m...“ ossraisn; isasasa m1. (jnsrlnttatown ‘Iwe Coats. The Peop le’s. Pape Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew them on in those who follow on. MAIEIMC OIL MERE MAN Those having torches must pass . R. , ‘If? CHARDOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JUNE 26, 1945 Floris For High Rate Of Employment Outlined Local i'air n liot Guilty 0f Robbery a n, rack winnrssrs ' QUEBEC, June 25 - (OP) — Canadais plans for providing a hi h rate of emplo t were cu lined to the governing body of the International Labor Organ- Jsstion today by Arthur Mac- Nsniara, Deputy Minister of Lab- or, in an address in which he sketched the broad terms of an tit f _ Pltrffi LlAlflhxlfelfl dhh "Not malty” in) trial eeeinniw I about ll oclook y mom-ins. aided at 5M YlllAtfllU "m; the jury's verdict. 'l'tie case was heard before Mr. .A’1‘he At- lfid G.R, Holmes appeared for the Crown and RR. Bell for the ac- cused Including the evidence 0f the two seemed, eight witnesses ' he . ‘fiughran arldloberts were ec- eused of having sassuitcd and robbed of It. one Fred blcliinnon. gd 7g years. The robbery er ‘singed to have occurred on ‘Zhe night of April as last around rnid- night in the vicinity of the Royal Hotel. Th wer i-Iarper McNeill ° 3w Chagbovttetnwrr re (foreman), . M‘ McDonald. Churchill; A Cel- lsghan. Lake Verde“ Wi em Tan- ion, Chriottotown: Gordon Stetson. irighfield: John Coyie. Charlotte- cl town‘ R4 e i“°‘i’.“i.’ Cosdv Ne 'wii§ ' . , . W ' ffiifli‘ Macliillldid. rm novelty; Lawrence Kickhsm. New r-rsven; Harold Cudmore. Harring- ton. Frenchman Denies Invention Of V-1 villus, June as - (AP) - Georges Claude. aged ‘lunch scientist on trial for collaborating with the Germans. today denied that he invented the V-l. weapon which the Nasis turned against England. The inventor who won fame with the neon gases is charg- Id only with "distributinl enemy propaganda," but he took occasion to make a "vehement denial" of what he said were reports that he had fathered the vengeance wea- Dons. Coming Events "Show - Moi-en Tueedely. . ‘ a-ae-ai. "Show - 8t. Peters Bey. Wed-i nesday. 6-5- . "Dance — Mfintague Erica . Webster's Orchestra. G-N-gi. "Hospital Dance in McLean's! Warehouse. Souris . Wedn ' . e-ift-Tue-ir. "Dance. Lesion Hall. Mt. Stow- lrl. Wednesday, June 21th. Don Water's Orchestra. 6-20-21. "Dane . 503W Plains Hail. .. rife Nth. ssillview Chcheotre. 6-26-21. ."See Tracadle Players presen ‘PCT’ in Coran Ban Hall, iii‘. June 26. 6-35-2641 __@- " "U players Present "Dameels i: D tress", Ugg School Bali. idly. June liixfce cream. e-se-li "W. M. S. Rally will be held in Cornwall Church Wednesday. June 21. Sessions at 2:80 and B PM s-ai-ii " hogs a Ca an Thursday for Devious: Contact Norman McKen- i‘ trucking service. Weds-redo every " l"ruer. lie f c "Reine June 21in i" bk “Rev '" m... . J's?’ "i can?" _ s-ae-ae-m-ai. \I ti; nloading carlcad Asphalt shingles and Buildi Bu u . 9W prices. stout! gag-omen“; hrl-lesr the Blue Cross Hoe ital- tlon Plan ex lained st orn- munit Hall, vehead Tuesday‘. at 8.80 5.39. "560 "Lens Rivers" by Hunter w" Dllyera in ‘Fredericton Bail. "4". June M. at 8:80 PM. l-I-nefl "Width hogs ever- for PW" B Ltd. Phone 31mi- N A. Out- eveuing t, expanded employment service. Mr“ MscNarnara spoke near the conclusion of a lengthy discus- sion in which delegates represent- fnl governments, workers and employees of various countries par- oipated. J. H. Oldenbrock. Netherlands worker delegate and general sec- retary of the International Trans- port Workers‘ Federation, who fol- lowed Mr. MacNamari-i urged the expansion of collective enterprise. E. 0. Phelan, I.L O , actin dir- ector, summin up the discussion said the organ zation was not in a position to lay down any panacea for unemployment because con- ditions dlffered in various countries and would require special treatment. Mr. cNamara, who is Canadian Government delegate to the meet- ing said the selective service con- trols introduced