Ad oats. barley. and “l "Wfll- McGuigan and Boyle. 8-30-51. "Lmdlll fwks at. Cardigan grill; ‘fllirrsdfly for Davis ti: lscr. Contact Norman McKen- h,',;§°“°°tlns Hoes m: tnlu: roi- .. such . m‘ lfAXIMB OIL your MAN "~- __,-- In"; 0th"- h a» doei in ' Jaw $521‘... ehlvnull. lhould ?‘%//’ T hePeoples .... , w“ ‘\‘\\\\.\ Read by Everybody Covers Prime Edwardilsland Like the Dew mixms - , OIA MERE MAN The only wealth carried beyurd as; mve a the good we a» this We“ Gunilla], Founded llli. p median, Two Cents. " EEB cualurrrrcrowu. cannon, TUESDAY, salesmen}, 194.5 forture Tales Piling Up As /_________ iilesman ls titctroouted ¢__ etin er, 59. an enl- in)! ligfaritlme Electric was electrocuted Sunday evening, ' repair work to a trans- near the CFCY trans- . It; is thought, ln e. to use both hands, the late gilartinger had thrown his saf- "belt over two high tension . It was learned last night m; the dcccasccfs right arm was med almost. fr) a crisp by the pg volts carried by each of the tension ivirrs. » pie late .\ii‘. Hartingcr was a have oi Allnlllli, hilvlng been born “I???” piwlrd hvirnna 5H ‘s ago. He came thCiilfldh 31 s ago. Surviving pimlre his wife aild five children. mm, Robert. t; in the Canadian m‘. in Belgium; Mary, ena. 9mg and Norbert are at homc. Mtnqtiost was orderlel held this pining bf Coroner Dr, J. D. blac- fiuigllil. iiitler’s Salary r (By The Associated Press) IBANKFURTKON-MAIN, Sept. 3‘ Adolf Hitler's compensation fort [Ming the German people to war- midestruction railged from s2,- rt’ ds showed today. ides his salary as chancellor, m was paid $100000 a year as patient of tho Reich and five or nuesimilni sums "to bc spent as haw il " tLic researches said gdhis i no neared S6.000,000 no he profitted from special bra in tho tllird year of the war. limiting Events l "show Morell Tuesday. "Show Si. Peters Wednesday, 0-4- “Show Murray River Thursday. 9- "i ' Chicken "Si. ..' Supper, iicrioay. Sept. llth. 94-21 "Dance. Montague. Friday. Webszefs Orchestra. fl-4-3l tin Ban Hjll Wednesday, Sept. l- 511i>bt=r a to l0 a-al-aij s"'Clllfk0ll Supper and dallce atl ~ GEOYSH Monday, Sept. l0tll. 9-1-4-6-8-41‘ “fllilobital Dance in McLean's arehouse. Souris. Wednesday i “W- fl-lfl-Tue-ti.‘ "Dlsirit" Convention. Borden I Elli iiniz. Sept. ~ 4th. Sessions .0 lno 8.30 p. m. 9-4-11 "in stock. wheat, ground wheat. Yle for trucking service. 9-1-4-21 Rér-Chlflkéll Sumter. Bazaar, Bingo sacraments. South Rustico Hall, lgtltlfillllcl’ 4 and 5th. Drawing oi uh") lot" Mission Church, Sept. dd-ocknlllllfl‘! served from 5 to l0 8-29, 31-9-1. 4. 5<5i “admit hogs every Tuesday gileliivls A: Fraser Ltd. Phone c lor trucking service. R. N. D“”‘°“- Craoaud. . i-H-Sath-Mon-ti "Con ti (m, Dual; 1'18 hogsflevgitaiThig-sday dz Pras hone gaff“? servliaoe lilo A. - n. . . BC- Doweil. Fredericton. ti-z-tf. ._.__. "Buym! daily at. our stock pens. ghriglroettetown young sows suitable mmhedl"! Purposes. Paying extra Mk l’? for such stock. Live- "ikoilns Board. a-aiol Ill Fraser. Albsnv and viol- "léfl Elnemld. Friday. Sep- qmn AlknPhonu éollact, A. 0. men“ Y- 0!‘ . . Green. "m! demand for ' young bred fivifmgarmeffi having stock doing dull’ by offering them ior P§W§j°s We my extra. Live- " eting Board. l~31-Si "The R w _ annual convention of the Umnmvii" Christian Temperance chum‘ H be held in the United uiy, 8', fm" River. on Thurs- (l n. Thember 6. Miss Edna was. t: as s ' - l a. w e mhr oi the evening. 