. Am: I. M, MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN .-:2: humble 3 man in be- fn':IeG'dl::r:he more he will be ex- .,.d. the more humble before rlrldaxtllo more he will get rough- shod. "mg: Charlottetown. Snnunerelde sou weekly. l. we weekly. other Provinces and U. S. A. 012.00 per ly C KE- l)lSTURBANCES Elsewhere in Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew l CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 30, 1951 London Paper Says French Baker Says Sack Of Flour Cause Of Violent p0.x”ii-SAINT -ESPRIT, France. Aug :9 -tAPJ- A baker in this gm Rhone RJlVEl' port told invest- igate;-5 today he felt that. one of his sacks of flour was responsible for 'lhc bread that kills and make: men mad." Foil: persons have died and 27 3;: mil ill hospital--many with mental disturbances--froma weird- lickness attributed to bread baked here Aug, 17. "I nolircd the flour didn't seem good," said the baker. M. Briand. "ll V8-Ill'l. moist and didn't stick to air hands when l rubbed it. "ll-u convinced that the bud bread came from this flour. I have '.llF poof in a very unhappy way. 1 (aunt in dcllvcr some bread to Coming Events "italics, Orwell llall, Septem- ber (lrd. --l:u,xlng Timothy seed daily. llcts izgan and Boyle. "Dance, Elliotvale School. Thursday. August 30th. "Danrrc. Morell Rear school, Thur.-ri.-xv. August 30th. "R-czular Dance. French River llnii. Thursday. August 30th. '-D:l:lce. st. Andreu's School Blond-ll". September 3rd. "Dulce at st. Peters 1-Larhour. Frzdtlv. August dist. Good music. "brooitficld W. I. Pantry Salt-, Xlnnrc .K- .Vrcl.eod's. Saturday, Sept. "llrlvu c in Elmworxi school. 'rhm-srizu. August 30th. Canteen SCTVICF i.'lcnro,v School, Fl'l(lEl)'. .,l Lunches. Burke's ' t 1'. Grccnflcld School. 7'1 .. Aug. 30. flcfrcshmenls. Wrlvslrr - Orclleslrn. "1. -i l.ul-c of file season at yr-.-.-.. lg W In-Ilnnl. Frlrluy. August 01" ll Mill: 9 lo 1. Good music. "I)nw:c. Emerald llall. Thllrs- day. i rust .'l0th. nluc Haven Hamil PH -Orchestra. --.x-mp. - We will be closed all div Mcrltlnr. September 3rd. E. J. Macrlnllrall, Vernon. "C'hulmn Supper. Bingo, Dance. Ed I s orchestra, Tracadlc. Labor W5". 3lO;lll'nllJer .'lr(l. ”'Cliivilcll Sllmlcr. Dancc. lnnlt H31-u -lhndnv. Scptcmlicr Ilrd. Sup- ?" 5-ct"-rd at six. P'fD-M Yr. HOWc's Hall. Bracklcy " K Fl1lll'hdil.Vo August 30th. llllslt. chm-lottctonlans. I "Ncw in stock. Potato Top Kill- sr sui ruw improved livestock Fly ilray. Dillon Ab spllletr. P'fdDulltc. St. George's school. all ii. slllcllst 3151. Ice Cream and links Wcbslt-r's orchestra. Pu"T”tItcvilt and ln'.k over our hoflna 1-lnnnce plan. for your 55 W1 Poultry. Dillon 3. Splllctl. m'l'F'0r snapshots that will not e mail Your Film: and Nege- tlvu t chmofwsotgxnhum Photo studios. ”l'”mCrs. ask about the S'nIl' l(:':;:llml'1”;i:tl Finance Plan. For (Rd nlmf will-3C5 Your local "l;,"Pf"lir Frldnv hlaht Dance in ' "5 FRY Holy Name Hall, Chaissorfs H"D”:lv”:x;y Mtrh slawm Lesion C urs ey Gcoru cfgmrxll and his Merry Islanders. service. Admission soc. N 'T'T' Ci cogrgful" Auaustine Oove Calf .., .. m”"meM my. September 9,, momilgl: Cclffiltthere. at 9.30 in m” EV"Yb0l1.v l5.llco'nl3'k'" pr”. "lluvin ' PS )4 -A I Wis. cattle and poultry. gt": :;..F;:se;::.::.m-. Dill over . '?”h- 830.00 for pigs over 30 at 5 JMg.:;mlIl' smaller ones. 'DIncc 1;.” . .. .-.... - e W "'9 M-rrv lmndm. llul T. 9.30 and 10 P as. 50 "Ms. canteen service. 