In 0ffi MAXIMS , OIL MERE “MAN Anlndoonoeluraofright artlsehlaehofldol- laugh: g-M-a-j- ople 's aper Iorlllg Guardian. lauded III. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Ceoh. In Charlottetown Under Prices Board Regulation Diplomatic. Appointments "g (By The Canadian Press) UITAWA. Oct. fill-Announce- ment is expected mortly, possibly within the next 24 hours, of a rules of diplomatic appointments timed at filling vacancies in Cane ads’: foreign service. The appointments, -impendlng for some weeks. are said to in- volve‘ five posts abroad-three in foreign lands and two in nations ndihin the British Commonwealth. One of the foreign appoint- ments will be that of C. Fraser Elliott. deputy minister of rev. snue for taxation. who, authori- tative sources said last night. will become Canadian ambassador to Chile. Another likely will (Continued on Page 5 Col. 0) 611000111 Coming Events "Movies at T5511‘... to-night. "Unloading car of coal Thurs- lsy and Friday. P. J. Noy 6s Co. "Dance St.‘ Teresa's, Monday, November 4th. Webster's Orchestra. "Crushing Grain Saturdays and Mondays. J. Worth, Pownol. drgfeflé-llfly ‘buying daily. live and s ou r , t - ket prior? Davis gulliuflgser?“ f‘Our Store will be closed all duy Friday. November 1st. Peters 8r Gallant Ltd. OTTAWA. Oct. 31 —(CP) -'I‘he Prices Board tonight announced extension of "restricted areas" where priority of the sale of evap- orated milk i‘s by coupon only. in l "WV! designed to provide more evaporated milk for infants, in- valid: and others in remote dis.- trlcts. ‘Those district: where supplier of fresh milk are sufficient to meet necessary needs are design. nted as restricted areas. Most areas of Ontario and Quebec, exceptthe northern portions, are in this classification, as well a; prmclpg] cities and towns of the weszcrn and Maritime Provinces. "Restricted area" in Prince Edward Island includes the City of Charlottetown. The board has also announctd that all renewal applications for evaporated milk for infant; undcr two years must now be signed by a competent authority, such as a doctor or public health nurse, or must be accompanied by such a certificate stating that the child requires tinned milk in its for- mula. It will be necessary for oar- ents to present a new certificate whenever the card is renewed. Previously a certificate was re- quired only if the child was over two years of age, Birch card contains l6 Coupon‘; and entitles the holder to six runs of milk per coupon. States War Plants Working. Three Shifts (By The Associated Press) NEW BEIDFORD, Mass, opt. 31 "Rev. Leopold Braun, an Amgrj- can Roman Catholic priest who spent l3 years in Moscow. charged last night that the "Russians are “Variety Supper - Legion Hall. Murray River. Saturday, November 3nd. Supper served from 5-9 P. M.‘ "Delivering wheat, mill feed 011W ration. barley meal on Sat- ‘WPY- Gfiiite MacDonald, Souris. "Unhldllll car VPurina Hog Mortar. Hog Grower and Milk Chow. N. Aubrey Cutclifle. ""115 5W"? Will be closed all fly Friday. Nov. 1. J. 1". Morris» ltinkora. "Reserve November 14th, Var. My Concert and Lecture, Clyde River Hall. "Bociai and dance in Westmor- land school Friday. Nov. 1. Sale of sandwiches. N“Unve of War Memorial at ine Mile Creek School, Sunday at 1.30 P. M. w“Unloading car_Coke at Albany. Wm? 01' Phone your order to Brent W. Crapoud. ~ F“Chicken 1nd Bazaar, bortune Hall. Wednesday, Ngvgyn. ‘l’ 13h If stormy, following "R mo. nut; an P; S“ Iv. November 2nd st s “"01: Bulk Wheat to arrive in ' M" future. Order at once. 5""!!! Myers. “alumna: Marketing W’ Ml! It Montague Mon- lay. Nowmber 4th. For trucking who list with Stewart Adams ore. Victoria Cross. Phone M “Ii-Montague exchange. "Livestock Marketing Board “"11"! bogs at all usual loading ' week o4 November P1710! highest price plid lnvwluro in Canada. Cali our ""110 for trucking service with- lut ertn. eoet.. ' " Annual-Tooting of the M‘ ‘ ‘ ' Association will In the Baptist church Hell. Board .3. a I i 110p. working their war plants three shifts a duy...while Russian rep- resentativvs at the United Nat- ions confere1rce_sh0ut for disarm- ament." Father Braun. who returned to the U. s. early this year, made the charge at a meetin; of the Knights of Columbus. Father liraun. 