during wartime were being removed as quickly as possible but it was hoped to evolve s voluntary means of recording job changes so the pulse of employ- ment conditions could be watched osely. “We hope to build up in our em- ployment service something that will compare favorable with any- thing in the world and we think by making it efficient. employers and employees will come to it and there will be no need for compulsion," he explained. Describes Policy Describing the Gové-nmenvs general ample ent policy he sketched thrw te paper on re- construction made public ih last session of Parliament and said the program was aimed at provid- it‘ ra .000.000 more jobs than in 19- ‘fWe intend to follow the policy- for which there is as yet no work- ing model in any country-cf vary- ing government expend! ures so as to compensate for fluctuations private spending," he said. Public works projects and pub- lic investment in natural resources, supplementing private investment, would be an important part of the program. , Tomorrow the delegates are ex- pected to tum to discussion of the possible relationship of the I L 0.. and the new world security organ- ization. A closed session is planned for the morning and it is presumed this will be one of the topics for that meeting. It will later be dis- cussed at s public session. Expect ilarch To iierlin In June. 218T ARMY GR QUARTERS, June 25 — (AP) - British, Canadian and American troops and armor are expected to march to Berlin before July l and it is believed here that the Big Three conference of Prime Minis- ter Churchill, Premier Stalin and President Truman will convene in later. Units of the British 7th Armored Division (the Desert Rats) have been wanted to be ready on i2 hours notice for a parade to their gqqgpntion zone allotted in ihc western part of the city by the Allied Control Commission. A big d768,: rehearsal has been scheduled for tomorrow on the sutobahn st Brunswick. from which the British and Canadian unite will begin their March in Berlin, some 1'» miles distance. Reveal Jap losses To Aussie Troops élAelaning out by- sued gar-r ns on New guinea, Bouifai “u; gud New Britain have id eggs Japanese troops and capture n- ter1sLhaaid~ e bloody ones for the Nipp the Aussies kl . . Mao- __ sad!" h“ "M'- m pmomm Dllsrililefitlfiiriilogbiuxcaareftflllatlclfheir new“ IT b, l WIND UP ‘IOU! legal a uments to court, where a um; t “hm m‘ ml, ~_ ——— ~ panel o is judges from as men my; d” d." i‘ Ju" urrAWA, June be -- (C!) —- countries may settle the quarres , n“. p" o ' M, Winding up an eilN-Wfli will’ ‘>1 peacefully and by rules of justice. hey q- q qgqu}, ' Uni States and Canada. four Military Staff Committee-under, . ' M! British idsiq experts will ' spend the Security Council. it will make .____,‘ ' the neat week talking with sgrl- strategic plans for throwing Unit- "Drew; y w u, m; culture officials here before ‘re- ed Nations armed might against . , esscr. w'%"& seldom,‘ arid“. tiinzlhtmifiiae m ngtaegship CounclL-Under the New flfl u“ “M” ma‘. qfl Irmmlttoa was ap int by the General Assembly, lt is responsible . "has" w ‘-tii'§'§“n’$“‘m““lsi.‘.i‘$"“l§i,2? 2a..“-cii:u.v:i:*i.ir=:i::i p, rndglwi ' _ _ are ougide of the stratelic class.- I i the German Capital about l0 days: Southwest Pacific Headquar- today. first two weeks of une were ese with lllng M7 and captur- ing l4 on Bougainvllle and wining out eel in New Guinea while taking AT i cuiuce By The Canadian Press PACIFIC — Americans trap last sisablo Japanesofnrco in Philip- pines, Arutralisna in New Britain, New Guinea nod Bonfinville inn 9.725 Japanese c f" of yersr; Japan acknowledges loos of Chin aws. CHINA - Chinese clash with Japanese l5 mile; northwest of Kwellln, Kwrangef Province. BURMA - Brittah and Indian troops meet no serious Japanese opposition in. push along loungoo- Mawchi road. BRITAIN — 1,675 candidates nominated for July 5 election: Churchill begins LOCO-mile speak- ing tour; Lord Haw Haw pleads innocent to