1: room, - sslo Fm aha. Deaths one of my clients, M. Nizon, in nearby Carsaw. "He came by the next day to re- proach me for it and I sold him several sticks. of bread made from that particular flour. A little while afterward. he died." Investigators leaned toward a theory they were up against "Fer- vent Fever" or "St. Anthony's Fire." an illness caused by a. cereal fungus known as crgol. some of the symptoms are vom- iting and chills, but the outstand- ing characteristic is hallucinations of fire and impending violence. A witness at the hospital, where at one time 40 persons were under treatment. said one of the patients threw himself out a window shrieking: ”I can't stand it any longcr, A red snake is eating my brain." Farewell Orders For local S. A. Corps leaders Farewell orders have been re- ceived by Major and Mrs, E. Hutchinson. in charge of the local corps of the Salvation Army. -ef- fectlve after the Sunday services of September 23rd. Major and Mrs. Hutchinson suc- ceeded Major and Mrs. V. Mac- Lenn at the Charlottetown Citadel in November. 1948. after serving five strenuous years at the Cunard street corps in Halifax. which in- cluded the latter years of the war. with all the problems of a. naval and dis-embarkation port. , During their stay here. they have made it host or friends. particu- larly amongst music lovers, who have been delighted by the num- erous band concerts by the Char- -lottetown Corps Band. and by tile efforts of the Major in encourag- ing the younger members to learn to play and join the hand. The Major and his wife have been very active in social work among the needy, and will be miss- ed by the inmates of the local in- slitutlons and orphanages. whcrc thcy conducted regular concerts and entertainments. Under their direction. the youth work of the corps has achieved considerable success. Major and Mrs. Hutchinson have their home in New Waterford. Nova scotla. and have three daughters. Doreen, l9, Jean, 13. and Shirley 9 -'I'l1e location of their new corps. or the names of their successors. are as yet unknown. Missing Yawlu Believed Safe HALIFAX. Aug. 29 - (OP) - Scarch for the 20-foot British yawl Nova 1-jspero was halted tonight when it was confirmed that the craft put in at a small Nova Scotia port, last Saturday for supplies. R. C. M. P. said the vessel. with Stanley slnlth and Charles Violet as crow. called at East Bac:aro after being becalmcd. - The young adventurers. whol sailed from England to Nam sco-' tla in 85 days, left. Shel-burnc for New York August 10. and it was feared their tiny craft had come to grief. Thcy resumed their voy- age Saturday with a good wind but weather latcr deteriorated. The R. C. A. F. said the search will be resumed tomorrow if the p Missing Macleanjnd Burgess Missing Two Months LONDON, Aug. 30 -- (Thurs- day) - (AP) - The Daily Her- ald reported today the Foreign Office has learned the where abouts of two missing British Diplomats. Donald lllacLean and Guy Burgess. The paper said secret service agents have located the two men after zl three-month search of Western Europe. Mrs. Melinda MacLczln. wife of one. has been vacationing on in. French ltivlera with her three children and has rccclvcd a mis- szlge from her husband, the Herald said. The report appeared or-ly in the llcrllld. ' The p.-rpm. which has close government connections, said the l-'nrcir:ll Offlt-c probably would make no announcement until next week. No onc oi the Foreign Offic: Diplomats Located REJECTION - 5011”! Korean Lt officer. Interpreters watch tensely. (G5?!-1 LlaeaLzggwvyfiyglgxvgglghlldejggggi Late reports said Reds would not of the RCdS' protest to Col. Chang resume mu” "mess the Ames (left). the chief Communist liaison Change the” "59-V389 lmiuda" 16 PAGES MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Beauty. (and shape. discourse, manhood. learning, gentleness, vlcrtue. youth, llberalliy and such like the spice and sell. that season I men. The Guardian, Five Cents. Morning Dally Founded 1887. FLARE AT STRIKE-BOUND TOBACCO PLANT All Off-Ddly Montreal Police Called Oul MONTREAL. Aug. 29 -ACP)-Alli, off-duty police were called back to; duty tonight because of disturb-. ances at the strike-bound Impcrlall Tobacco Co. plant in west-end Stl Henri. The order went ollt following a disturbance between police on duty. near lhe plant and strikers who, threwxstones through the windows of the building after preventing railway cars loaded with cigarets from leaving a company sid-lng. All police on duty at police sla- tlons were placed on the alert and reinforcements were rushed to the working- class district thousands of curious spectators jammed the sire:-ls blocked off by mass picket lines. curly today would comment on the Herald story. MncLcan. 