t » Maxim, OFA Mm: MAN __.--- wllflflxsf: will content. a lltilo will not own- , t i i t . '-Iq__'_r"'~&‘" ,,,_,..-_-<-" “--_. Covers Prince Edwordilsiand Like the Dew Read by Everybody \ nAGF. SEVEN . w,“ How vain ls learning unless intel- ligence go with it. MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN Guard ianillounded 1087. ‘u m", Guardian. T" 9°!“- Q CPIARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, Auvoulsr i; 1945 a _/=—_;=- ommiss ere On ualifications .-0o|. Lowther Returning To ‘ice St. School 0W1 5 special meeting 0i Board yesterday. Jllubd that LL-Col. would return to his position as principal nf aspect school. At the same: m-angcmcllts were made for _ llinc. who has acted c Street, to re- . position as vice- “; Kent School. l, laivthor served with the in armed forces since the .. if 0i W3?‘- _ [n . Works. the who served [l . ‘an of ~ returning to the t- School. irtter was read at the meet- from Lf-Col. William Reid. ormer meinbcr of the staff of . Kent stIIOOI, expressing his n his lullhlilk to return to named to consider the ques- oflticrcasfn: the amount of ‘ctaiizlv 1:: Cift: Schools schools are to open on i. roe Suffers trst ilrougbt 50 Years It M; reported todny. ' l . y. H! is cxpecwd to t below girc-uur ding of tall 55 per lcvcls. ex- bread rationing through 191.0. A fifth of tlic vcgc- hip '0 and fodder crops Wiilvtl out bv the lack of illfillt‘ itiygrlivating the f Sil-"Wefillcs. {IICFCJSB in crime. . (Llllls slaying and OPCfl "quadrupling" of uitutes. P.ll'l$ lliipprg an, 5a,“! that“ the (‘ity threatens to he another gangster-era Chi. ‘tming Events "shill" Bradalbane Tuesday. 3-27-31 , -___ ‘Sim MilillPqtte Wednesday. 8:27-21 "Dance l i.l t . ~ n 20th?“ o“ Rink T315533“, "Dance in ‘ '5 Orrlil- wpb’ aguc Friduyg “Cir Number iilfiiughout l“ . no“: a ' 5°‘ m“? while they last. I- 28-29-141 in McLean's i "Hvsonal em Dance .. A _ dltlihcsug tea. llenie w_ 1_ new“ ‘m- m a’ iii-frig Hogs Y; also ,. E “fillfft A. C. Green “l 9t C. Ulfcn. Errlerala “"1: r ‘ngnmtiizssrvs resent “MAY. Auauct m“ 31"!‘ Women's nstitrlle 8-28~2i arid-dance at Stew- 30 "m: “cod Manda East, fine following Wood ‘IIXCE - ‘s cscrem ‘h! < U not , mslionsurczl by the E31! Women's Institute. an N-li l!“ i uolillisivhil‘? in all sizes, and - dfJé-jdup to lavrrnches. c, ~ prices. agons H!‘ S. buggy and truck wagon t mounted drlvlng F ‘I00 Morrison, Fred- ‘ ‘- ~ sass-st nlckle ‘ Clix "n .. + FITuIbIErVIQPtWHI“! (‘lltllcss in size “ltd d ' ‘ ton. slNilNG ion Sits Veterans. The Royal Commission on vet- erans qualifications arnrived in Charlottetown yesterday by spec- ial chartered plane from Mont- real. The Commission had previ- ously visited other Maritime Prov- inces but deferred its visit to Charlottetown at the special re- quest of the Provincial Govern- ment. 1 The Commission was establish- ed in May, 1945. by Federal order- ln-council in order to ascertain‘ the value in civil life of the knowledge obtained and the cx-i perience gained by men and wo-‘r ,men in the armed services and to advise as to what further instruc- tion they should receive after de- f For Co-Cporation 8-27-28-2i by truck for Efiirgrfrkrlilbranyl and vicl; “Hm ~ - 'ri av. Augus Al- b ' §i‘§ieM§’.§‘v'i$L’i° S? ‘Elli? 335.40%. ‘Iva ‘ Scot n's “D _ rum running trade 0n N0" 1d F at River Igrxrrlll.‘ wulLs-holel mmimliril-i-Etffisa ' 30th. a onsorcd ' Shanghai Reverts To China After 8 Years Under Japs — - _. (AP) _ Cl-IUNGKING. Ans. i’! chm. A ("s M“ "MWPFS- new mid ,v wrncss and driving wagons, buggy _ ed truck wag-an “m5- Clinion Morit- 8-20-3i mobilization. Micmbers of the commission arriving in Charlotte- town were: The Hon, Wilfred Bovcy. Montreal; Mr. Hector Du- pills, Montreal; and Mr. Herwlg, Ottawa, general secretary of the Canadian Legion, B. E. S. I... Accompanying the sion is tlic technical staff. Lt.