'IlDKYO America ed the stories carefully matron from which a list of Jap. anese war criminals will be com. piled. Four military inquiry teams are questioning the free for the flight time in several years. Nurses were rushed ashore at Yokohama to help establish the first American medical installation as more sick prisoners were brought in from the prison camps. Meanwhile. on the hospital ship Benevolence iil Tokyo Bay, Amer- ican prisoners were being "screened" day and night and. after medical care wcrc transferred to other ships for repatriation. Capt. Frederick L. McDaniel oi Alexandria, Vu.. senior medical of- ficer said new mental cases being found by his staff. Not a single case of insanity was’ found among the first 1,518 llber-_ ated prisoners examined. Capt. Mc-t Daniel said. however, that “about one-fourth o! those we have llfls- pitultred are suffering from tucer- culosis poor hygiene." mostly cases of heribcri. dysentery anemia and extreme malnutritlcm. he added. Prisoner ship Benevolence vividly described to authorities their life in the en- cmj.‘ "hell Among aboard the ship veer‘. iavio childlgeig , . , d f ‘ women-one years “M00 to new} smoomooo a yhr’! ¥lllev 23in British and American l missionaries who had iniernntnt camp One. of oi told "Be-scherfl; Boat." ll Japanese shin‘, cilrzjglilg American prisoners Japan. l-ie described how thirst craved Americans were fllvffl filmfi-‘M no water and slashed veins and drink Only 50f) of on the ship are rived the (in Murder lthargo tBy The Canadian Press) VICTORIA. (Chuck) Kinney 1'1, was charged with murder today in conilectlon with the silffocation death of Phyl- lis Siroud. 18. Chief Constable Mack McLellan ,, . _ of'tl'le Victoria police force said Chicken supper and dance COT" the QiO-pound boy had confessed. The girl whose body was found buried in sawdust ill the basement of hcr homc._ died from aSPhYXi-l due to strangulation or suffocat~ ion, on autopsy showed. aild a cor- oner's jury found she was murder- cd. The girl's body, clad only in silken panties. was found 12 dais after her disappearance night of Chief McLellan said today that other clothes worn by tile Elfl Bl time , "were bclievcd to have been found. The boy will appear in juvcniic court tomorrow the ihc c-l so cniic will Supreme summer said the ~ |-sl-l-o-al_ leader: vokulc due police court. It is asslzcs opening in Victoria Nov. 5.. House ‘Burned At Rosehank A farm house at Rosebanir. own-, 0d by Mr. J. Enlmett MacDonald. Charlottetown. fire Sunday evening at. about 8.30. The dwelling was leased for A sprinkler from the Charlotte: town’ Fire Department went to the scene but the blaze had made too much. headway to be extinguished“ Nearby buildings were saved. l Gen. Chiang c2113 For New And _United China By SPENCER MOOSA CHUNGKINQ. Sept. President Chiallg on China's wildly celebrating m - lions tonight to crown their vic- tory over Japan b.v building a united Claim: its =1 n mhttlicwatllict the eight years oi bit. ter warfare are over. 09n- "'°‘ "‘ " l“.‘li'.l.‘“.f§f.?i°i.. gllgfilllnttlgn “of constitutional domo~ cracy. In a. partial concession to munist demands. of all parties be 0ft the IIUOIII ululrlbl! Prisoners AreReleased any. Sent- hun- More chapters of the horror of ex. isting for hell" of Japanese prisons from the pailid lips of American war casting a pail ovci- occupation ftp. ces moving into conquered Nippon. months ln the “living: came liberated Drlsoners today. n army authorities sift- ior infor- IHGH, T11R11}! WGTB and are l malnutrition The others t0 5 arriving at the hospital camps" the ilunclreds to arrive and their children been ill a Tokyo civilian the survivors of Bataan the horror aboard the tits their own the blsod. tile 1.500 Americans believed to have sur- trip. Juvenfle Sept. 3 — Charles on the Aug. 1s_v-.1 day. Police of hcr disappearance and it is likely] be transferred to possible the uv- bc remanded for tria in Court at the crlmlnfll will destroyed by . was the months. 