38. left his job in London May 25. a Friday evening. Due for a long week-end. he hat! three days to cover his tracks h;- fnre his dlsoppcllrance was ' dis- covcrcrl. Burgess. in. was on leave ni' T the time. llll. future in doubt be cause of his recall from his joll with the British Embassy in Washington. Unofficial speculation ranged widely. Thcrc wcrc sllggestlons that MncLenll and Burgess W018 mentally unstable and had gone, to Russia. in a belief they could effect rl rcconclliuiion hctwc-it the Western powers the Soviet Union Otllcrs thougllt the two sim- ply hurl gone off on n "bl-mic” and were reluctant to return and face, certain scandal. Schurman'sa Gel Conlracls On Mainland it has been announced that the M. F. Schurman Co. Ltd. has re- ceived two major building con- tracts in Nova Scotla. This com- pany has until now confined its contract activities to Prince Ed- ward island. The first contract which vvas awarded a few weeks ago to this firm is for the new East Plctou . rural school which will cost s5oo.lVE'El'Gll Nova scoha 000. This school will be situated. ' ' approximately eight miles east oflsklpper Passes N 'Gl ; V, N. S. :1 ill be a. , "”fT , m'dl'lel'li mlfvd-story ,bIl:?ld'lI:1g n'ilh!.mGRA3:Jgg;fLE No S A”? steel frame and wooden interior. ”' VT ,.- g . It will have eighteen class.-toms,Nf”;ii::1;u:l?ll?Z,f.'.,Zf..f2l”mfll:tl”:l and is being built for the Novatal. Id n til, fo'”m-Mn 5'3 nnyery Scotla Provincial Department ” mm Omy g L” 0ll- . . ,, mks and mghways. .lng sickness. He Wm 80. Amncgrrg g, gwug ,, , ,, , -, - ; survivors is a llall-'.lrtcl'. led on Page 5 Col. 4) IGcol'gc W. Wilson. 'l'rllro. N. S. F-ale-Oi-Tmctf Talks lip To 0 Communists TOKYO, Aug. 30 - tThllrsrla,vl - (AP) C The Communist China radio today ripped into Gen. Mat- thew B. Ridglvay's latest stand- pat message over the crisis at Kac- song. saying it "resorted to plain lies." The broadcast. acknowledgin". receipt of the supreme Allied com- mander's Wednesday message. was preliminary to a "special broad- cast" Pclping radio planned to make. The special broaclcast was set for ll:1l0 A. M. Tokyo time (9:30 P. M. E. D. T. Wednesday). Riclgway Wednesday had placed the fate of the Kaesong truce talks squarely up to the Red command- ers by refusing to knuckle down to their demands but offering to re- slvme the conference. A 9 A.M. broadcast today bv Pciping radio accused Rldgwnll of being evasive in his latest reply. and Boss Has Warm Praise For Princess Patricias P., DMD A. F. aircraft early today. 1'1- stend of carrying on to the Dot val base of No. 426 R. C A. l' Squadron. which fll'W him from Japan. he aliglrlcri at Trenton ill" hose and molorcd In Toronto for conferences with CF executives TRENTON, 0nt., Aug. 29 D401”) - Bill Boss. Canadian Press war correspondent In Korea since in.-I Dccclvlbcr. said today "the Pli- lricins are lllc flncsl lhing the Canadian Army has ever created" The rcti-';cnrtlcd rcporicr. who Ross said the PillI'lllliI3 llfltl "Nil crossed lh-: Pacific last Novcm csprit do tarps so rent you could bcr with Il.c 2nd Battalion Prlr- touch ii." The .rcsl of the 25th ccss Polricius Canadian Light la- Canadian infantry Brigade Group fnnlry and has been with the was A first-rate fighting out” (hnadinns in Korea constant. which already had established r. sincc. said he was back in Cnn- name for aggressiveness. min "to work at fishing and rest- Thc ironps' morale was out- ing for ll cllllngc." standing dtspitc a largely boring Espero doesn't turn up safely. ll? lIlTlVL'll from Tokyo by R- C summer. Announcement of the SEOUL. Korea. Aug. 29 .. (cpl) -A Canadian infentryman today was sentenced to life imprison- ment by a general court-marital which convicted him of men- alauahter in the grenade death of a south Korean army officer March 1'7. The scnicnce passed on Pte. Glen Roland Blank. 