- Col. F. M. West. University liaison officer and in civil life dean of the School of Engineering. Mount Al- lison University; Cmdir. E R Cmdr. C. H. Crosslnnd, liaison 0f- ficers for Army, Nztvy and Air Force respectively. It is also ac- companied by nu official reporter. Mr. R, A. Whitman and its sec- retary. Cmdr. A. E. Fortlngton. The other members of’ the Com- mission. Messrs. F‘. Lyons, S. R. Ross and F‘, W. Smells, did not accompany lhcm on this oc- caslori. The Commission has held sit- tings in Ottawa. in all Provincial capitals, and in Montreal and Vancouver where of Provincial Governments and their interested departments, por- ticularly the department, of edu- cation and vocational training tricwed representatives of labor unions and the heads of all uni- versities. Up to now over zwitncsses have been examined. I One of the most important tasks ‘of the Commission, Col, Bovey said last night, was to discover at first hand from officers of the armed services exactly what training. more particularly in i :.6Faiiiiaai‘aa“5r§@*?’c<§iT‘4f‘ r Former Sydney Fire Chief Passes Away svmrav, N. s.. Aug. 2'1 -<cP> - Chlcf of Sydney's fire depart- ment for more than 28 Ybars. Harry M. l\’iL‘l‘S‘.‘l'B.|-\l, 73. native of Fredericton Junction, NB, died here today following a lengthy illness. He came to Cape Breton _in 1893 as boss linclnaii for Canadian Pacific Tclegraphs and helped in- stall that company's communica- tion facilities through the Island. l-ic became fire chief in 1917. He is survived by his wddow: two sons and two daughters. ii. C. M. P. To Take B-ZB-Zli t To... at Over Camp Norway the Province. Get 1 8-l0-tf. i "A few car number books still (CP) - Tlic Royal Canadian Nov- as Camp Norway and used as a training base for Royal Norwegian will be taken over by the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Policc as a training station in October, it was learned here today’. It was learned that naval IWYSQYI" ncl n-ow at by lhc end at least. 100 R. C M P would move t Sponsored by probably some shanghai. greatest city 0i and fabulous trol after cikht V90" occupation. a dlsllfllflh city indicated tonlilhii~ 1 troops “ rbomc Kni-Sheks "part of the i . s arm es Shanghai area this landings GEOIQC Commis- Wood. Major B. F. Addy, and Wing nopresentatives have appeared. It has also inter" 56o, LUNENBURG, N. 5.. Aug. 27 - al Barracks here, formerly kncrIl of September and that‘ in, The Federal Government wit‘; turn over several minesweepers an raster naval cm“ (t; room fortress, with concrete defen-r international cross- . . 1 d i 1931. ‘old ""- roads, has reverted to glililiiigigaafleigie‘ Japancse occup e n s from the . -, ted that. (The Tokw "m" gmgrallsslmo nnd United Slates air for- . . di a in the t“ err" ‘l::.a"1tt..'"li wore made PC8119 l‘ " l accordance with armnsemflii-S ma“ with thb 30993959 Commander, U16 EDOU-ARD HERRIOT . Three times Premier of France] who is winning new fame at his old post as Mayor of Lyon, where he is solving France's most pres- sing problem — how to get enough to eat. The Capital daily "Voice of Paris" hails him as “the coh- queror of poverty and the black market". reporting Lyon as per- haps the only city in France where there is enough to eat at reason- able prlces, with plenty of mean! fish, fruit and vegetables. "Since." Hcrriot has been back the niillri rarion has doubled." a worker sad. t British Battleship Nelson ETWo Big Aircraft In Eafilndia Waters Thanks Public During The War MONTREAL, Aug. 2'1 message oddrxsed to the