treason charge. GERMANY — Communists urge coalition government, confiscation of large estates, development of free enternrlise; British. Canadian and American troops expected to March to Berlin before July 1. Find Baby ilied Cf Natural Causes After more than two months had ,elapsed from the time of its pre- 'vious meeting. a coroner's jury last |iiight cleaned up the baby Wilson ase bv finding that “baby Gloria iJcan Wilson died of natural cau- ses." On the evening of April 17 last a coroner's jury with Dr- I. Yeo as coroner met at the Cutciiffe Funeral Home to enquire into the death of Gloria Jean Wilson, agc two months. who died some Q!‘ or twleve hours before. flltefliflf lit was the daughter of Mrs: Augustus Wilson, 102 Gerald Street. The in- vestigation was adjourned pending ,the findings of a post tnortem. Yesterday evening at the Cut- clifffi eral Home the results of-t e topsy made by Drs. J. D. McG n and I. Rnchmel were .mad'e nown. According to their i“ ' findings, there was nothing to indi- l i cat-e there had been anything but natural causes in brii-iging about the infant's death. Mrs. Augustus Wilscnflmother of the deceased infant. gave evid- ence. She said the baby had given no previous signs of being ill until a few hours before its death. When it died, she called the Chief of Police. Wanted to know who tested the milk sold in thc City. Shortly afterwards police officers came and questioned her. Dr. Keeping also "arrived. She asked him about the milk and Dr. Keeping told her he did not think it ieceeaary to have the milk analyzed. enlarged thymus with a bottle. Did not think a cold could have had much to do with the baby dying but it could have been a contributory cause. Mr. George McLeod, foreman of reading: the verdict, of the jury that the case had been poorly handled by the police and the City Health Officer. The jury ivere George McLeod (foreman). A.J. McKenzie, James Brown, Aben i McLeod. Main Working Units 0f World Security Agency ( the and what it is shall do: Security Council-Its the main res peace is kep and a gforce if iecessa I‘ ——- General Assembly-Ail the Unit- MANILA. June 26 — (Tuesday) -— ed Nations will be represented in ,- Australian ground force! this “town meeting of the world" JIPIMSQLas United States Senator Arthur Vandenberg calls it. The Assembly can discuss international problems and make recommendations to the council make recommendations about th world's economic .and human wel fare troubles in order to stamp 0i! the roots of war. DnRachmel said the baby had an‘ gland and could, easily have died if left alone in bed, Byron Brown, Major McLean, Thomas White, Munroe\ SAN FRANCISCO. June 25 - AP) - The main working units of future world security agency proposed that they fll membe n, including the Big Five, will have ponsibilit to see that. , order out Economic? and Social Council - Its 1a members can investigate and .......,_.... . .._.___.. 11,615 nominee) {For July 5 illritish Election ___. B! J OHN DAUPHINEE LONDON. June 25 - (OP Cable) --A total of 1.615 candidates, a near- record, were nominated today as the hectic July 5 British general elec- tion battle entered the final phase with voting required for all but three of the 640 seats in the erilar. ged House of Commons. Two Labor members and -onc Conservative-none prominent — were returned by acclamation when nominations closed. Prime Minister Churchill, his cabinet ministers and all leading personalities of the Labor and Liberal parties face fights. Labor, headed by Clement R. Attlee, entered 601 candidates -a record for the arty and the largest gggérp in this e ection, the first since Mr. Churchill's Conservative Party put 54'! candidates into the contest but with Liberal Nationals and Independent Conservatives there are actually 621 Government sup crters in the running. SrArchlbald Sinclair's Liberals, fighting the election on a platform based midway between the Con- servative "free enterprise" policy and the so-called ‘nationalisation program" of left-wing Labor, suf- fered from the July election date and is running-cpl 3M opponents. The party had panned entering boo candidates if the election had l been held in the autumn, | Other candidates: Liberal Nation- al. 52; Independent-ail; Common ;Wealth. Jar-Ceremonial, .120: Nat» iionsl lncbpartyl,» 19:’ ‘Scottish iNationalist, eight; Welsh National- ist, seven: Independent Labor nar- ty. six: Independent Conservative, three. There are also e3 other can- {ieidates running under various tit- s. I Eighty-eight of the candidates are women. 