42. was the only Roman Catholic priest allowed to hold services in Moscow. He went to the Soviet carfial in i003 as e. result of a pact between the Un- ited States and Russia signed by the late President Roosevelt and :he former Soviet foreign secre- tary, Maxim Litvinofi. He held two services daily~cne for English-speaking worshippers and the other for Russian‘ and French-speaking Catholics. Mem- hers of diplomatic corps in Mos- , cow were among his parishioners. Born in New Bsdford. he stud- ied at Assumption College. Wur- ecster. Mass... and in Louvain. Bel- gium. and was ordained in 1932. He speaks German and French fluently. FOR CLEANER. FLOORS An easy and effective way to re- fnQl/Q dust particles from any bare floor ls to use the brush nozzle of your vacuum cleaner. Two-Suspects Arrested As Police Probe Explosion (By The Associated Press) ROME. Oct. (ii-Police tonight seized two suspects for question- ing in the time-bomb explosion which earlier wrecked a wing o! the block-long British Embassy. ll Giornaie Delia Sara said the lus- peots were "two forelimb" Authorities serum: to any whe- ther they vme connected with three men and a woman who fled from the vicinity of the Iknbassy at the time of the blast. Two were fired upon by police when they did not heed commands to The powerful blast that awoke filllriotoetownhm M ng two suitcases left at the doorway half. of Rome tore a gaping hole in the front of the nnosuv to the depth o! two rooms. and so cracked the heavy masonry of the three-storey building that police said rt of it might have to be pulle down. The blut was frun bombs in and set of! by a time mechlnilm. Michael ltewdrt. Rritish press attache. uid it would be idle to rpeouiete on the motive. t consonants their investigation ca '- CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1946 Will Treat 16 , Convalescent Polio Patients Within the next two week; 51x. teen convalescent polio patients are expected to be undergoing muscle-restorative and other phy- sio-therapist treatment in the W85! end of the old Sanatorlum building. Dr. P. A. Creelman in- formed The Guardian yesterday. That rsrrlflfiflfiéllt. Dr. Creel- man said. is the result of a dag!)- fon made lest Monday by the medical men of the Provlnge, Some forty physicians represent- ITB all population centres from Tignish to Souris met on that day B! the Charlottetown Hotel to hear Dr. T. B. Acker. with his background of more than twenty years experience with the disease, discuss the polio situation as it uflectcd the Province, As a result of the medical men's conference. six physicians were aopointed to coornprisc a commit- ice which would have the respon- sibiliiv of making all plans and nrranecments for the further treatment of those who had res covered from the disease but who had been left with physical dis- abilities. The contrnittee com- prises Drs. RSI". Seaman. W JP. MadMillnn. J. P. Larrtz and B. C. K0"".?’1".-—all cf Charlottetown- (illfl Drs. Henry Movse. Summer- side. and Preston MacIntyreM/an- rogue. N ino Nurses Required While (he arrangements are bclng made for the accommodat- ion of polio patients at the Sana- torlum. the same treatment which will be used there is being carried on at. the Cityls two hospitals. Dr. Creelman said the services of nine rurses would be required to take care of the i6 patients whose selection for treatment will be made by Dr. Acker upon his re- 111D’! to the Province next Wed- nesday. The services of three PlIYSlO-UIEYHQBIS will also be nec- (cOnt1KJéEY-TPEEEG Col 5);‘ Cut lemon on Payroll; Close 1,642 Boards WASHINGTON, Oct 31 — (AP) — The fast-vanishing Of.fioe of Price Administration today order- cd 10.020 field workers cut off the payroll, and direczed that its 1,642 local price consul boards close Nov. 4 . The order, besides cutting the paid field stcnf by nearly one-third, terminates the service of some 40,- 000 upaid VOl'l\'lZ€€‘I‘S. Paul Porter, harried price con- trol chief, said that the 1.64.2 local boards had 8.013 paid clerks. Other paid supervisory field workers brought the total i0 10 000. All of transfer records. _ ‘The OP A chief’ said so few ceilings had survived that the ex- pensg M maintaining the local boards was not justified Their duties wit! be transferred to 61 O.P.A. regional offices and 650 area rent-control offices which are staffed by paid workers. "There of course may be irre- spoosibles who might have done it-Palestine Jews. Elwiiln NI!