Can-l radian public, R. C. Voughiarn] chairman and president 0d the. Canadian National Railways, to- day expressed the system's thanks for the co-operntlon given it dur- ing the war by the millions of train and steamship passengers, shippers of freight and express. hotel guests. and patrons of the telegraph and other services, The Canadian Nationals ability to fulfill it: gigantic war duty "to the credit and satisfaction of the nation." he said, "is due not only t0 the skill, devotion and zeal of those who are our workers but indargc xiiensure also to the Can- adian public who by their gener- ous responses lo appeals for help and their uncomplainlng accept- ances of restrictions and controls, lightened our burden." He mode particular mention of "the unnumbered citizens who re- frained from travelling needlessly as their contribution to the corn. mon cause." Huge Mileage From the outbreak of war m Sept. 1939. to V-J Day, can. adlan National passenger train miles amounted to more than 130000.000 according to the Bur. eau of Statistics. Passenger car lnllzs ‘totallcdrlnore than one bll. lion. .117 million. It is estimated that more than 153000.000 pass- or." ~ t Continued on Page In 8 Jap En voys Agreem nts ii H I Troopship Samaria i Cooks At Quebec r QUEBEC, Aug, 27 — (CP) - The: lrnonsliip Samaria. l9.500-ton Cun-j ard-White Star liner. docked at; Wolfe's Cove here tonight. bringing, back to Canada 2.524 more war, veterans. As in the case of previous troop arrivals here, a boisterous welcome’ awaited the returning men. Shortly after the vcsscl docked. discmbarkalion began. Men bound‘ for western cities bnnrdrd uniting: trains. and were sncd liomcwnldr while those bound for eastern Can-i ada centres will leave tomorrowi morning. i The BOO-foot vcsscl carried 1.084‘ armv personnel and 1.440 members of the R,C.A,P.. including 48 mcm-, bers of the Women's Division. iiuisliffgulowokiieak To Manor In Court , ~—- I i 051.0. Aug, 2v - tReuteij-t, —- lTvro residences of Vidkin Qill» '4'- .N;,i~wny's puppet prcmrcr_ dilrnnr 1 German occupation. were \’l;illi‘fi i0- da by the jury when Quislmss, treason trial was suspended bc- cause, Judge Erik Solem announced, Qulsllng was "too weak" to appear] in court. t The jurors saw his summer palace r "Gimlc" and then dmvc to the. i “Eagle's Nest," a BerchteSEHCPYI. ~ . N v and merchant marine person- , . L "55 Mulls. 8\_A1Ig?¥m(h31yl n5‘, inf“, in the wan ' style hide-out in the hill soutsltic ll M” 23m GWWWIPW Hall Wed- Zll. Good music; Oslo, The “Eagle's Ncst." was the‘, miniature fortress Quisllns had v1“! l dared built but which remained un-_ "completed when his world collap- i \ the base would leave? 59d flmund mm- In court Quisling had describerb the "Eagle's Nest" as "just n 1 = villa with a few rooms on a patchl of ground.” What the judges found was a 20-, cos. machine-gun emplacemcnts. a radio transmitter and enough foou for six months. broadcast heard in London, said» atch from the 8W" WW one of t e world's busiest. which the Chinese derground forces of ihc taken, National Government had over from the Japanese. i (An Associated Press cotter-i pondcut. Vern Hnuglnurl. flew over , Shanghai in n Flying Forircss at‘ sunrise Monday nnti reported tilt‘ city deckcd vrifh Chinese. AYHPI“. ican and British flags. Persons on roriftouirs arrived wlldlgwlfcrrtrrllliplzg-i sad eo yappcare o a" .- caped great. damage in the wurJ i Sign eace At Rangoon By CHARLES Gaulvncu RANGOON. Burma, Aug. 28 - ITucsciiy-I — tAPt — Japanese surrender OTIVDM; signed prelim- in. y pence agreements for South- ccrt Asia at l a.m. today (l p.m.. ED.T. lvloudayl in the floodlit gland ball room of the Govern- ment Htvucc. The hiatoriC ceremony. climax- ing two days of negotiations, pav- ed tho way for Allied reoccupa- lion of Singapore, the East Indies and all Southeast Asia. A plcnipotentiary signed for I-‘lcld Marshal Count Juichl Ter- auchi. commander of the Japan- cse southern armies, while Lt.