base. 150 Americans were hurled inw tun- nels used as air raid shelters. Fifty Japanese guards then poured gasoline into the tunnels and set it aflre. As burning men fled from the tunnels they were machine- gunned and bayonotted. Forty of them tried to escape h; plunging from a 50-foot c111. Some who survived the leap wen shot; others were buried aive by the Japanese. llo Plans For Taking ll. S. Service Vote , Sept. s - to?) - Th; Nova Sootla Government blt not yet adopted any regulation: 11¢‘)! taking the soldier vote 1n the on _ coming provincial general eleotlblll) Premier AS. MauMlllun said toll‘! 1n reply w charges by Pivsrlieig‘ Conservative peril’ lead" 1 ' F's-user um the oovemmslll 11"‘ visions were "inadequate and un- fair." Th, Premier 1111111 the prom regulations were set out in on“ form for discussion Pllllw-"es who’ and added that, Mr. from”; m made the charges at a vellum vention here last’ night. “as - ing out of turn- ll. S. llioe Admiral llies Unexpectedly t‘? ml also. 01W» 9°"- (Ap) _ Vim-Admiral Johnofsldnfi McCain, Oliaocoznrplandlelr dud o! I mnéatil: giggle home in nearbl C ro o 0 ~ , . 31mm Moon“ andhllleflffiii. bore of nu 8L8“ loftt f; mm”. day after tukinfl 95:; o B“ . der ceremonies 1n T0 Y hgflmn “SaiSt. had been rcwllfdagiflfi: 11111; w so to Wul;ll3g1§°“,,, 1 aviarkfnaaci. riugmpfittion. dirt-cull! ranging fl and keep aggression far from U ted States shores. affairs for n B. 1.1 s. HALL =1 SATURDAY NIGHT 1'“ Modern and Old Time Dancing _ s to 121. Adllsllw“ *5‘ - Follow flue Crowd to i ' TIIE n.1.s. 11111.1. ' s -- —--"'<f