42 of them Labor, 31 Lin- erai and 14 Conservative, with var- ious minor grcups making up the balance. ' ' The merqbe s elected unopposed- ihe smallest number in anv Bri- fish election-were Sir William Allen. Conservative, of Armagh, Northern Ireland. wiho at 7s is be- lieved to be the oldest candidate, and two ~ abor members. WilY-Ydhri ,0. West hondda. a miner, and D. ~G. Logan. from Liverpool's Scot- {land dlvlslon..All were members of the last house. dissolved June 15. ! iJoyce Makes Claim 0f American Birth LONDON, June 2'! -— (OP) _._ William My“! defence attorney entered a plea of innocent toda/y rgce of high treason, mind indicated that the man who made war propaganda broadcasts ,for the Germans under the name 1 i l l of “lyord Haw Haw" would bass his idefense on a claim of American A preiirnin hearing on the ‘ charges was ad unried until Thurs- day. when, the court arincauiced, Joyce will be committed formally for trial in Old Bailey dilring the July session. "Inc prosecution today completed its case against him at the famous Bow Street police court in London. and Ihurcday’; committal for trial will be purely a formality. - Joyce indicated clearly today that his claim of American wou be ihs mainstay of his defence against British charges high treason for his propaganda broad- casts ss " d Haw Haw." As the preliminary hearing was resumed in the Bow Street, police tion contended 1;; passport renewals — the last iiine only l0 days before the out- break of war, when he went to Ger- many. After his capture by Allied auth- orities, follo g Germany's eur- render. Joyce said he was born in Y . Joyce declared h ':(ofi hangar. ‘f t - outright s eta-tenant offered in evidence as an ethibit. ni-svhstisvsst SAN FRANCISCO, June 25 —- (OP) - Preside t Truman came to this flag-draped conference today l0 share in the final moves which.wlll present tp the world a plan and J11 under which the United Na the former vloe- resident upon whose shoulders f the mantle oi leadership when President Roose- vieit died suddenly i0 week; ago ‘flomorrow he will be the central fifuaw in s. crowded program which wli end the United Na/tions world security Dilwfaflf 18M in the after- noon. "This is one of the great mom- ente in the history of the world," said Prime Minister Mackenzie King, lender 01’ the Canadian del- egation and one of the 5o delega- tion chairmen who welcomed the President at suburban Hamilton Field es he arrived from Portland. Ore, by air. '1lhe last working meeting of the conference was set for 10:30 P.M. P.D.T. ( 1.30 A.M. E DT.) tonight ... 5 plenary session to accept, the text of the charter for a new United Nations league. l Franco Seeks To Enter. World i city v ‘Bi- WASHINGTON, June 26 — (Tuesday) — (AP) ons opewllvein e. Superfortresses in t f' A tumumwm welcome gpgeiiédi grea siength struck yesterday at 1 fracturing areas. Headquarters of the 20th Air Force said the €2ll‘iV| daylight attack (June 26 Japanese time) ' against “multiple important” targets located in the areas‘, c of Nagoya, Osaka- Akashi and Gifu. Further details awaitcdtlie return of the 21st Bomber heir Marianas bases. 9vwu=“\d_.¢1¢y§l9_¢ Churchill Asks big Majority At. iJuiy 5 Election Begins 1953/51.. Polit- , ical Tour To North Of England, Scotland. By HELEN CAMP LONDON, June 25 _ (AP Calling for a “great majority" fo his Conservative Party in the July a election. Prime Minister Winston Churchill swung northward today Security Group MUNEO . By BOSS . LONDON, June 25 -(CP Cable) — Gen. Franco of Spain is trying. hard to win friend; abroad and, free his country from the political isolation his regime imposed on lt.