- lonalists and so ore-but I could not give a guess." A tattered piece of red cloth bearing the Italian word "atten- aione" (caution) and the Polish word "miny" (mines) was found at the scene. Foreign Minister Pietro Menni. who sent his regrets to W!!!“ Secretary Bevin. said the investi- gation has made no progress but i! continuing "in two villi! til?"- lions." Premier Alcide De cancer! Ill» expressed regret in a mesun 1° Prime Minister Attics. declaring the ‘hateful and stupid not a- rouses heartfelt unanimous die- ppproval on (he part of Italian public opinion." The Rome eveninl M1009" n Giornaie D'It:ll:. declared It- alians have no interest "in of- fending a great power like Erit- ain" gnu called upon police M "f are who canto these will ge: a 30-day dismissal - notice‘ to wind up their work and , Eight Firsts , N5 Oct 3i —-(S(pe- 0581) — Lewis Brothers York, PE I. were top winners in the Holstein classes today at the Maritime Win- ter Fair, with eight firsts. Premier J. Walter Jones, Biunhury, was a strong contender. The Falconwood bull owned by Walter Dickie, ‘iruro, was 1unlor olmmpiom. Premier Jones had the tumm- champion female, wit-h Lewis Bros. the reserve 111 wmlpfltlliou for county herds of Shorthnrn classes Alex Mac- Klnnon, Meaziowrbrook, P E.I , won the grand championship with his oow Roan Lam 34th. Seymour Wood. (Jhnrlottieiown, was leading winner in the R.O.P. classes for slmrtlrurns. Lewis Bros were simng in in. dividual classes and grmips, also whining firsts in two bull classes. ‘Classes Won By At Amherst Fair Yesterday . In H olstein Lewis Bros. three-year Old cry females, get of sire, and junior herds. The reserve grand champion in dual purpose Shorthorns was own- ed by Seymour Wood . P.E.l. FOXES SCORE Island foxmcn dominated the registered standard bred classes, with Roy Woodside top winner. L.W. Hancock had the reserve grand clmntplon and drampion male George McMillan was prom- inent in group winnings. , Walter Lusby, Amherst, won the grand championship in silver foxes with L.W. Hancock, second. Other exhibitors prominent in Winnings were Georgi: Callbeck, D.0. Stewart, Roy Iockenby and Gordon McMillan, and Charles Willis. Before S’si Choosing as his subject, "Can- ada Grows Up.” Fisheries Minis- tcr Hon. H. F. Bridges who is vis- iting in the Province making a tour of (the fishing areas lddress- ed s. dinner meeting of the Sum- merside Y's Mcns Club in the Presbyterian Church hall last ev- enlng. He said that even if his audience did not agree with his remarks he hoped they would be provocative of sound and serious thinking. Mr. Bridges quoted the late Lmd Tweedsmuir in speaking bgfore the Institute cf internat- ional Aflairs on October l2. 1937 when he said: "Canada is a sov- ereign nation and cannot take her attitude to the world docilely from Britain, or from the United States. or from anybody else. A Canad- lprrs first duty is not to the Brit- ish Commonwealth of Nations but to Canada and to Canada's King. and those who deny this are do~ mg. to my mind. a great disser- vice to (he Commonwealth. If the (wmmorvwealth, in a crisis. is t0 speak with one voice it W111 be only because the component DEW-B have thought out for themselves 11131;- own special problems and made their contribution to the discussion so that a true 00111111011 {actor of policy can be reached. A sovereign people must. as apart c! its sovereign duty. take up its own attitude to world problems. ‘The only question is whether that attitude shall be a wise and well- informed one or a short-sighted and ill-informed one. Therefore we need knowledge-exact know- ledge." M1, Bridge; said if those words had been littered by a Canadian. he would have been accused by certain people of