3 __ Kai-Shel: new "a. mod demo- the Far East." Chlallil "we shall the in- com- leader consult con- lt ll the war Government wo fAPl-w vale armies or armies “lied! parties could ll I within China's borders. | To workers and formers. lnvestitu re F°11°Wll18 the presentation of the Distinguished Service Cross, posthumously awarded hcr husband, mam Ho“ h ‘ _ Mrs. Nora. Farrlsh is shown on the steps of Govern- made the se at ‘C arlottetown Thursday with Col. Howard S. Haddon of the United States Army, who mam _G°vi3lr‘eseh ation on behalf of the U. S. Government. In the above group are, from left to right, n d. M e nol J.'A. Bernard, Col. Hacldon, Mrs. Farrlsll, her mother, Mrs. S. R. Jenkins, Mrs. Ber- ar . rs. Farrlshs two sisters, Mrs. Ivan Reddin and Miss Helen Jenkins, all of Charlottetown; back aw’ “m” °f the Llflllenflht Governor, Liz-Col. P, S. Fielding, Sty-Leader H. C. Tralnor and Lieut. lalnilm MflflMlllflll. D.S.C. and Bar. The D.S.C. was awarded to Major Parrish for heroic and gal- Ih aclons in the Mediterranean theatre oi operations while serving with the U. S. Strategic Services as ‘Vim-m with Yllzosl-av Partisans. He was killed in an air crash in the course of operations. M3101” LYn" 5- Fflffiih. of the United States Army, m- (Can- adian Army Photo Aug, 31, 45), FORMAL SURRENDER Local Soldier l. 0N U. S. BATTLESHIP .. Documents Signed Formally In Historic Tokyo Bay Ceremony. itluebeo To Be Scene 0f Parley U. S. S. MISSOURI. Tokyo Bay. Sept. 3-tAP)—Japan surrendered Vilma“)? and unconditionally tol the Allies yesterday in a Zfhmiu-l ute ceremony which ended just its} the sun burst through low-hailging; clouds as a shining symbol to n1 TBVflBBd world now done with war.‘ The solemn ceremony marking the first defeat in Japan's 2,603-! year-Old history. took place oboaldi this battleship with 12 signatures whichvrequired only a few minutes todaffix to the articles of surren- el. Over the battleships flew the! t American flag that, fluttered from Washington's Capital on the day of the JrlpilllfiSf.‘ attack on Pearl Harbor. Dec. 7. 1941. Also dis-i played aboard was the flag Wlllcllt Commodore Pcrry unfurled in Ja-l pail 92 years ago. Surrounded by the might of the United States Navy and Arm_\._ augmented by British warships and under the eyes of the Ameri- can and British commanders they so ruthlessly defeated in the Phil- ippines and Malay. the Jntluhesc p .reprcscntatlves quietly made the iContinucd on Page 9 . ideal Weather t For Labor Day B.v The Canadian Press I With ideal weather prevailing Q- ‘ rlltelr most of the Dominicn WOYKOYS‘ their thousands Labor Day parades at principal cities yesterday. Labor gathering; and Slwrts meets attract-ed large crowd. at many points. Floats carried in the various parades depicted label's part in wining the war and placards car- ried in this first peace-time Labor Day celebration in six rears em- phasized laborb demands for jobs and security, marched early dam. He promised equal legal status to all parties, but declared that pli- oi political be tolerated he ‘pie ed a better livelihood, with grea r em loyrhent; to Wit!