2'1. of Winni- ptx. by I five-man Canadian mili- tary court is subject to review by a high military board in Ottawa. If it. is confirmed Blank will serve the life term in ll Cana- dian prison. 0 should there be an lppcll against the conviction or the sen- tence it would be heard in Can- ada by the permanent. military appeal authority. made up of high Canadian jurists. The court-martial acquitted Canadian Soldier In Korea Sentenced To Life Term government's rotation policy hurl enabled the men ,to adjust. them- selves to the certainty of either being home by Christmas. or of spending the next. winter in Korea. 1!! indicated by their service. He was ulllcnl of tho Kacltong peace-talks. said he rcmlrlned con- fident they would he resumed and would lead in ccluatlnn of hostil- ities. but added that if they were abandoacrl it would be to "ex- plode into a terrifying battle b-s tween two heavily built-up arm- Blank of a charge of murder in the death of Llcut. Ee Chong Sung. Two other Canadian soldiers. Pie. Donald Michael Gibson. 22. of Ottawa and Pic. Alan Roy liatchforI:l' Montgomery Davis. M. of Van- couver. originally were charged. like Blank. with murder in Sung's death. But the Reuters News Agency correspondent covering the court- martlnl said he had learned au- thoritatively that as a result of Blanks conviction the prosecution has asked that murder charges against Gibson and Dlvls be drop- pe . But Gibson and Davis wlil he tried for alleged attempted rape and certain leaner charges. the cor- respondent said. The court- martlal of Gibson is expected to I08 New Wage Rates For Iloeal Longshoremen A new agreement was reached between a committee from the Lab- ourers Protective Union. represent- ing the longshoremen of Char- lottetown and representatives of the shippers regarding the hand- ling of produce for export here. A dispute involving wages and practices had developed and meet- ings between the representatives had been held for the past two days. They were attended by Mr. 1-loracc Pettlgrove, Senior Indust- rlal Relations Officer for the Feti- eral Department of Labor in the Mnritimes. He was named concil- iation officer for the dispute by the Federal Minister of Labor un- dcr the Industrial Relations and Disputes Investigation Act. it was understood that the long- sborcmcn. through their bargain- ing agent. the L. P. U.. had origin- ally demanded an increase of 20 cents per hour. It is believed the terms of the new agreement will give them 15 cents an hour in- crease in rates. Although the various parties agreed in principle to the new terms they still had to be present- ed to the executive of the L. P.U. by the committee which met with the conciliation officer. The L.P.U was understood to have held a lengthy meeting last night to dis- cuss the matter. but results of the deliberations could not be learned at press time. Accompanying Mr. Pettigrove here was Mr. John R. Klnley. In- dustrial Relations Officer, Halifax, who came as an observer. Representing the shippers were Mr. George 1-I. Buntain, of Bun- tnin and Bell, and Horace B. Wil- lis. of Horace B. Willis Inc.. while acting; as observers were Mr. Aus- tin Scales. president and manager of the Island Fertilizer Company. and Mr. C.P. Reddnll, manager of the P.E.I. Industrial Corporation The committee from the Labour- er's Protective Union was