Maxims Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER a, 194s Airliner Crash Claims (By Th0 PRU) EDMONTON. am. b—Ofliolais ,1 mo powerful erta. Farmers’ Union which has called a deliver! strike of all farm produce for 1'11- midnight among its 20.000 members. 1001K!" 5 answered Dominion Government request for out nothing could immediately be done unless the Government moved to meet farmer demands [gr parity prices. whoa a critical mtatement came from Alberta's Premier Ernest Mélllfllflll on the A. F. U. strike action, F. '1‘. Apnleby. president of it... Saskatchewan section of the United Farmers of Canada. whose estimated 53.000 members are ex- pected to give stroll! ell/WOT! l0 the Alberta farmers. said at 0t- tawn that Trade Minister Mac- Kinrion had asked that the Strike i... “held back" until Agriculture Minister Gardiner had an oppor- tunity to study i319 39ml?" d9‘ IifllldS. H. J. Boutillier. secretary of tihe A.F‘.U.. said the union's board 0f dlmcfors had made the decision to strike and a full board meet- ing would be required to postwllt? it. The secretary pointed out that ti.» harvest was drawing so near that a two or three weeklpoet- poccmcnt might defeat the ‘whole purpose the strike since a large vol e cf pmdlwe ‘V0915 have reached the market." Mr. Boutilller said "if they "9 really interested in reaching "l agreement they should be able t0 give the boord some definite as- surance immediately without wait- inc for two weelcs for Mr. Gardin- er'< return.‘ The director! were “quite Will- inc to discuss this thing- We iirc really interested in netIOl-lfl-f- inYrs" Halifax Man Named . Chief Prosecutor tBy The Canadian Press) HALIFAX. Sept. 5—-Capt. John Dickie, 3i, Halifax army officer. has been appointed chief D1088- outcr in the war crimes trial oi 2W0 Japanese soldiers at Yoko- hama. it tivas learned here today. cant. Dickie. vuho is a member ol the legal section of the Con- ldinn liaison with General Ma:- Arthur's staff, will prosecute Capt. Tnklo Kaneko and Sgt. Teshiharu Uchidu. who were on duty at the Fukuoka prison camp in Kyushu. Jritmn. in i943. The two Japanese will face charges of ill-treating Allied war prisoners and 3B Canadians, two Americans and one Chinese are blamed in the specifications against . (Tn, I Coming Events "spurts Exhibidoii, Thursday. Stptcniber 12th. "Buying New Hampshire, Bar; ltd Rock, Leghnms Pull-e. W __ Wiicntley. "Coma u. firs}. first‘: llluuc. for hand mode the latest in harness. "Remember are Mammalian P El Annual klr Snow anc Dance 0n wed. Sept. tan. at thi- Char- lsottcitown Alrpcro- Paulo Sirius erv ca. Bradalbane. o a Be d. s‘ m" n o“. children's "1903. women's and stockings, just. arrived. "Dl-ugwelra‘ Bus oeryioe cancel- llus second trip on Saturday's until further notice. leaving Chor- lottctown at. 5.30 on first P. i "Bern ' "_“ Brad lb . I btukets fmriiilfatslioernprlces. ‘ me "Moe of "Abegwait" RAP. 905. Kingston. cancelled. (816.1 K- B. Young. Registrar. " £5. ‘$53.2 f" ' than flue. following night. "lleadoabaok Institute m!!! Elf-Eases‘ dtlcmcldiuguadclng ‘at a‘ -_- l0 dad to leave their - An aotimat (Ftrviill Stand Firm A Until Government Gives ‘Assurance Gale Damage Estimated At/ postponement with the statemantnssoojoou (By The Associated Prell I EL ROSA. Minn. Sept. b-llvery building in this village of 4B0 persons was damaged today when a terrific windstorm accompanied by a deluge of rain struck the Central Minnesota ares. There were no immediate reports of cas- witnesses ualties. d the storm as a tornado. Some The wind ‘blew down from 00 to Damage to fgrm built};- l’ Ed . 