| At the moment Spain's chances of joining the United Nations are hampered by a resolution adopted at ther-San Francisco-world sec- urity conference banning from the United Nations organization any regimes brought into power with the aid of the Axis. However, the resolution was not included in the United Nations’ charter and Franco may see in this a loophole for pressing his case. v From what can be gathered irig London, Franco's regime is still| firmly established in Spain anci- there is no evidence that his days are numbered. The army, on whom the regime depends, still i into the heart‘ of England on a 1,- OOD-rnlle political campaign, With 50 or more speeches on me Dfvgram during his four-day drive through to Scotland, Mr. Churchill promised throngs who greeted him in Villages. towns and cities that there would be firm relations with the United States and Russia. To voters in much-bombed areas, he pledged that they would have 165389011595 in "the shortest possible Hr.- rleclared that it was no use for people to think "that I can coil-- tlnue to serve unless I have a great majority when I return to the House. This election is of the great- est importance because it comes at a moment when the future of our country is at stake. We can only preserve our place in the world by being united." 011mm“! Conservative plans for DOSi-Wfir Britain Mr. Churchill turned hi5 fire against Qppongnts supports it strongly. However the great majority of Spanish people are coldly oppos- ed to Franco's Government. They don't like his association with the, his particular interpretation of‘ neutrality. His regime is called, Fascist and Franco . termed the only dictator left in. Europe. The British press treats" Franco with unfeigned hostility and acorns his efforts to the United Nations. line 0f Missing yPflil‘ Turns ilp i DALHOUSIE, N.B , June 25 — HOP) —- Reported to have been drowned with a shipmate in the Reetigo ” River yesterda after- noon, John A. Mayall, o South Heed, England, swam to the Que- bec side of the river. He is thirst radio officer of the Swedish freight- er Bngnhildsholm. No hope is held that the first radLc officer, Alfonse Zlnitrowicy. of Vino, Poland couio have survived. . Residents took care of Meyali after he arrived, exhausted, on the other side of the river. He and the id other officer left the ifeifliiifll‘ i" a gwlm and were able to leach the shore. They found the going difficult on the return trip 811d decided to return to the Quebec side. About 400 yards sepflflifli the men when Mo?!" 1851'» 55W his com men and thought he was in no ifficiaity. m noun r0 CANADA Lennon, June 2e —iCP-Aneta) _ Princess Juliana of the Neth- erlands. who revealed to be en route to Canada. is travelling aboard the Frids , Government attaches dis- clos today. The Princess is travelling to Ottawa to get her three ung daughters and to take her o icial farewell of the coun- war-time _ home. ;TCOKIES_ iut week-end W15‘ liner. Queen Elisabeth due in New Yorki inllhe Labor Party, declaring; _But what happens if our Soc- ialist friends come down arid draw across this enormous plan of pro. Mall, $1 was directed i5 Feilflrt later from Guam 531:! l-hflt between 450 and 500 B-s-QS took part. in the raid about noon in the largest demolition Pinpoint mission ever flown “Klimt Javanese war indrsiby targbizs. iThll Sllilerfurts were escorted by fwo-based fighters, The strike was from medium altitude. (The big planes dropped more "m" 3.090 lofts of high explosive bombs. Good weather permitted visual bombing of several targets, but cloud cover required precision instrument bombing of some ob- jectivus.) MANILA, June Z6 —— (Tiscsday) installations Sunday. Two of the raidcrs down. Presumably, no attacks were