being anti-Brit: (Continued On Page ll. Col- 3) Cots 3 Year Sentence And Army Dismissal (By The Associated Press) PRANKFURT. Germany. Oct. S1 -Maj. David F. Watson today was sentenced to three years‘ imprisonment and dismissal from the United Btstes Anny upon his conviction on charges of conspir- acy and receiving stolen property in connection with the 51.500000 Kronbcrg Castle jewel theft. It was the secondiconviction in the case of the stolen Reese fam- ily jewels. Capt. Kathleen Nash ut the United States Women’: Anny Corps was sentenced earlier to five years’ imprisonment. Her irusbend and Watson's command- lnl oflicer, Col. Jack W. Durant. is evicting trial. t ' Fisheries Minister Bridges Discusses Canadafs Status de Y’s Men Booming House Fire Takes ‘Four Lives BALTIMORE. Oct. 31 -(AP)— An empty can which smelled of gasoline and a patrolman‘: scport that he saw a mun running from the scene were the main clues as police and firemen investigated a blaze which burned out a water- front rooming house and left four seamen dead today Battalion Chief Thomas Hanger- iy of the fire department said, I home-made incendiary bomb ap- parently wos thrown through the’ building's front windcw——the slme one shattered a week ago by a monkey wrench. ‘ Police said the wrench carried a note reading: “Stop rooming fink: in your house. This is your fin lwsrning." The dcad seamen, ll Latin- Amerimns, were identified at Johns I-Ionkirxs Hospital as Manuel Dnlbero. Marco Tilio Esplcnoza, Paul Sunicnns and Ramon Romero. Romero dlcd of burns several hours after the blaze. ‘The other three were taken dead from the vdebris. Jcsse Rodriguez. proprietor of the roominil house. said ‘re had been acting ‘is hiring agent for Panamanian Steamship Lines and had received permission at union headquarters Wednesday to ship some of his men to one of the firm’s ships at Newport News, Va. He said the dead men were rnion seamen. Police blamed the inci-dehf on waterfront tension developed dur- ing the recently settled country- wide Maritime strike, The mon- nlng of foreign-registry ships was a point of contention among soc- _ a Read by Eveybody" Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew sumnmrslde-‘ox Caroline Institute, University of l )1 ll. S. University (ieneticist Wins The Nobel Prize STOCCKHOLo/l, Oct. ill --(AP)— Prof. Herman J Mailer, world- famed geneticLst oi Indiana Univ- ersity, was announced tonight as the winner qt the 1946 Nobel Prize for Medicine and Physiology The 56-year-old scholar, author and lecturer was awarded the prize for his work in discovering that urutstions, or biological changes in a species, nuw be produced by X- rays. The prize this year amounts to about 130,000 Swedish krona ($36,- 205). The award was made at a formal session of a wmmiiiee of professors 12 PAGES Cwlwlb do not lessen evil: but I'M-her increased them. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN 3! The army leaders declared it same sort of demonst “ Medicine in Stockholm, lasting only s. few minutes. The actual decision had been made earlier in private discussions. A native o! New York City, Prof. Muller long has been recognized as a leader in the field of genetics. Last year the Rockefeller Founda- tion made a grout cf $95,000 to Ind- iana. University for a six-year re- search in the field of genetics with Prof. Muller as one 0i the three scientists carrying on the program. Last week the American Cancer Society made a grant of $4,500 to Prof. Muller for c. study of can- cer. He was settler geneticist at the Institute of Genetics in Moscow for four years from ‘.938. and went to Indiana University in 1946 from Amherst College where he was head of the zoology department. iippointJTo liigh Position WASvHINGTON, Oct. 31 ~10?) -—Char1es Chl-pmlan Plneo nf the Royal Bonk of Canada today was appointed director of loan oper- ations of the world hank. The announcement was made by Eugene Meyer, president of the hank, at a press conference, Arthur Hoar of the Bunk of England was, appointed assistant director. Mr. Pineo retired from the Riyal Bank about a year ago after long service in Canada and South America. At his