1M3 Suuke Centre Rathe, editor of the Herald. as 3500.000- Littlo Change In Steel Strike Situation- (By Jack Williams, Canadian Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA. Sept. 5—(CP)—Gov- ernment efforts to settle the steel IUTlkS were stepped up today as the work stoppage neared the eight-week mark. Prime Minister Mackenzie King conferred for more than sn hour and a half with union officials and then went immediately to a cabinet meeting where the strike was scheduled for discussion. Fur- ther Government-unlon confer- rEIlCeB were planned but no defin- itc time had been arranged, The meeting with the Pflm“. Minister was the second union- government conference of the day. This morning a union delegation spent more than two hours with Labor Minister Mitchell and sen- ior officials of his department go- ing over possible settlement plans. The Govcmment has proposed settlement on the basis of a gen- eral 102cm increase with further increases ranging up to l2 1-2 ccnta for lower-paid workers. Lat- est formal union proposal has been 15 l-I cents. It is understood one of the topics of discussion at todny-g meetings was the possibility of settlement by a general 131-2 cent increase but there was no indication that an actual offer of that figure had been made by the Government. At the conclusion of this morn- lnlfs meeting Pat Conroy, secre- tary-trcasurer of the Canadian Congress of Labor. said there was very lrttle change" in the pagi- tions of the union and govern- merit. Pleads Guilty SAINT JOHN, Sept. 5 ——(OP)-— Earl King Decatur, a War Assets Coflloration Representative. ydead- 9d Kmlly loda ‘Alien n9 appeared for speedy oral on a charge of BWEPNII: a $460 bribe in a @8118- aetion between the Corporation and T. S. Simms and 00-. 1M Judge J. A. Barry fcnlnnded him for Two-year-old Boy ls Lone Survivor (By The Associated Proud 51-39. NOV" Sept. 5—A weat- liound tum-luxury airliner from New York crashed to earth in hilly northeastern Neva!‘ during thick fog today. killing 21 rersons Ind slllrln one passenger, a blue-eyed blond boy of two. The youngster. Peter Link of on tho Found. crying duledly. about 100 feet from the wrecked Dill". filmed apart when it plow- ed into a low hill two milea west of the Elko airport. Other passengers’ bodies were described so rribly mangled," but the little boy apparently ea- capcd with only alight injuries of the chest and arm. ' The bodies of three women and a baby boy about six months old were among 17 brought to Elko. Newspapermen counted four other bodies in the smashed nose o! the plane. No Canadians were believed to have been aboard the aircraft. Fire swept the front section of the plane and smoke sLili wreath- the wreckage hours otter the crash. Chris H. Sheerin. Iliko news- paper editor. said the plane crashed irrto s. ISO-foot sagebrush- covered hill. "The plane's momentum wtas enough to send it. sliding about 300 feet up the face of the hill mn out onto the top. which is VIIIZ Lives O VIIIIZ 21 8 PAGES (By D'Arcy O'Donnell. Carillon Press Staff Writer) OTTAWA, Sept. 5—(CP)—Prlmc Minister Mackenzie King's an- nouncement that he will re-crgan- ize the Cabinet before the next session of Parliament in January today revived speculation on the nature and the extent of the pro- posed shuffle, Much of the speculation was n re-echo of that heard in parlia- mentary lobbles before tho end of the recent session. Absent from it however, was any guessing as to Mr. King's own future plans, The Prime Minister made it clear at his press conference yes- terday that he will lead the Gov- ernmc-rit in the Coming session and that he hopes to lead it for several sessions. He said it should not be forgotten that the life cf the pre- sent Parllament does not expire until June, 1950. He made the statement after an- nouncing changes in the diplo- matic service. which included his resignation as Secretary of State for External Affairs and the ap- pointment of Justice Minister St. Laurent to that post. Mr. St. Laurent agreed to ac- cept the post until the end of the year and handle it jointly with his justice portfolio. In the meantime, King will re-organize the cabinet and the re-organization will provide for a minister who will handle nothing but External Affairs. May Retire Mr. St, Laurent is among cab- inet ministers who is reported to fairly fiat," Mr. Sheerin said. “The bodies thrown out were terribly mangled. I counted at least. four other burned bodies in- side the front part of the plane. The ares is treeless and barren. pocked by barren. low hilh. o is about 225 miles airline north- east of Reno. The plane was on a. chartered flight, with a passenger list made up from unrelated applicants. Will