made against U S shipping off Cizinawa, since Fleet Admiral Chester W. Nimitz made no mention of such a were bhot Guam. A gain ‘up to six miles northward by United States infa ry and a thrust southward by airborne troops and guicrlllns tightened a vise on an estimated 20.000 Japanese now "thoroughly trapped" in the Cag- ayan Valley of northern Luzon, a communique announced today SAN FRANCISCO. June 25 - lAPl-The Japanese Domei Agency reported tonight that Allied forces had landed on Ternate. a small island" l0 miles west of Holman-era. which lies midway between New Guinea and Celebes. The enemy account was without confirmation. s gress a lot cf theories about total Axis powers during the war Bntflsociallism and far-off dreams and; utopianlsm? all that will happen, will be disturbances "Under a National Government. we hope lo have long and happy re- iatlons with Russia," he said, At Rugby, Mr. Churchill declared ated us—those brothers of ours from a. cross the Atlantic-so we must stand by them." Meanwhile, in Blackpool, will Lawther, president of the newly- formed Union of Mine-mowers, de- clared at the group's first annual conference that a return of the Conservative Party to power would mean a return to the "economics of the jungle." and a continuance of an acute coal shortage. 29 YEARS’ SERVICE MANCHESTER. England - iCP) —-Sir William Claire Liezs has re- signed from the Board of Directors of Manchester Chamber of Com- mere»: nltcr 29 years‘ service. He was president of the Asscciaticn of gulch, Chambers of Commerce in 31-1.’. BLACKOUT AFTERMATI! LONDON — (OP\ — British in- dustry now is footing one of its first "peace-in-lilircne" bills something like 25011010006225,- 000.0t\0\ for abolishing the black- out Mast of it will be spent 0n cleaning thousands nf acres of glass l_n__nlarii-< 91d factories , ___._ I By TOM nanny WASHINGTON. June 25 -(AP) — The State Department unfold- ed today a plan to clamp trols throughout the world Gemian economic ambitions. liam L. Clayton told military sub-committee: ant evidence" inance. 2. barked on a scorch for all Ger- mriii nsscls and business intrigue. man economic and political in- filtration in Latin America "has been dealt n blow from which it probably will not recover." Plan Controls On German Economic Plans COX!" 0n Assistant State Secretary Wil- Senate 1. The Department has “abundn cpolies. that the Gefmanstrusts, all This was done. he tmtllled. by Women Discuss Liquor, Sugar "be- the "main part of the job” is noti come respectable" in the eyes oihyet done-that Japan must be de-; fc —“as the Americans stood by! (OP) -— Prevention of young per- SAOKVILLE, N . B. , isons obtaining registration cards or‘. its without producingifi. certlf- ~ Montreal 68, &; lCfllg 0r affidavit, was requested in. 3i» John 46. a resolution adopted today by del- egates to the 52nd annual meetingi of the National Council of Women.‘ The Council also decided to aski dominion government to ap- _ n woman to the Natioriakwiglf-B. liquor perm proof of their age, by birth the point Committee for-Physical Fitness In another resoiu-tioil, the clel egates rcsuested th-e Dominion Gov emment to make more sugar “villi able for canning fruit by diverting, ,a large amount of the sugar use | new in the making of nine. i Brain Specialist I For Army Hospital i , MONTREAL. June 25 - ifir. Wilder Penfleld. director of th Montreal Neurological Institute and world-renowned authority on brain surgery. has been appoints a Colonel in the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps and will act as consultant in the neiiro-surizicul special treatment branch of Mont real Military Hospital. it W715 learn ed today. Alf working with the South American "spear- German business firms that were set up by Germany to grab off all Latin American busi- republics to eliminate heads" of ness, "discredit" the United State and extend German influence widely as possible. Ramificatioiis of German mon- corporate are and to war. cartels gen red already’ seek to hide capital under study of the sub-committee abroad, rebuild economically be- headed by chairman Harry M. hind "ghost" industries and trylKilgore iDem.