- Gen. F‘. A. M. Browning affixed| hi". sigiiattlrc on behalf of Ad- miral Lord Louls Mountbatten. Gen. Browning told the Japan- ese they must. smooth the way for the Allies in this theatre pending Tokyo's formal surrender- Sept. His ing took barely five minutes. As the ceremony ended. the Japanese bowed away. The bows wmnt. without Allied response. Flags of America, China. Britain and France hung from the gal- lcrles. which were filled with unl- formcd Allied personnel. In the prcliminary talks. the Jamnesc had given full details _. ‘service by new army draft instructions and the sign-t te AN EAST INDIES anrarzri BASE, Aug. 28 - tTuesdayl -‘ (Reuters: — The Royal Navy baz- tleshlp Nelson, flying the flag of Vice-Admiral Harold tHcoky) Walker is with a British task‘ force now steaming at full speed for Penang, Malaya, it was of-‘ flclally announced today. This is, the first mention of this battle-- ship's presence in the East Indies Fleet. Adam. Walker derives his naval nickname from the hook he uses in place of the left arm he lost in the Zeebrugge, Belgium, raid 1n the First Great War. Other ships in the force arc the cruiser Ceylon. the aircluif’ carrier Hunter, three destroyers and two slocps of the Royal Ind- ian Navy. Meanwhile another force of the East. Indies Fleet. led hy the, cruiser London is due at —an island off northern Sumal 308 miles west of Peuzing- - Sabang and Pcnang 1020.101‘. guard the northwestern entrant-c‘ to the Malacca Straits -- ~,c way to Singapore. ' Slhlllif Speoulate 0n New? ilong Kong Probe OTTAWA. Aug. 27 _ ICP) The anticipated return of Cali-i radians taken prisoner at Hongt Kong has touched off speculation here) as to the possibilities of z. vestlgatlo-ns addition to that which Sir Lyman Duff. former Chief Justice. made mo» ~-in.-‘ organization. authorization and‘ cllsiroatch" of the force in October. Appointed a Royal Commis- sloner by order-in-council, ' Lyman handed down n rep '1 June 4. 1042, which failed to find‘ any person or organization a: fault with the exception of one. minor instance — failure to get‘ some 20 army vehicles to Van-t‘ couver in time to Join a ship‘ which carried the force. I In a general conclusion. loci termed the Hong Kong frvrrp or! 1.985 men "an expedition of whixlit Canada can and should be proud," and said it was neither ill-con- ceived nor badly managed, Truman Urges 1 Continuation 0f i Selective Service A WASHINGTON. Aug 27 President Truman, decl 11855 w combat vctci uncertainties of the mand ,- , C "a; iudud, es. _ He. also: , | gested today a two-year li 1. Recommended that Cm- gress lift n 283.000 ceiling mi army volunteers and c0nsidci~ . inducements to stimulate vol- l untary cnlistmcnts. t 2. Caulioncd against “too early unqualified formal tcri - atiori" of the emergency of colic: i. Allicd prisoners of war and reported that all were iul good health. INDUSTRIALIST DIES ST. STEPHEN, N. B.. Aug. TL- tCPt — The funeral of J. Lucius l-laley. 71. well known industrial- ist who died at his home here Saturday night, will be held to- morrow afternoon. Born at Yar- mouth. N.S., he wns president of the woodworking plant of Haley rind Sou, Ltd., a former town councillor and one of St. Stephen's most prominent citizens. runusurzn pics SPRINGFIELD, Mo. Aug. 28 -- (APt —- Harry S. Jewell, president of Springfield Newspapers, Inc., died yesterday after a year's ill- ness. He was '18. He had been l newspaper publisher here for 50 Years and had been a. member of the Associated Press since it was Organized at the turn of the cen- war. Such tcrniinnt n ' mean selective service have to be abandoned six months. It also would m 1 , the President of many wartime t powers. r The President set forth hi"- vicwgl in a letter to chairman Elbert 'l'l~.c-‘ mas and Andrew Mav of the S ate and House of Rf.