Demand Constitutional Government t By Arthur Gavshon) LONDON, Sept. 5—(APl -The Arab states will demand estab- lishment of an Arab constitutional Government in the Holy Land at the British-sponsored Palestine talks, an Arab leader declared to- day amid indications that the Jews would not attend the confer- ence ln Cairo, and declared the Arab states would reject the par- titlon and federation schemes“ A Jewish informant and a Bri- tish official both said the Jewish Agency had rejected the British invitation to participate in the talks. Reports from Jerusalem said "non-agency" individuals and as- sociations invited were unlikely to attend because they all adhered to the "principles of inner Zionist discipline." The Jewish spokesman said the Jewish Agency had. however, left “an 0pm r" for an lith-houl‘ change of a titude. In Cairo, Abdel Rahman Azznm Pasha. secretary of the Arab Les. Bus. said the Arab states were go- ing to the conference because they 8nd Pfllestlllian Arabs had agreed unanimously at the Biudon con- ference months ago to submit the Palestine case to the United Na- tions. The Arab higher executive of Palestine since has rejected the innltatlon to participate in the. ta l. sentence Sept. 10 lly MICHAEL OMAR-A lllllllll ht Stall Wrltu imw YORK. sent. b-Work at All Unitld States seaports halted today in a sundown ubwecedent- ed in a annals of American wtlerfro disputes when nearly 00.000 A.F.l... seamen were ord- 0- ships. ‘florist-u’??? be .1. 0. o . . o! t refused i3"...- l-he Didi," linaautbeaeamenstrtickinwo- tart against a wage stabilisation board mo of a monument- “‘8ii’.l."'¢ "" ‘w’ sue. ark spots on the troubled .. labor atrila York. I It?!" - 1- "- mum's ‘i’ g: no city and I'm. ' of the oointfl‘! industrial areas carbon. MIXED} Shutdown Unprecedented As 100,000 Seamen Strike M's International ' Union (A111,) and the ilors Union of the Pa- cific (A121...) wont into effect at noon E.D.'I‘. and in some ports pickets were on the march inane-i distely. In other: the lines will not form until tomorrow. The rival National Maritime Union (C-ILO.) hi! to honor the AIL. lines. A few minutes after noon John Hawk. B. I. U. yin-ornament. termed the strike 100 oer cent carom" “Willi!!! an of ear-mu. previously ‘muted lmantanity in maritime l diwutfl, ygrg 1n. eluded in the strike order. President Truman told a mesa conference-in W prion he had not IMIVIIOG the strike: it was in Jianda of labor Secre- tlr! wellonbaoh. The Presi- dent a ha 1mm act the lmattar will I ‘an 0f! '1 .4 4'2" (Continued on Page 5 Col '1) wt... like Efforts To Locate Cil In Maritimes Continued DIGBY, N. 5.. Sept. 5—(CP)— The establishment of technical in- stitutes in each province to pro- vide asupply ofgraduates qualified to act as foremcn and superinten- dents i-n industrial plants was nd- vocated here today by Dr. H. W. McKall. dean of engineering at Mr-unt Allison University. Speaking at opening sessions of the Maritime professional meeting of the Engineering Institute of Canada. Dr. McKail said the es- tablishment of such schools would assist students wishing to enter the engineering profession but not having the necessary qualifications $0 undertake the university slud- e s. Concluding his speech Dr. Mc~ Kali urged provision of financial assistance and proper student guidance as a means of insuring competent students full training. Dr. D. J. McNeil]. professor of geology at st. F. x. University, $098M"! at morning sessions, de- clared that Canada's production of crude oil, now supplying only 15 ‘Percent of the Dominiorts re- quirements. was decreasing at an alarming rate, Speaking of‘ efforts to locate oil in the Mariti-mes in commercial quilnlities. Dr. McNeill said dis- covery oi’ such a supply would be 0i Brest benefit. to this part of the Dominion and would old in reliev- ing the shortage of native oil. In closing Dr. McNclll express- ed the hope that efforts to locate oil in the Maritime-s would not be abandoned and that tlirr sponsors would receive sufficient, encour- Bxement to spur them on to suc- cans. ' ls Convicted (By The Canadian Presll ANLHIIRSI‘. N 8., Sept. 5-0110 of four men charged with