‘ vot- erans, he ofered grants of firm land; and in the neople generally he promised freedom oi speech and 0i person. Gen. Ohlln told» his PeoDle iraniklv that ‘our inundation as a not WASHINGTON, Sept, 3 _ tlieuters) - Quebec City ha; been chosen as the sitc of the United Nations food and agri- culture conference next month, it was learned reliably today. Ford Mlilorlters Favor Strike WINDSOR, Ont, Sept. 3 —(CPl' -—$li‘lk€ action Pilflllwi. the Ford Motor Company oi Canada, Lim- ited. was favored by more than 90 er cent, of the members of local 200, United Automobile Workers tCI O) who cast ballots in a strike vote hero, Roy England prcsldent of the local, announced today Results of tlle vote. taken from Wednesday to Saturday of last week, were given from the Windsor" City Hall steps to hundreds of union mcnlb-ers who cheered Enfl- land's words Although no figures were givenas to the number who; cast ballots. union officials said- Saturday morning that nlore than 6,000 had voted up to that time. England indicated the date for the start of the strike nt the Ford plant will depend on the action of the conciliation board set ui) by the Federal Demartmcnt of Labor to try and settle contract disputes lyztlveen the company and union. Bombeltméhmmrrnd Lost 47,000 Men LONDON, Sept. 3—~Reur.ers) R. A.F'. Bomber Command lost 41.- 000 men killed tiuring tho war. Sir Charles Portal, marshal of the Roll- al Air Force, said tonight. in a Badly ; Injured . l In" Accident t_her, Edward. was kiled in Sicily lily i943. Another brother James. lives qt 213 Prince Sire: . City. He has three sisters. M11. Edward Blanchard. Debt-rt. N. S and Hilda tMrs. Fzed Holmes-sci" and Priscilla. both of Charlottetown. Cfn. Lawlor is illarrlcd and has one child. age four years French Prepare For Election Oct. 21 PARIS. scat 8 ‘GP Cflbl“ .._ The campaign is getting lmcicr way in France for the Oct. general election which Will be thc most significant post-vial" vote on the continent and one which will shape the constitutional future of the republic. , In this first general election since May. 1936, Lhc French peo- undcr the i875 constitution of the CHICAGO. Scpt. (l-fAPL-Becty frfuttdn, 24-year-old film actress, and Theodore Briskill, 27. president oi the Revere Camera Company, were married here last night. cneaTfisTfhsans broadcast appeal on behalf of the R A F‘ Benevolent Fund He said Bomber Command won 19,000 de- coratiom for gallantry. Bl modern state is the weakest a- the United Nations." " o most important for national unity is the ilational- ml oi.’ all armed forces," Gen- doollnd. . ». 0380 OF CANADA Eli 't"‘i'l'fQ "' EASIlKlP. i FOR BREAD ' CllKES ' PIES Japan is normally the world's leading fish-catcher and consumer. lO USE -COOKIESA ‘ETeain From P. E. I. t l Canadian Army) Mall. 3.1.90; calmer Provinces l U.8.A., $5.00. .1530. 1o PAGES‘! KlllES JAPAN FOR CONFLICT At ‘Government House Says Viola-y Entails "eov\1.|3e$Poosibl.l.?..l.:iv; _LONDON, Sept. 3 —- (CP) — Prinze Minister" Attlee tonight blamed Japan for starting the Second Great War by invading Manchuria in 1931 and cautioned that victory will be “empty and short lived" if the conquering Allies forget “the heavy responsibility that our victory entails.