com- prised of the president. Mr. Lem- llcl E. Rush. Mr. William Quinn and Mr. William Hughes. News In Brief KINGSTON, Jamaica. (AP) - tlnloninl police have re- caplurcri 23 of the 76 convicts who escllpcd the Kingston jail af- ter it was uamngcd in the Wcs' Indies hurricane Aug. 17-18. Aug. 29-- LONDON. - (Rcutersl ---Housewives will be limited f-; lhrce ounces of butter a person a week after Sept. 9. govern- ment food rationing authorltict announced tonight. The current ration is four ounces. VlC'l'ORlA. B.C.. Aug. 29--(CPI -- The cruiser Ontario and the deatrnyv-r iluron will sail ingeihcr for Halifax from 1-Isnuimnlf. Fri- day. navy officials said today. OTTAWA. Aug. 29 - (CP) -- The cablnc: hall agreed to ac- cept Transport Minister Chevrieri recommendation to appoint a transport controller in an attempt The disturbance la:.lcd- 1 about two hours and by 11 p. in. EDT police said violence had ccascd. The crowd of spectators was dis- persed and groups of pickets and police remained at the scene. The five freight cars were load-; ed earlier in the day by office alldi maintenance Workers. when word got around that the company planned to move them out, strik- ing membcrs of the international Tobacco Workers Union (A.F.L.1 gathered at the plant. The strike began two weeks ago. ' An earth barricade was erected, across the railway siding and sonic. pickets lay down on the track.-:3 Police were summoned to prevent.” violence and a large crowd goth-l ered I Two plant. employees - Jcall 0 Claude Ledllc. 19. and Andre De-, salllniers. 23. both of subtlrbanl Verdun-were arrested for dis- obeying pollcc orders to move. The plckcls began stoning the. building after police arrived Olll the scene. Many first-floor" win-1. dows of the four-stol'r-y plant were smashed. . RE-0l'l-D55 01.1) case I VIENNA. Aug. 29 -fAP)- Three. former Austrian police officiolsl have been arrested on suspicion of; murder in the 14-year-oldt. Nazi-! em. death of Defence Minister: General Wilhelm Zehner who dicdl April 10. 1938. a month after thcl Nazi occupation of Vienna. The Nazis said he "committed suicide" The claims of his widow thatl Zchner was murdered by Gest-f apo agents lcd. however. to a re- cent. rc-investigation of the cased where .' Worthington Scores Delay In Civil Defence Planning: Gen. Worthington said latel that the situation in Canada was not nearly as bad as in the Uni- ted States. but more are ”lrrilablc dcluls.” "'I'hcl'c is no point." he said. "in lpubllshlng a book lclling Canda- llam l-) :0 in Sl1Pll"i'S in case of a raid. uhcn actually no shelters are l)Clll'.' lDlill'.. "Time is running out and we've got to not ?.CllOn O'I'r.-XWA. Aug. 29 - (CP) - Maj. Gen. F. F. Worthin-gton to- day called for immediate action by Canada either to spcncl a civil dc-I fence program for the country orl "kill" it completely. i He said he is meeting "terrible delay" in getting the prcgram de- veloped. His feelings are. he said. that the program should be ad- vanced quickly "or killed c m-- plctcly." I The Federal civil defence co-or- , . . dmamr made the mmmrm M E crs former w.fc. actress Jennifer hr-c.-ts Conference called to inlrc- Jolie” 3"” '10” W” wire of mi” dun, mo chm Defence Dn.e.,.1o..g tlucrr Davltl () Sclzllick. was nail- Gcneral for Sweden. Akc sunclclin. md and lam ."w is fl-Vi"3 he" and his assistant. Ivar Muilcr. ”0'" 3011' YOU". The two young urn. Wcl'tiiirr;;lon read a mr-s- mm M walk 7 3"” Ml-55 30”” sage which he said he had Tt'CI'lVCd ha” '0 C" Bl T-dmii the Summer ifrcm Wu.-.hington quoting Millard mm th” 33””: Ca1dw.,1l' U. 3' C. D. diretycr, R3. Waliccr lino been in films cigllt saying that either the U. S. re-AaTf”::;n?f(1ly1h" ".”?dE.ag5”rCCe5s' qulrmi the use of civil defence to I V” (.1? L " p"l”'”” " "T 3 v.'Ln 21 major uar or the programp "'5 1-V 1 ””5- shouid be "kill forthwith." 