‘[]l‘i‘$f‘liiflflY-‘~; military committees. Cnnsitlerntwlci sentiment has been evidenced in both Houses for an early end to the draft or at least a halt in ‘teen-age inductions. - , The President's report flint GNP. erals Eisenhower and nfac/uwbur‘ together will need 1.200.000 troops indicated that an occupation force of 700,000 to 800,000 is planned for Japan. There had been semi-affirm. disclosures earlier that Gen. Risen» bower figured on n force of 440.010 to 500.000 in Europe. t museum r0 clwana , mmuos amiss, Aug. ‘.27 _<crl Cable) - Honorio Iiegui monf Pondal has been nzimcd Al". no tury. r . ._"°“"°§.€1_i.9.cm&i1£»__ Minister to Canada, it was 1111-. ‘FOR BETTER BAK/NGQ’ [03 OF CA FLOUR o mom SELEUED WASHED mtvo Winn-r, S0. NADA ‘by air later Plants Close Down DIONTREAL. Aug. 27 —-tCP\ -—-'l“l|c (‘artlervillc and Longue Pomie plants of Noorduyn A- viation Limited were closed hen; tonight “following telegraphic notification that the war “m. tracts were cancelled," lg W53 announced here tonight in n company statement. Approxim- ately 4.000 employees are af. fact-rd by the shutdown, "No warning was received of the cancellation." the announ. cement said. "which stopped work on the production of 25 Harvard advanced training planes per month and the mak- ing flf component parts under sub-contracts for ihc Mosquito and Lincoln bombers, three nf "l" 71"‘ "lflior tasks .on which fhc plants were engaged.“ Forecast Fall Election In Man. WIfiNIPEG. Aug. 27 — (CF) _ Tho Wluulllfg Free Press in‘ a I‘l(‘\\.~}l.'l§;l‘ SHIP)“ today forecast Man. rtobzfs Coalition Governmgnt win call a fall election, possibly in Oct- obc-r. The newspaper said that the fore- ca.-t is based upon deductions drawn ' recent and coming events, ilurly those dealing with the _ . "Qarson today called a .\,')(‘Cll\l session of the House. to o- pcn Sept. 4, for consideration of‘ ]lft'~‘i-\\'fI1' reconstruction plans. ’ nlude no comment on clec_ lion pr perils, British Nope ll; S. Will Accept Goods For Credit By JOHN DAUPHINEE LONDON. Aug. 27 —- tCP Cablcl ~ Informed Treasury sources said .. the British delegation .. .1 to Washington to work an alternative to lend-lease its best t0 obtain an as- liili the United Statics accept British goods instead dollars iii repayment of any crcdif Ltrantcd to meet the pres- en.‘ financial emergency. An indication was given that Britain is tiiore interested in a sl rt-icrni credit than in a long- lvnn .such as suggested by T, Croirlcy. director of the nvcd States‘ Foreign Economic .- ill tstration. At the same time .s emphasized that British . nre approaching the ‘Jisliingion talks with an “ab- rfufelt: upon mind." vii Kw . adviser Brkisli Trczsury. Southampton today Freatcli liner Pasteur. tlir Unitrd States. and the Earl of Hillf \'. British Ambassador in vWlL-illllfldlll. is expected to leave in the week. to the Great Tropical Storm In Texas HOUSTON, TEX.. Aug 27 — IAPM- A great tropical hurricane. smashing buildings and inuridating ctmsial lawns as it hurled l35-milc- Illl-‘IOUI’ \\'lllfi.