-W. Va). Leo T again for e position o! World dom-i Crowley. Foreign Economic Ad- lnrinistraior. will be heard tomor- The United Nations are em-. row. I Mr. * first Clayton submitted nt hearings Icipzilly South America, lgave details of German tactics lo hide assets United Nations. from Lillia- .00; other Provinces a U.S.A., $5.00. Subscription Delivered, $5.00. T fiiilT JAN IN STRENGTH INTERNATIONAL Final Mo... Taking Place ~A_t Conference y Mmafigces Sma" Raids 0n Qic I l Two Canadian military and industrial targets in four Japanese manu-i. iilfficers _Promoteii -(AP)—Four small Japanese aer- ial assaults the first against Okin- ziwa ground installations since that iSlvBllfi was secured Tflllfiiifi)’, caused nuncr damage to American airfield raid in today's communique from; June25~ (CP)- B! the documents benringi Alfred)’. iflid‘ M?» Ciflyioll- UPI-ion German cartels abroad. prln-i l-lc also! “evasive? the OTTAWA. Juno 2o ~ (or) -a anaoian observer of United States tactics in the Pacific and the Anny fiirector of Military 'I‘rainin,g have | FE?“ Promoted and sent to unspec- iiifld Dqolsvwith Canada's 6th Pac- ific Dlvislcn, Defence Headquar. ters announced tonight. I "llromcted to brigaidlcr rank, they l 1, Col A. James Creighton, 43, I Vancouver, Director of Military ‘Training and commander of the Seaforth Highlanders in Italy. Maj. Gen. Bert M Hoffmeister som- mander o1 the 6th Division, also is an 03d Seaforth commander. ' 2. C01. Walter A. Bean, 3d, Ottawa and Kitchener. Ont... attached w the Adjutant Generals branch of special wort: in connection with a. group of Canadian military obser- vers he dtrect-ed in the Pacific HAS 27 MAJORITY BRANTFORD. Ont. June 26 (C?) —- Norman McClung, return- ing officer for Brantford in the Ontario provincial election June 4, said tonight that on the basis oi the civiiian-nlus-services voting Cpl. Stanley Dye, Progressive Con- .servative. had a majority of 21 ivntes OVPY‘ Col. Donald Wlliiamsn |I.lberal. Previously it was report». jthe majority was only two votes. l ' . ‘flier. . , WW1’ ‘f0 “AW A CKEARINR “NE . roe (u: wssfusn .° TORONTO, June 25 — (GP) — Minimum and maximum temper- ,ature:— Vancouver 56, ‘M; Edmon- ton 02, '15; Regina 46, &; Winni N; Toronto 69. B2; Ottawa 6'1, 9; Quebec 5'1, '16; -; Monewn 38 M; Halifax 4e, 6i; Charlottetown at, ea: Sydney 46, 6'1; Ya B. FORECASTS LOWER _s'r._ Lswnnrrcaa: - MOdf-BISCQ noriili and northwest partly cloudy and eliihfly co er. -| LAKE ST.~J ' m :- Frcsli winds, shifting to nwtltwest; ,paa'tiy cloudy in west portlmi; i slqwers in cast. t, i BAY OHALEIJRI—~ Elresh north- 1 westerly winds, partly cloudy: prob- ably light showers at first. MARITIME WEST: — Cloudy with shower, fresh winds alaifting to northerly; probably strong winds or galea off south coast late at night. EAST’ heals MAR. . - nnd south winds shifting C southeast to northwest; cloudy with ahuwera. OTTAWA AND UPPER ST. LAWRENCER- Moderate northerly win-Is. generally fair and moder- ate We‘v"-"--- f-‘r and Wflflli . NORTl-[WES'1'li‘-!tl\ ‘NEEDS:- l Fair and moderately warm. l High tide this afternoon at 1 and tonight st l2. 4. . ' , Sun sets this evening mt [.60 and rises tomorrow o hi: t 5.15. lPLI-iért quarter moon Jtu-lv‘ 2nd, 1.13 :1 . $34,,‘ FQHT; ._.¢.,.,.,_. s... s...» ._ .. _ SUNDAY SIBVICE Leave Charlottetown ltlb. l.“ P-Rl. Arrive Charlottetown 5.20. 3.19 PM, ORAIIMYPTETO GLASGOW mallv Except Snndayl Leave Charlottetown Lin, s,“ 1a,", Arrive Charlottetown L85. 51p PM. 5. n. s.-r. e. i. s-saav ‘IIIVICI _b iDalIy. Including Sundays) commune ma! i-earr. so Leave Weed Islands ‘I a. 5,, 11 a. .- 8 p. in. s 17".}? “Hum . " u‘ F‘ (On autlaorlg qg n, o" _ lvléoelaer. on any": std-v. “elders ana Thuredayg q‘ "l! eels-as the n a g, , h» homing‘? rid. h‘ other doting: yum méh-mim Isl.