1 g:T-T1" '”l1ilo.sc are exactly my foclingsfp ”ANAU- A CC-ma"3''- 5”? 25 Gm. Worlmngmn Smdp -fAPr- A German prosecutor to- Askcrl where the main trouble ind"-V 'Chm'-Pod N0 Ham” hmelmen the Canadian delay was Gcn. Vl'orthin-gton replied: ':The trouble lies behind you." He was pointing to the Parlia- ment buildings which could be seen from his office window. Prominent Movie Actor Dies At 32 Hol.l.vwo?)p. Aug. 29 - (Api- A::ol- Robert walker. 3?. who zoomed to fame during the Second world War in "shy Guy” movie rnles. died last night at his home while undergoing treatmcnl for an cmollonal disturbance. Dr. Frederick J. llaokcr. a psy- chiatrist who said he had been treating Walker for 18 months. was summolzccl by the i1L'l.Ol' last night. The Doctor said he talked to Walk- er for two hours, then called Dr. Sidney Silver, another psychiatrist. to administer a. sedative. Dr. llacker said the sedative (an injection of sodium amytal) had been given Walker many times for rrnotional disturbances and with good results. Howcvcr. this time the actor lapsed into a coma, the psychia- trist said. and developed respira- to'v failure. An lnhalator squad w called but failed to revive him. The physician added that Walk- TRENTON, Ont., Aug. 129 - (CPi - A war correspondent home from Korea said today that both sides in the Kaesong cease-firc talks seem more concerned with making propaganda points than in reaching all agreement. I The lanky reporter, Bill Boss, who, has seen war at first hand in thci Second World War and in Korea since he went there last Decem- bcr with the Princess Patricias. said the only thing the United Na-l tlons had accomplished in that peninsula was the destrllctlon oft Korea. "on a massive scale" and: its denial to the Communists as a base. The south "certainly is anti-i Communist. for the moment. but. it is cqllaliy anti-U.N.. a tragcdvl worked by the conduct and attit- udc of the Western. troops." hug said. i C.P. Newsman Says South Korean People Anti-Red And Anti-U.N. The United Nations had failed to l.lnderst.'md the Korcans' hatred of the Japanese. who had kept them in subjugation for two gen- erations. The Koreans feared that the forthcoming Japanese peace treaty would reopen the way for their return to Korea in a new guise but for the same purpose - the exploitation and perhaps dom- ination again of their country. Boss said: "Last Saturday in Tokyo I found support for this in the recom- mendation by an official of the United Nations Korean reconstruc- tlon agency that a corps of Japan- csc engineers be employed to 'help reconstruct' Korea." Boss. 34. ik home on leave "in work at some fishing and resting." He also plans a number 11' public addresses. :4 MOSCOW, Aug. 29 - (AP) - Officlals nf a lecture bureau in Siberia who collected money fnly lectures that never were givcn and sponsored some which never should have been given have been handed "severe punishment." Pravda said today. The charge, said Pravda. was "stealing state funds." But there Russian Fake Lecturers Get Severe Punishment money for lectures. ”lt developed.” said Pravda. "there were certain individuals in the Lecture Bureau who oc- cupied themselves with forging documents on fictitious lectures which were never given." The investigation continued. and there were "more shortcomings." In addition to the fake lec- tures. the investigation showed Ac Kgepongl he ,,.m' "Mu. sides to untangle a critical Wt-stern have been dupe;-ugly nnd ob. grain transportation tic-up. if was stlnalely nlicmpilnu in bargali l9'"'"Nl B00551”- from extreme positions which are equally unreasonable." "Tho Communists are unreason- able in holding nul for the parnll -l as a military line. while we arc balking for the prcser-I line- which Ill no more riefcnnlvle in the long run. militarily. than is the parallel. "The correct line ll one north of the Parallel all right. but only to the extent dictated by the ground. and one very obvious one reach:-:4 at the most )0 miles into North THREE l:lVF:RS. Qua. Aug. Lil (CF) .