§ at the Mntagorda nrca of the Texas coast, pointed early tonight toward the thickly- pnpulatcu Houston-Galveston sec- tion Tho heaviest. force of the storm during the day apparently struck Port Invaca. in the Matagordn Bay Region. and a report from the highway patrol radio there said every house in the gown was de- molishcd or damaged. Accused Soldier Says He Tamed Down $10,000 , By DOUGLAS AMARON FARNBOROUGH, HAMPSHIRE, Eirglnnd, Aug. 27 — (CP Cable) _- Tlic trial of Pte. George Hale of the Essex Scottish Regiment of Wind- sor, Ont. charged with voluntarily aiding the enemy while a prisoner of war, cntcred the closing stages today when defence witnesses com- plcttrd thcir evideffce before a Cun- udlnn gencrnl court martial. Alon of today's hearing was de- vmntl to Hale's own icstlmnnv and i-rtiss-exnmitiution. Hr \\'l\‘-' ind 3 l-Z hours llllil told ill li_ story nf his usancizitit: . I , with u (lermau under-officer who. - ho ‘Villi, nffcred him $10000 to co- oper-nic with the Germans. Hale said he refused this offer, P Mail, $1.00 ; other Provinces a U.S.A., $5.00. Subscription Delivered. $5.00. our!) AIRMEN LAND IN JAPAN FLEET ENTERS By HAMILTON W, FARON WITH THE l’. S. 3RD FLEET. Aug. 28 - (Tuesday) - (AP) — Allied naval units steamed into Tokyo Bay to- day in final preparation for landings of 10,000 sailors and fiiiarines at Yokosuka naval base Thursday (Japan time). l The special task force making this initial entrance into ithe wafers oi the Japanese capital left its anchorage in Szrguml Bay this morning for a Bil-mile trip around Mlurir Peninsula into Tokyo Bay. Heifded bl‘ Rear Admiral Oscar C. Badgerb flagship, the cruiser San Diego, 10 ships of the special force round- ed the point and went through the narrow [lraga Chan- nel, only 2 l-2 miles wide and lined with silent, coastal guns. All indications were that the guns had been made in- operative by removal of breech blocks as ordered in sur- render terms. t rrokvp BAY MANILA, Aug. 28 v- (Tuesday)- - tAPt -_ The fl t occupation in ‘cs landed in Japan today at 9 .1. m, Tokyo time t8 p.11‘. E D T ) (9 p. m, A.D T ) Monday) _Fortv-elght two and four-ch- gined transport planes and Flying Eortrcsscs began landing at that hour at Atsugi Airfield. 1B milr; southvrcst of downtown Tokyo. with 150 American technical specialists. The advance party at Atsugi im- mediately set about arranging for American signals and landing pro- cedures for the air armada due Thursday. The Thursdayr arrivals will cludc Gen. MacArthur Allied Su remc Commander. and his staff. The advance party brought in special equipment for contact with thc advance urea at Okinawa from which the party took off Atsugfs Airfield, like all other Japanese airflclds. is barely large _cnough for Allied planes. The .technician.s went to work to ren- .der it as ample as possible in a I short time. Col. John H. Lackey. Jr.. of Nor- ,fnlk. Va,, commander of the 317fh lTi-eop Carrier Group, piloted the I load plane. Col. Charles Tench took over the ‘task of supervising Japanese pre- parations as previously; detailed by the document handed the Japanese Emissarics in Afnuiln 1t) days rig-v A great Allied fleet, a‘. battle at. (ions, ready l’) crush any attempt» at treachery". waited only for thine‘ sweepers to finish their tusy before steaming triumphantly into Tokyo Bay today. AFuIure 0f Somers 5lsles ls In Doubt . HAMILTON. Bermuda. Aug. '27! r- tCP Cablet __ Future of rliel -big Canadian Naval Training Base in Bermuda. H. M C. . isomers Isles. was in night following the the remainder of adian Motor LJllllFll F The last four launches flotilla. which were tn have form- ed the nucleus for the "trot-king- of Canadian Pacific Fleet left Somers Islrs for Hull-i this mrliuic. Nani offici- als have issued no shiicmcnt about the future of 1n.