retirement he was assistant. general manager Z-n charge of the foreign division. In his early 80's. Mr. Pinco is a native of Nova Scotla. Charged With Manslaughter AMHERST. N. 5., Och. 31 — (CPU-Albert Edward Davis of nearby Nnppan wns committed for fri-ul here today on u charge oi manslaughter arising from the death of Arnold R. Stiles, also o1‘ Nappan. Although s verdict of accidental death was returned by a coroner's jury at the time, the case was re- opencrl under direction of ille at- torney uenerafs department after reports were - received from the RCMP. At Haifa, the Jewish commun- ity council called for a three-hour general strike tomorrow as a pro- test against the resumed transfer 0i refugees to Cyprus. where a- bout 5.000 Jews lacking Pfllestine entry permits are interned. The strike is to be accompanied by e mass meeting and demonstration. At the same time the Jewish National Council (Vaad Leumi) issued a siatemlm§ calling the methods of Jewish extremists "heinous," an “unforgivable crime" and “acts of madness" most dan- gerous to Zionism. A Jewish agency spokesman said .1115 organization "and other Jew- ish authorities will combat with all the resources at our disposal the criminal activities of gangs which not only terrorize British authorities, but Palestine Jews as ‘rellfi’ Earlier. a broadcast by the sec- (Continued On Page 8 Col. 1) Ila|lowe’en Passes 0ft iluietly Notwithstanding the pessimistic predictions that the Halloween Delivered $0.00 mu ssToo, mo" Provinces nus A, $1.00 Arab Uprising In Palestine ls Threatened . Canned Milk Rationed Calling Of Mass Meeting Might Be Occasion For Eruption Against Jews i By CARTER L. DAVIDSON JERUSALEM, Oct. Si-(AIU-Leaden of the Palestine Arab Anny Futuwah called today for s. parade and mass meeting ‘ Nablus, 33 miles north of Jerusalem. and many authorities expressed fear it might be an occasion for an Arab eruption against the Jewl. win was "not a protest" against bomb- ing: Wednesday in which six Arabs were killed, but other Arab Inform- ants declared it was “a IlIOW of strength by Arab: (m the heell of the by the Jews." Two British soldiers were killed and two other: critically wounded tonight when _their truck struck a road mine a few miles north of To! Aviv, it was reported officially. The deaths were the fourth and fifth among British Anny personnel during the last 40 hours. $239,829,200 Subscribed In Bond Sales OTTAWA, Oct. 31 —(CP7 —'I1re 13-day total of Canada saving: bonds sales is $239,829,200 and the average individual purchase is greater than expected. the Bank of Canada. reported tonight. The average purchase so far i: $384.89 compared to $375.30 at the same point in the Ninth Victory loan ca/IWPBIBH. The average genero- al sales purchase now is $707.15 and the average payroll savings pur- chase $174.82. Applications have increased i1 621.10.. including 377,214 by payroll. Navy sales have reached $785,550] R. C. A. F. $1.330. l l I'M Bcqmmn’ 1" WONDER wnm’ i mo wifn MY Sumnaws cclebrants would tear up side- walks, break street lights, and smash windows. Halloween passed oft in the City with little or no damage being G008. Crowds oi children were on the streets by dusk and even many of . those of more mature years Joined in the reveillng. But the fun was wholesome with nothing malicious in the pranks that were played. Some windows were souped, door bells were rung; and tricks of : kindred nature were participated in by happy throngs going from door to door. The Haiiowek-n Party given by the Kinsmen Club no doubt had a salutary effect also. inasmuch as so many of Halloween age at- tended that affair and thus were off the streets. Mayor B. Earle MacDonald and Chief of Police Birtuhistle made a tour of the City by cor about i1 o'clock and later informed the Guardian at was one of the most orderly Halloween celebrations in the City's history. They were unr animous in stating that the par- unis in (he City deserved com- mendation and congratulations on the conduct of their children dur-~ ing the hours of revelry‘. men during the stoppage. Banning Sentence To Be Appealed OTrAWA. Oct. 31 -—(CP)—An appeal has been filed against. (he five-year sentence imposed on Jam- es Scotland Benning, 33-year-old fonner munitions official, convicted last Tuesday of obtaining secret and confidential information for Russia. Notice of the appealwas sent to Toronto by J. Douglas Wait. de- fence counsel. Release of Benning on boil pending outcome of the ap- peal was scheduled to be sought be- fore Chief Justice Robertson in Toronto. 