- Further hearing by a board of lnuulry info the cot- lnpsc Jan. .1! of ihc R.'l,.'v00.0flIt Duplenls Bridge was adjourn--d lete today until Sept. 5. LONDON. Aug. 29 rlileutcrsl M Field Marshal Montgomery. At- lantic Pact army deputy ammun- der. may visit Yugoslavia in the latc fall. it was reported here io- " lC(intllillii:lWo1l- "rig?-5S c'5l.-'7). day. The invitation was believed to K0""'-" have come from Marshal Tito. was much more to it than that, The Pravda account went this lK'A)': The Novosibirsk city prosecut- ing attorney recently became in- terested in findlnl? but how ccr. ialn lcrlllrcrs from the Laclurn Bureau were able to deliver four of five lectures on the same day in places several days' travel apart. He was inlcrcstcd pPll'llCl.llaTl,V in a ccrlaln lecturer billed as "Professor Alferov." Investiga- tion showed Alferov was not a professor but. a city engineer. Further. he ncver delivered any lectures and never collected any there were some real ones. given by lecturers whom Pravda label- lcti "pol-boiler artists." Particularly. Pravda was in- censcd by the lecturer uho told ills audience that a mclcor which fell in Siberia was rcallv a space ship. from the planet Mars. Th! story was that the "space ship" was wrecked. This story had caused quite a stir among the peasants several months ago, and they wrote to the newspapers wanting to know when the space ship could be expected to return. Pravda was pretty med abmll the story then. too. In fact. it touched off this investigation. l ,.ooted'.wlll'l damaging properly and caus- ing bodily injury. declaring they: Bought 30 fat bedbugs at one mark apiece. Turned the bugs loose in a rival hotel. 'fllE '(ROUBl.E wall A Lil: ls HALIFAX. Aug. 29 .((:p). of, ficlal forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather or. fice here and valid til "cl Thursday. un ml nigh: Synopsis: Cooler alr advancing into Northern New Brunswick has set off ll. rush of showers and thunderstorms in that part of the district. This air will continue H5 advance across the Maritimes. pi-9. ceded by showers and thunder. storms, and is expected to reach the south coast. of Nova Scotia about noon Thursday. With the arrival of the coop... alr the showers come to an end. but the temperature and humid. lty are slow to change and skies remain generally cloudy. Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with a, few clear intervals. Slight. ly cooler. Light winds. Low and hlizh Thursday at Charlottetown 58 and 75. High tidc today at 8.25 A. M. and 10.23 P. M. Sun rises today at 5.31 A. M. and scls at 6.56 P. M. Tmi-:2--Z... M.C.A. AIR SERVICE Dally Except Sunday Leave Charlottetown for Moncion 5.30 A.lll.: 11.20 A.M.: 450 RM. Ar. Charlottetown from liloncion 7.25 A.M.; 1.25 P.M.; 6.55 I'.M. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgo -Halifax 7.40 A.M. New Glasgow k Sydncv 1.50 EM. New Glasgow 4; Halifax Arrive Charlottetown from NC" Glhixow and lifax 11.00 AM. from New Glasgow .1: Sydney. L20 I'.M. from New Glasgow and Halifax. Charlottetown - Sydney flights daily cxccpt Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY Charloiieimrn for Moncirm 11.20. Ar. Charlottetown from lilonciorl 5.55 l'.M. Lv. BOIIDEN - CAPE TORMENTINI FERRY SERVICE Dlily Standard Time Lcave Borden Leave C. '11 9.10 AM. 19.10 A.M. 10.35 A.M. 10.35 A.M. 1.00 PM. 1.00 PM. 2.40 PM. 2.40 PM. 4.30 P.M. 4.30 PM. 7.30 P..Vl. 7.30 RM. 0.00 PM. 0.00 PM. 10.30 PM. 10.30 PM. WOOD ISLANDS -. UARIBOU FERRY SERVICE (slnndorli Time) Lelvo Wood '-h-dh- Prince Nova - 1 AM. 11 A.M. I l'.M. Chan. A. Dunning-0 AM. 1 PM. 0 PM. been Caribou- Chen. A. Dunning-1 A.M. 1! AM. I P.M. Princl News - 0 AM, 1 P.M., H P.M.