selling horseoneat at an unreasonable mice. Edward 0. Sarson of Pug- wash, N.S.. was today convicted in court here and will be sent- enced at a later date. Sarson pleaded guilty to obtain- ing ration coupons under false prtencea while a third charge of submitting false monthly returns to the Prices Board will be heard when hearing is resumed. to thaw“ 60w 1300/’ MLL B fiflttawa Speculation; 0n Cabinet Reshuifle Textile Strike Ends; Back To Work Monday V D, Que, Sept. 5 - (Olfi-Strking workers from the Vaileyfield plant of Montreal Cottons Liuiiteci voted tonight tn end their 97-d1yold strike and return to work Monday momlng. They accepted unantnousur the recommendations cf the strike committee of the United 'liextile Workers of Amcrica (AIL) that the settlement terms advanced by Antonio Barette. Quebec Mirna- ter of Labor, be agreed to These terms, previously accepted by the company. provide for a secret ballot among the workers to choose a Union and for a joint. submission to the regional War Labor Board of a latvir agreement to be drawn up between tnc corr- pany and the chosen union The labor agreement would cover the matters of pay and workirv; hours. The strike, which affected some 3,000 workers. had celled for higher wages, induced working hours. and a union contract. Britain-ll.S. Tolllerge German Zones (By Richard Kasischkel BERLIN, Sepl. 5—(AP)-A four- point agreement on a, basic struc- ture for economic merger of the British and American occupation zones in Germany. lulillldifl! 95ml?‘ llshmerit of administrative agen- cies manned hy Germans given executive powers, was announced today by military governments of both countries. The step is_expected to reduce costs to Britain and the Unified States, which have been compelled to import food and other com- modities into the zoneil. and to improve German economic cc-n- ditions. Establishment of a ‘common _ liv- ing standard with uniform rations. pooling of native economic re- sources and setting up of common export-import policies are em- braced in the agreement. There is no intent to forge political unity of the two zones. The German-manned agencies -wiil be located in various cities of the two zones, but there will be no joint capital city. A small supervisory gro of British and United States of icers will be sit- uated adjacent to each German a ency. ‘The agreement embraces prlnciples:— 1. A common stands-rd of livini; with common food rations). 2. Pooling of resources originat- ing in the two zones and sharing them on a basis of population needs, except commodities like coal whi-ch arc subject to British- these Russian-(French-American agree- ment for allocation. 3 A common import policy which will limit exports to agreed items and quantities needed to sitpplemmt native resources to provide tile agreed common stand- ard of living, 4. An export policy to handle surpluses, with bi-zonal accord on isms and quantities to be export- ABINGDON. Vac Sept, 5—(AP) —-John Isaac Cox, 90-year-old former Governor of Tennessee. died in hospital today after three weeks illness. He was governor in l006~0l » ______i_ MIDDLETOWN, Conn, Sept. 5 ._(AP)—Two brothers, one of them blind, perished today in a firs that levelled their four-room frame house here. Origin of the fire was unknown. The brothers were Henry Clemens, about S0, a pain- Ell/Zapb t ter, and William G. Glam-ens. 44. blind . _—4 v.2 03,80 CANADA Flow/z i Big Lobster Soizure At Port llill MW It: dlya and u: nights of constant watch and pacmi- ling through Woods and non; the shore in the vicinity of Port l-lfll in Prince County, fisheries officers yesterday lllllflllll! solved approximately ilfteun hundred bounds of live lobsters nnd a quantity of canned lobster which had been 55h"! llllitfllly ll the season is now closed on the North Side. The live lobsters w”, n. leased biwk to the water and the fishing gear was destroyed. Inspector P. C. Martin said that this seizure was accomp- lished through the good work ""1 coflllerutlon of the in- HD0000“ and guardians of East Prince. S ll.S. Warships In Greece i ?fid tcgnduotorwaro stabbed early By 1.. s. CHAKALES clilo5gd_e mmm" Mm’ W“ ATHENS, Sept. 5-—(A.P)——The aircraft carrier Franklin D. Roos- evelt arrived in Greece today with escorting vessels from a. United States naval force. but plans to send 120 airplanes to write “FDR” into the skies of Athens suddenly were cancelled. The warships arrived as the pres ministry announced that King George II had accepted the resignation of Archbishop Damas- kinos prior to his imminent re- tum to the Greek throne. in ac- cord with the outcome of Sun- day's plebiscite. Latest plebiscite returns show 1.166.512 votes for return of the King and 521,267 against. Meanwhile Steuhanos Stephan- cpoulos, acting foreign minister. supported a statement in London by Premier Constantin 'I‘sa1daris that flying rockets had been seen in Northern Greece. He said Greek divisional commanders and Britisi officers had seen them both east and west of Salonlko. He said that rockets. estimated to be flying at a height of 2'».- to five milcs hnd béen seen at Drama, 13o miles northeast o. Salonlka and lust south of Bul- garian border. He added that an investigation was under Way- ilold Lines 0f Forest Fire REXTON, N. n. Sept._5-tCP)— A crew of 100 men. utilizing water- fllled railway tank cars today held the lines of a. forest fire which had burned to within two mllgi of this northern New BFUHSWIC village. l... D. Black. district forester. who is in charge of firs-fighting. said there was no immediate dan- ger to the community. The blaze, which broke out Moi‘- day, has already burned through an area of about 3.000 acres of second growth timhci‘ and land recently cut. Thus far there has been no threat to homes or heavy timberland. By JAMES McCOOK Canadian Press Stuff Writer COPENHAGEN, Sept. LaGuardla. U. N. R. Ft. A. director- general. today proposed tc the United Nations food and agricul- ture organization sweeping powers for a proposed world food board and offered a formula for price- nxlng intended to eliminate ex- change-trading and "make specu- lators go to work for a living." All British Commonwealth coun- tries attending the oil-power meet- ing-both importers and err-nort- m-have indicated support in principle for such a board and a system of stabilizing farm prices and distributing surpluses equit- Mr. LaGuardla told plenary sexton:- "You cannot have both stability in prices and security for farm- ers ea well as fluctuations in wiou- . "In no use saying we are Iota to interfere with free ex- today's udlauga and free sales. II or A - . " or A MERE MAN" Vloo is nourished and kept alive by concealment. MAXIMS * k MERE MAN ’ "i 1 n» wr- 24-Hour llbacrlptlou Delivered 85.00. Ill-Il- “N: other Provinces I 0.8.5. ll-ll. n in Bombay Curfew’ Will Be Imposed " lfRiotsgontin ue’ By G. MILTON KELLY l BOMBAY. Sept. 5-(AP)--Savage Hindu-Moslem bat- tles flared again ln Bombay today, boosting the officially- announced caaualty toll since Sunday to 200 killed and 600 injured,_lncluding six men and a woman massacred with knives in a mob attack on a shrine. In Calcutta, stabblngs and beatings claimed 10 vic- tims, while three persons were killed by police who fired into atcrowd of railway workers at Trichinopoly, in south- ern Madras. A communique sald 14 persons were killed and 78 injured today in Born-bay. (Reuters news agency said a later announcement gave the day's toll as 27 killed an Police said the six men and the woman were slain when g mob o: 300 persons raided a shrine and set it aflre. Another wonum was seriously injured. and a year-old 0311111 was reported aliasing. Two bod-lea were found stuffed in temb. One young man and two children in the compound estaaped. _ The railway workers at Tricki- lnoboly stoned the police station in D1019“ flDulnst the arrest of a labor union leader. ‘Ihey dispersed after police opened fire. In Calcutta wihere more than I Hindus two persons were killed and at least eight. wounded by stttbblnes. Transportation was vir- tually halted after a bus driver T110 government said it would imipose a 24-hour curfew if necm- sary in troubled areas of Bombay. Some 2.000 persons have been arrested since, Sunday. Bombayk '70 mills remain-ed closed. traffic was strspended in the northern section. and a train refused to halt at a North Bombay station after one person was stabbed in the depot. Hindus observed n holiday to- day. and tomorrow is a Mosiem prayer day. Officials expressed fear the processions of Hindus t0- dav and those of Moslems tomor- row might precipitate new clashes l Committed To Higher Court (By ‘llhe Canadian Preau; DIGBY. N. 5-. Setpt. 