3313,‘? rheu- gontlmlfll residence l Buds Bloom In U. 8.: Snow Falls In Rockies (By The Associated Press), NEW YORK. Oct. 31 — Buds burst into bloom in the north- eastern United States today as temperatures shot into the 80's, making it one of the warmest Hsllowe'ens on record. but rescue parties had to battle waist-deep snow to reach isolated persons in the Rocky Mountain area. The unreasonable warmth fiwullht record marks for the date in New England and New York City. which had a high 0t 80. Portland. Ne. also reported 80. which was i0 degrees above the previous Oct. 81 high. and Boston lied a sizzling 81. breaking a 30- year record. Sprouting of bulbs and budding of trees was noted in New Eng- land and Dr. Poul Dempsey of Mhnechusetts Stats College. said (he spell of warm weather was certain to cause some damage. m New York. where the weath- er bureau said this October was the warmest in the Tl-year history of the office and also one of the drioot. men found rosobuslt- Os in com and many vegetable have been fooled. Tile New York fishery Council said about 100 pounds of shad were caught re- cently in fresh water streams a- long the New Jersey coast, where the fish ordinarily go to spawn only in spring. Far across the country in Utah. the early snows made rescue of 33 snowbound persons difficult but all were reported brought to saf- ety or in no immediate danger. At Aberdeen, S.D., the mercury dip- ped to 23. Unusually warm weather also prevailed in southeastern states. with Miami listing B4. Atlanta B0. Charlotte. N. C., '19. New Orleans 82. ard Memphis 79 at noon. The normal mean temperature in At- lanta for the date is 6'7. The welt-her man predicted sharply cooler weather for New York City tomorrow, with a mul- mum reading of about 60. However, the United States werther Bureeu said the warm spell in the east. with temperrt- ores of 10 to t5 degrees above nor- mal. probsbly would continue for some time until the much cooler plants thriving. Ivan the fish in eastern water: air west of the Mississippi Valley moved east to replace it. HALIFAX. Weather synopsis and official in- land forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Weather Office herd at 11:15 p.rn. tonight. Forecasts. valid until midnight: Prince Edward Island -Cloudy Friday morning, clear in after- nou-n and evening. Colder, North- west winds 15 m.p.h. incoming light during the late afternoon. High Friday at Charlottetown 50. Summary -Cloudy in morning. Clcvr afternoon and evening. TORONTO, Oct. 31 -—(CP)—- Minimum and maxi um temper- atures: Vancouver 4 , 48; Edmon- lion a0, s1; Regina 19. 4c: Winni- peg 2i, 35; Toronto 52, 55; OLL-iwl 53, 59; Montreal 32, 80; Quebec 34. M: Saint John B. l0; Monctom 32, 65; Halifax 30. 5'1; Charlottetown 33, 59; Sydney 32, en; Yul-mouth _, c2. High tide tlhls aftemoon at 2.01 and tonight at 2.45. Sun sets this afternoon at 4.4‘ and rises tomorrow morning at 6.39- First quarter moon November 15h 11.40 P, M Summerside tide eighteen mini- utes later than Charlottetown. AIR SCHEDULE Chnrlnttotntvn-Moncion _I..envI Charlottetown 8 A. M.. 11.20 A. M’. 6.15 P. M Arrive Charlottetown 6.55 A. M. 1.35 P. M.. 5.55 P. M. Charloi-fefowm-Halifax- Lea Friday Charlottetown 1.45 P. M. arri Charlottetown 4.55 P. M. Charlottetown ~New GIasSOW Leave Chsrlotltetown 7 A. M.. 1. P. M. Arrive Charlotttown 11. A. M.. 5.15 P. M. ' CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND’ Lmave Borden £1.05 All. l P-M and 1.30 P M. Leave Tormentine 10.30 A ll 1 P. M2 7.80 P. M. Extra trips are made betwee on which automobiles are earrh‘ SUNDAY BIRVICI From Bordfltul PJQPCUAC Prom Tormen I - - n“ Aanoo Leave Wood ~ 11AM. rue. . s‘ wooo rots 1:11 o Am i‘- cariboa‘ at some bows. \ -- '....,-_-.____._M..; .