- basc. and ii is‘, considered possible here it will‘ he decommis oncci now that the Pacific trai. n: plan has been. abandoned . ‘ H. M. C. S Snmer: lslcs, com-- Imissioned Aug l. 1M3. played a. viial part lll liliil-alliliiililillc work, ln the Western Atlantic, as ixcll‘ as training 10.640 Canadians and 1.000 British officers and ratings. During its operations. ll3 Cali-i adian and 10 British naval ves-t sels received their final "working- up" or readying for sea warfare. a: the big base. HEATEN‘ TO DEATH MEDFORD, Mass, Aug 27 - tAP) - Mrs Theresa Rubera. was beaten to death on the porch, of her home today with a has ball bat. which. police said. w s wielded bv her 72-_vear-nld father- fn-law. Paul Rilbera. who was ‘hooked on a CllHl‘_l_(‘_llf murder. l ,mnde in him during a pnrtv sup- i poscdly- held to celebrate tho under- mfficei-‘s impending departure for ' the Russian front. i Hale's subscquent. testimony ‘dealt with his relations with ‘low prisoncrs of war when he re- ‘ili"l‘l(‘K‘l tn the Wfikklllfl camp. He admitted freely his associat- ion with thc Germans but denied giving tho encmv any infnrinntion ‘and claimed m‘. the lulu-r hand h ‘wen: out with the ‘ hoping he might ivblriiti - isu useful in ill.‘ Aliivri l" Giving l‘\'i(it‘ll"t‘ ill u uti. . Fifi‘ , o , Hale mid oi t?» Harman ;qii'. dinning him about ill.‘ Al ‘vrl war tcffort in general uni the Aug. l9, ' 1042 Dieppc raid in particular. immediate - staging i _ Queen ‘s at.“ ,and tonight at 3 rrlses New Teachers Added To Staff Prince 0f Wales r Three new teachers are Joining rthe staff at Prince of Wales Col- lege for the beginning of the ' f fall term early next month. it was tlearned yesterday. The new- comers are Cletus Murphy of Millvale, and John McEwen and Earl Wonnacott, both of Char- dottewwn. Mr, Wonnacott. form- lerly with the Canadian armed ser- vices, served on the staff at the close of the last term. Mr. Murphy received his Bach- elor of Arts degree from St. Dun- starfs University last year. The other two are graduates of Prince of Wales College. - Two members of the P. W. C. staff have resigned since s’. term. They are Arthur Woolneij. who has occe ted a position with a Protestant lgh school in Que- bec City, and Millax McLure, who is joining the teaching staff n: University, Kingston, Prince of Wales College w.i‘ open for the fall term on Sept- ember 4. Dorrr Count Your’. Galatians iF You LwE on A Htcuwav g —-? »-\\I§ til METEOROLOGICAL SERVICE Toronto, Aug. 21 tcPt ~- Minimum and maximum temperatures: Varn- cmiver 60: RPiZlllfl 44 82: Wm- nipcg , , 30; Toronto 47.74; Ottawa 43, 70: Montreal 56, 70: Quebec 49 70; Moncton 58. G8; Halifax 60, 6B: Charlottetown s1»; Sydney fil. 7?: Yarmuuth 54. 63. FOKOASTS Lowct" Si Lnivrencc: Fresh south- west winds: partly cloudy anti a. little warmer. Lakc St. Johnzl-‘resh south and soutliivc-i winds; partly cloudy and little warmer. followed by scar- tercd tliundcrshnuers Gulf. Bay Chalcur and North Shnrc: Moderate to fresh southwest winds. partly cloudy; no». much change in temperature, ‘Maritime Provinces: Moder- ale west in southwest winds. partly cloudy and a llitlc warm- er; probably scattered thunder- shnwers by Wednesday. High ride (his ggternoon at 3:25 Sun sets this CVCfilflZ at 714-5 and tomorrow morning at 611"» Last. quarter moon Aug 29. 7i“ Summerside tide l8 minutes lat,- ler than Charlottetown. ' SUNDAY SERVICE i Leave Charlottetown 11.15. 5.45 PM. Arrive Churlollclmrn 5.20. 8.10 P-M. CHARLOTTETOWN- NEW GLASGOW (Daily Except Sundlvi Leave Charlottetown Llii. 4.00 EM Arr-iv; Charlottetown 2.35. 5.20 RM N. S.—I‘. E. I. FERRY SERVICE (Dally. including Sundays) SCHEDULE MAY l-SEPT. 30 i Lean- Wood Islands ‘I n. m.. l1 t a. m.. 3 D- I11- iienvo Caribou, 9 s. m.. l p. m. I p. m. . .. -.. _--_ -.--.- -.-- __-qw--_-no-an-' ‘rain-