“ ‘In a broadcast speech on the sixth anniversary of Britain's entry into the war. Mr. Attlee declared "it was the Japanesg action in Manchuria which started the train of events which culminated in the Wbrld War." Failure to deal with this first breach of the peace- “destroyed the authority of the League of Nations.” he“; said. _ He declared that Britain's “sole endeavor" in liuropel will be “to enable the will of the people to p':'0\'illl and in! assist in the establishment everylvhcre of governments resting on popular consent.” ‘ 0n Honeymoon in Massachusetts ilUiTCN. Sept. 3 - tCP) _ sgt, Charles MacGallivary. the char. 1~1~1w\\'n south who “on the Unit- _cd States Congressional Medal of 1101151‘. is honcymooniilg m Mas flfililsotts Willi his South EOSiOn briuc ,tlle former E.th2r Mfllllllllk Tn: bildc. who. uas Sgt. M c GlllivflfYs regular girl friend l:c- ioro hc vscn‘. overseas, coresnonzrti uuth him regularly. and was or, hand when President Truman pre- sented the coveted award. . ‘ Al ti". "u: .; “We Should pledge ourselves anew t0 build up a new! monigs awol-eeuyehiwtar ‘£5,535 world order in which all nations mav dwell in securitv.‘ Sgflslfifi M“- sia Glgzllhilkv! 01 - , - , ,- . ' ~ , a ax. on‘ s. i; ' l - . in “filth war vllll be banished," he added. t Gmivar}. .,,°w,,,,,,;,,,,,,? $855 “c '__“"—‘—-"' " '—— r- -" The Calladian~bniil ycurh who He warned tire Biitlsh people oft _ d,“ days “beam hm Sam coma“ lost his left arm cifzei- it was snot. icred by 22 bullets, took his bl‘ K. 0f B. Degree lfP-gydnhsl" “n m?‘ “"‘1'd5"1l"5 “Ml in a Catholic ceremony a’ bi. , a 3515 ~1_‘~‘_1\1ll110 11151)‘ 110111. by Augustine Church, South Bcslon. t the co-opelatlon oi the pguple and 13st Friday In pre-war days. Sgt. MacGillivary was in the merchant marine. ills: he feels now that the loss of hts aim disquaiiiies him for sea duty. He intends to consult veterans counsellor service for advice in cb- taining a new occupation at t‘e completion of his wedding trip. tthe Government, Britain will tri. umph " ‘ dt%gbll?ulke Wm tihimpcople that’ _ _ v za ion woul > speeded in i?‘ 5th” rfifilyntémec 3311C‘? (flflsigg E order to gain anvaddlinrlzll 1.000.000 Knights of Columbus, a fourth de-i Xéfififfihiji grufiélwjglthéstri" but gree of the order wa e e llfi d‘ s . e ‘ ‘,1, e Y? L mu“ today in a oeronlonysiogrtliiclllwatgd “Lilli” r32?“ mm" of owpauo“ He is the son of Ml’ and Mia. in by 110 candidates from Nova Britopsgln] urlglnzcllltuoaf militate?‘ e01! Roland MacGlllivarv ' Scotla and Prince Edward Island. ~' .- - _ , 3 5 *3’ - - -'~ 3w Members of the degree. team Qff‘ he ‘m m” “mud '°° m!) dlggtrrixpfirerghlg ntirmanpsh were from the Island Province, nnJ . “l m “m”? Sm“ m“ “m” troops in n-anec last mu dcr the leadership of Dr. W, J. P. “Ogle” _. _ _______ MacMlllail of Charlottetown. mast-' .- c csPmmgd m“ m "d" W~ or of the fourth degree in the two‘ mm‘; plodiwuon m. me 1939 We‘ I pmvmce5_ .Wflt- level_‘u'e require an increase; Other members included ‘Rev. R. . M abgul ‘homlmll wfllkero " t c. Elisa-drill, 0.0.. st. Damian's‘ Mcmllllllle- he “dded- Yelcosedt University. Charlottctowm. George W" “'°Yk°1'§.b€i"f°@fl the aces of). ~- Clovv. Sumlnerside; Daniel Noonan, 13 811d 30 Will be drafted to meet. ANTIGONISH, 1;. s.. Sept. 3_ Sept. 3 Charlottetown; Judge St. Clair Continuing lllillffllii‘ needs KANDY. Ceylon- Trainor. Montague; and F. M. Mad- H8 Said thut “fur the rest of the lREXHETSI — Admiral Sir Art ur digan. Charlottetown. year an average oi 45.000" men and Power, commander-in-chief E. .. Th visitprs were women will leave the services every Indies Station. with his flag in is evening the __ guests of thelocal council a: a week [the grmsh Cruise,- gleopan-m m. - . , ». dinner at which Dr, MacMillan He said that "is almos twic. ‘ rlv ti at Sin a ore at 11:40 A.M As a result. oi inuuies received t e est B P while gating of; a iram m B6110 llrfislflcd us toastmaster. fast asthcy were a month ago." indav. a communique announced ville. 