5-—Adelinrd D0u¢et of Concession and Joseph Paul Oomeau of Little Brook were last night committed to stand trial before higher court on sepa- rate charges of stealing with vio- lenoe the sum of $340 from 74- Year-old Rose Oooneau. Oommittal came following the taking of evidence from Mirs. Comeau at her hospital bedside where she is recuperating from fractures of her arm and ‘shoulder which she said were caused when Doucet milled her to the floor. Maiden Man Killed WAKEFIELD, Mass, Sept. 5 -- (AP)— Om man w-as killed anti another injured today when their automobile struck a tree and then was rammed by it machine in which their broilers were Robert Merrill, 22, Maiden was killed. Clifford lcnkins. 21, also of Maiden. suffered lnyuries. Occu- pants of the second machine. Richard Merrill, 23, and Ilnrdd World reed Board Suggested To U.N. 5-15‘. H. Jenkins, 23. repaired no injuries want “that is needed. you will in- terferc and you will out every gambling grain exchange out of business in Chicago. in Winnipeg. in Liverpool or wherever it exists." He suggested the following sc- lion:- l. Immediate establishment of a world food board under the PAO. 2. Po r for the bond to mir- chase su luses above of producing countries and control export. of them t0 01-h" countries. ' 3. Elimination of price fluctu- ations. Mr. IlaiGuardla would flX prices at the time seeds B"? planted. _ The former New York Mayo“ Dropout, ‘wit, mud] farther on prices than the one from the F- A. 0. economic advisory commit- tec. now before the conference for study. This committee had will“ posted the world food board buy and so“: tolgrgeln; pfgacoteulagions of more an loll-him riding. ~ the needs d 88 injured.) Looking Forward To End Bread Rationing LONDON. Sept. 5-(0? Gable)- The London Star said in a. newl- page story today that goveo-nmnnt ofllcilals believe bread rationing will end "before the winter months arrive." ' The newspaper quoted officials as saying Viscount Addison. Do- minions Secretary, was not "talk- ing out of turn" when he said re- cently dining a visit to Haldfsx that a; sufliclent quantities of Canadian grain had arrived in Britain "we should be able to stop bread rationing." Altai is lilo ‘ttitrii lit cm VASS All Ants ‘ ottoman AND Not’ - Rtutttbra ii ‘i SToMAcI-t - Attila Q1“ a‘- (Canadlun Press) '\ TORONTO. Sept. 5 — Minlmtlil and maximum temperatures: Vancouver . S Edmonton —— Regina 2g g: Winnipeg Toronto . 50 75 Ottawa 41 7 Moritreii 47 Quebec 39 Saint Joh - ‘m 5a Monclon 43 8B Halifax . .. 55 6G Charlottetown 4B 60 Sydney 54. M Ynrmouth . 52 BI HALIF . 56'!) , —— /~— . diyl- Official inland fo issued by the Dominion Weather Office at Halifax. Forecast vniid until Friday mid- night:- Prince Edward Island, Eastern counties, Lower ‘at. John Rive; Valley. Upper Saint John Rive valley-Scattered clouds. Litt change in temperature. "Ugh winds. High M. Oharmtetown t day 6a, Fredericton ‘l5. Saint Job ‘l0, Moncton 70. Summary-Scatii-red clouds. ruins calm“ " 5-“ a . . “sun sets this evening at 7.30 ml rises tomorrow morning at 6.5. Full moon September 11th, 5.51 A. . Summerside tide e win mill utes later than Chariot town. SCHEDULE Charlottetown-Modem - Learn Charlottetown 8 A- M.. 10-30 A. 5.15 P. M Arrive Gisrlottetow-n 12 P. M4 5.55 P M.. 7.35 P. M. (Zhsrlottefown-l-Ialifll -— Charlottetown 12.55 P- M. Charlottetown 4.55 P M. . Charlottetown — New Glaqow a Leave Charlottetown 12.45 P. Arrive Charlottetown 5 P. M. Standard Time throughout- CAB I'll r rranvon unwun murm- Standard The a one AJL, 1 ml Leave Borden and 4.30 P M 10.!) A. R l Leave Tormeatine 3 P M.. 7.30 P. M. Extra trips are mull bowels. which automobiles are carried. SUNDAY SBIVIOI From Borden l P M., S. d5 P. l-‘rom Tonnentine. f4 P M. 0 P- LANDS-OAIIIOU Ill dbalowtha dlldl ‘r310