0nt.. over the week cnd cm. ' "‘"“*—* Tummy back to tllc Fa-st Grcot l zonisiit. Richard Lawlor. 35. of Charlotze. . War. Mr iltilcc tit/slated that "thcl town had {otlbgvexrihlg 1gp, 15-1 3114i lttlssinrkiilat mutt‘ is) intiivisiblc and! arm ampuae . e was on ruu c, 1 la. l can 011A‘ o .. served bv to Camp Borden alter havhc‘ , Ith, resolute maxi n . f ti‘. spent his leave in Charlottetown t Pr‘ N ruie o;15...,“,,,.g,l§,jfll.§,,§shoulg p‘ 5 Gin. Lawlor spent six months in ;havc been learned in 1918A MRTEEH . fthnimtifhiié‘éliihifiia. “it; . ,0;‘”;, $5,;.§",§§§;;'gs,,;.°;*=>;,j°r the isn't an outwit - -. n " . u" thB Sprilrlggwcf ltllfiiitf-Ic ‘iivecnt (ssh-l 1914 w 1913 e ‘WM’ seas n an re urne. o 11-’ Mn . 1 _ . ._ " ada about two months ago. A bro-l "'““ p,.,,.§,°,,..,‘,‘°’,1,“ Slfin§,““§.0§{'d‘“" “F; YOU “AU! By COL. R. S. MALONE l _ _ l, (Director of Public Relations, mm‘ “"“‘"°“5 ‘hm 11"’ m?“ The :Iesson that was not learned in i918 _ ,0? mils‘: be learned today " I Cable) — Some 200 Canadian pris-_ ‘Tim Finuil} C°mf“°“w°“llh f“ loncrs of war, taken in the fall of “ v “Wig Whlllllih . Hung Kong to the Japanese Chrlst- ,_ mum in (with, ligldultétrktal nllilllxll inlas Day. i941, now are in Allied ; ‘Yell be proud o‘ me efforts of our hands in Japan. , _ Today I visited the m.“ gmupunen alld unmcli a homo. in tllc $5,000.04“ 9 t YOKOHAIMA, Sept. 3 lof liberated Canadians from Jap- Domimons- m 1"?" and l“ me I (l Janese prison camps and learned wlonles- M n" "W- “m “hm first-hand details of the fighting “"1135 ‘We oi it)?" demot- lws M} land last’ days of Hung Kong when there been ally iazlure of l-esolu. k .illc Canadian contingent of about tltm- fill-l’ Whlmlm‘ ‘in the lure Bf loss "We are now emerging from those six years of ivastc. for from the A point of view of the progrtss of i ,l.985 men from the Winnipeg Grcnadicrs, tile Royal Rifles of ~Canada and a brigade headquart- ‘ers was part of the British force 7/ I l" m‘ ‘ if . , ( QJ t” l ~ raqcnfibn-vi-vr- ' itllat battled overwhelming odd-s. Civiltilflllml. War is noth‘ng but ‘ The group interviewed today in- was o t zllcludtsd 15 Canadian soldiers, one The drwlllblnvl)’ fii Weapons 0f! METEOROLOGICAL OFFICE ‘ cutmhhtronorrro. sent. 3 — ~<3P' ~ immense dcstrucilvcnrss. , _ _ _. t r“ hm“; 1n the rein.“- Qg ‘he atomic i Minimum and maximum cmpe n - - t c: Vancouver 50. 59; Edmfimt §§“2,b",,.,1,‘,.“,§ $51? »,m°..t§§§,ld"lf upltgfxlcifi, 78". Regina s2. as: Winni- tions llllfl-lli. rlslvrllljiil‘ isecuiliity‘ ma; I Peg 60' M5 T°mm° 52', 76; otmx l11af'El' not merclv desirable but i 44- 631 Montreal 50' 70' Quebec .- _ - 6'. izJh 5i;M toniti IHlfil for the fuiulo of civlllzat on. g6; 311?“): 0591:‘ 7,: chgiflccmemwn incrclllilt seamen and nine French- ‘Cfillfldlllll Roman Catholic Broth- crs. This group, the first to sec Canadians from the outside. was overjoyed to see Col. l... V. M. Cos- grave. Canadian military attache at Canberra. Australia. and me. pie will elect about 650 illembers The Canadtan Franciscan “d1 _____ ._____ __ _ Y ~ _ ‘ ‘by ll complicated system oi DTO- mminican Brothers and all Can- 100 000 Chinese EF- 64“ 5mm“ 59‘ 65' Yagmmm‘ portionatle relillfestjentihlélefld inThg adians in Allied hflfllidfi to date are H ’ l B Fl i fibgflécuv, ‘voters aso w c as n reasonable healt . a'though a 0mg Q§§ 131,5 “’" .' . referendum presented at the same small percentage suffer; {cud-M __y_ k’ ‘ W118i. kfiizlée€lcego time whether the members will of beri beri. CHUNGKING 5w, 3_App,.,.\.i_‘ ‘f’. dresf .5“ d 51ml warmed take their places in a chambf?!‘ Three of tllc men had been hit “lately 109000 ‘Chmoéc were l'én@“‘€1m§-f agar“? shgre land B“ frequently WW1 011155 and 515D- hohlclcss today by floods caused Chateur; Moderate to (N511 south- Third Republic or sit in a con- nod on the m“, I was mm s; b U , . _ '_ V ailment assembly Chili"! W“ reheated cases of inhuman vreat- ahd écillilllliqlliltloglvcfli txlclicgalgéisvwa‘; ‘if-"d".r”§f,,,f“d,°°°lg d H (he ‘ask c! dram“ a new cm" "lem- p°°r f°°d~ few Red GT0“ at Chuilckinq Th floods were re t n lmes‘ h hang rug" l! stitution. parcels arriving and little mail gafdgd h] m} wog. 1n {he qhungl “m M‘ m" c n" n "'9"- It. is considered likely that fgpghlng than king M“ m m W," 11'1"» I __ f France will reject the old con- The prisoners told of sleeping ‘ " _ Lov-Wrl‘ St. John. PBTU) cloud) stitution and that a constituent on mats on floors of filthy camps. ARTIST, SCULPTRE55 DIES “M slightly v warmer probably assembly will be formed- Sanitation was beyond description NEW vonx Sept. a_.ai>»_is°““°"f’ shmw‘ ‘“ “m” BETfi—}—l—U~—TT—-—oN WEDS irnelscrgencmnelgs axe-ix ‘of the Mitsis Vlally Wiest-lthier. 50, intcr-iwlfiga: 12d ,‘,’fs‘.’,°’,,§f;d§f““§§§§§; ans o nn onay known ceramic artistwm‘, rah, and R “me warm". l clothing they had on when Hong Kong fell. and sculpiress. tiled Saturday after an illness of several monu“ few scattered showers at night or on Wednesday. High tide this morning at 9.34 and tonight at 11.04 Chicago Rolice See/ea“? “Dirty-faced” Slayer Sim sets this evening at 7.34 Qaild rises tomorrow morning a‘: ) 6.25. l New mhon Sept. 8. 0.34 am. Summersidc tide eighteen mill- utes later than Charlottetown. heave Charlottetown l2.l.'i 5.45 PM. CHICAGO, Sept. 3 — (AP) __ A. black glove on his left hand. Bra- "dirty-faced" slayer of two polieeJ dy. father of nine small children. men who stopped him tor routine] died in hospital. ‘n, figgafmfifnylfglo PM questioning was at large tcmghgl Police qucstlonrtl ll mail roughly V‘ chAaLoTTETawfl; ' as the dead officers‘ co-workcrs rfsfihlblillf! Emily's dcscliptlo‘; of NEW GLASGOW conducted u house-tmhouse check‘ the slayer. The man unvc rt south min‘ Fnem Sand.” UlflCk clnrral any side address and wot-c a glove on his loft hand to an artificial rum. Ho mnictl knowledge of the shooting Police expmssui thc theory ihc glove worn by tho killer was for the purpose of conccalinz on r-il- of the neighborhood in their search for the furtitive The shooting occurred last night at. Clark Street and Lullt Avenue. two block; from a police station. in Rogers Park, a north side rc- aidential section. Leave Charlottetown L10. 1.00 EM. Arrive Charlottetown 2.35. 5.20 RM N, s.-P. l}. l. FERRY SIERVICI tDniIy. including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-SEPT. I0 George Hellstorn. 52. tiled in-i ficial hand or arm. Paul J lic- n W‘; mum, q L m" 11 stanily ills companion. Charla: Manon, abystanllcr. said lit‘ all. ht ‘Luau § rm A Brady. 30. described the killer the mun wen \\'i)llll(li‘d bv m“ as a "dirty-faced" man about 30 to tho ships fired by the polittmev M!" CH5". I l- Ill- l D- III- Si years old who was wearing c. before they fell. l I b. I- “ 2.3.: