o . "Maxims 0r A. 4 MERE MAN ever yet. very miners N» llwroushly oeeuglleu ma was G. Morning Guardian, Pounded Ilfl. m». Charlottetown Guardian. Two Coal. ' llamilton Plant Still Operahng llnloll Oilarges Unauthor- ized llleroaso Ill Wages Given Stoleo Workers HAMILTON, July 16 — (GP)- Whlie the big steel lants at Sault Ste. Marlo and ydney, N- 5 were closed down by the strike in Canada's basic steel industry. the Steel Company of ‘Canada plant here continued partial operatzons amid a welter .of coilnter-charges and statements hy unionnnd coin- pally. The company claims to have up- wards of 2.000 mm at work in the plant; also. the company claimed today to have produced 2.000 tons of ingot steel rn the first 24 hours since the strike began at '1 a.m. Monday. The union charged late today that Slelco had made an "unauth- orlzed increase” in wages by giving workers inside the Hamilton Works 24 hours’ pay for eight hours’ work, together with an increase of 10 cents an hour over rates in effect before last week. The iinlon made lhe charge in a letter from W. F. Cleve Kidd, un- ion research director. to Judge Iain MacDoneil, chairman oi’ the Reg- ional War Labor Board in Toronto. Kidd said the company had "vio- lated wartime wages control order P.C. 9384 in two ways. namely through the excessive overtime and the unauthorized increase in the wage rates." Kidd also protested to E. J. Bill- ington, chairman of the Ontario Ili- dustry and Labor Hoard. Tc-ronto. that men now in the plaut by now had been on the job 120 hours. "Up to Saturday last week these men had greatly exceeded the 48- hour work week limitation under the Ontario hours of work and vs- cations with pay act. Already this week they have again greatly ex- ceedcd this." Kidd referred to the wages the men said they were receiving and added: “We request the Ontario Labor and Industry Board Pmmed- lately take the necessary steps to end the above-mentioned violations and to prosecute the Bleel Company of Canada for its violation of the Ontario Hours of Work and Vaca- tions with Pay Act." A third complaint lodged by Kidd on behalf of thfiunl-on was that girls ivere kept overnight in Station's Hamilton works "ln direct contravention of the Factory, Shop and Office Building Act of Ontario, particularly those sections 9f lhe act pertaining to hours of employ." The company made no comment on the union's charges. The strike situation came uo for discussion today at a special meet- llxg of Hamilton's board of police commissioners. Crcwn Attorney v-—--— (Continued Oil Page 5 C01 7) Coming n Events "Movies at 55gb tonight. "Taikiw-carigdhve, Friday. "Talkies —- Clap-dud, Saturday. "Cardigan August. 7th. "Talkies -~ Freetown, Wednes- day . . ‘ "Dsnoe, Ions Hail, Thursday. "Come to picnic Lot O5, July l7. meals. dancing, games. "Dance, Lyziwldale School, Thurs- day. July 23th. Lunches. "Ice Cream and Dance, DeSoble School, Thursday, July 18th. ' "Talkies — Cope Traverse, Thursday. "Come to the Dance tonight. Glasgow Rbsd in Ebenezer School. "Dance Fort-line Hall, Thursday, Julv 18th. Burke's Orchestra. “Dance — E511?» Cross Hall, Friday, Jilly 19th. “Dance in Ric; Point School. Tiles-day, July 23rd. “See Kinkora oiayers ll Port fiitlgilstus Hall. Wednesday, July Dance and box social Rowe's Hail Brnckiey Beach. Wednesday. July 17th. "Ilherc will be no dance at Mac- lagsaéi Warehouse, Souris, this Wed- BY. "Dance. Pariah Hail, St. Peters glisy. Friday 191m. Modern and Old me. "Dance, Cardigan Credit Union liali. Thursday. July 18th, Web- ster's Orchestra. "Danes in Belfast Hall on Wed- rotary ‘gesdav evening, July 10th. Lunches \ “Dance, Belfast l-Iall. Wednes- day. July 14th. Aid of North Pin- Ref cot; W. . . w... mus and Dame. Where! Upper Belle River School,- nun- dov. July 1on1. _ “Pro War 6gb; shear Binder Twine now in stock. Wholesale and retail Signed Dillon do Spfllott. "CIM Hall, Pie Social and Dance. ebster’: Orchestra. Fril- dI-v. July 19m. - ?.*'i".:*::"i"": .‘1. p? President Trum .1 i nominate Robert ‘Bliitleetrecfiglovtez? Si» Paill- Mllmi. construction American a b d t . lla foliowingntlzleaivfigioglr ofothsugtg. embassy. Ottawa Proposes immediate Start 0n Oiseussions OTTAWA. July 1e -(CP)— The Federal Government is prepared to begin discussion "at once" with lhose Provinces which wish to en- ter lnlo the inleilm Dominion. Provincial agreement pl-opnud 1,, lhe b et, I-‘rinle Minister-Mae. Ke-rlzlc lng "ssiq today in s tale. gas-m to Premier T. C. Douglas of lestchewan. - "As soon as there is a sufficient lwebtance of the proposed tax agreements we shall be ready to e lore in a rlenoraiconference or ot erwlse lhe possibility of work- g out mutilally satisfactory or- Plfllefllenls in regard to the whole or any part of our earlier public lnvesltment and social security pre- a s3. At the moment. t-he Federal Government was faced wilh the immediate necessity of sdjtisiittg its wartime tax struclure‘ to tlsc needs of the post-war period and a ‘harmful and chaotic" tax situat- ion was likely to arise unless new tax 3378511181113 could be worked out speedily. House Refuses To Aeeept Price Oontrol Bill WASHINGTON, July 16 —(APi In a preliminary victory for the administration. the House of Re- presentatives today refused. 211 to 64. to accept the Senate's biatlclred price control bill and sent it to .1 House-Senate coni- mitlee hopeful of getting a coni- promlse President Truman will gn. In rewriting the Senate bill. ad- ministration sipporlers it-ype I0 eliminate provisions banning prlc ceilings on meat, eggs, butter, mill: and many other items. The House vote came alter Dc.- mccratic lender J. W. McCormack (Mass) told his colleagues the people “will uemember next Nov- ember" what Congress does with the Office of Price Administration. Posonox Calcium Arssnste. Also Msriretlmnoord accent HM! l! Elmira S Gil‘ 3350-3; o» He voiced confidence the confer- ence oomlmillee will write a one- year O. P. A. restoration bill that‘ lhe House, Senate and the Presid- ent will aprovc. . R. blloan ranks spilt on a pro- poeoffuto approve the Senate mea- sure "as is‘ onrl loss it to the President, notwitlislandlns VH0 P70" c 5P1! '5- A key Republican. Rep- J-P- wolcoll lMlc-ii of Ihc bankii-g committee. Joni-rd adrninislratlnn leaders in urxlml ‘hilt ‘he 59m“? version be rewritten in a commit- lee representing lhe two chamb- q-g, He told the House the Senaifl bill “atmpresent l; in wworgge 501;.- dill n an we We 01' theohtatay of o. r. A. indist- "Come to the Ice Cream Social and Dance in Indian River School. on Thursday, July 15m- r at "Plan to have 13421:‘ "r Nelwunazs Lodge. night. ChiokemSslsds, strawberries and cream. sun served 430- "Notice-All taxes bdue ‘git; Travel’ e School M115 6 W the undersigned b)’ Jill 30"‘- “t” that they will be ha-fl ed to CW" for collection. Jss. Bell. 59¢- “Lawn pn-"q Long Creek 1111M‘!- dly night. July 18th. Good music. roehmerits. Aid of Rink. "Potato sprays new l" ‘twil- Gonicop n. o. r. Corrsbirlation Surly m” d blight. Also i... a ‘"--- m a arrive Friday this Iml- D1110“ Spillett. euro our Patrons -- Lives‘ M011, Monday. 111v 82nd and ev company executive. s; the 111-5; tralian legotion to the rank of full q Maul/Ti Halifax Plans =- i For Reception 0f Montgomery Will Visit Charlotte- town On Next Leg of Cross Country Tour B it‘ ~ . w’? Empires finest military “MEX will be the first Q "m vltv to bay tribute to “i-lféi; xuiillgln 113x119 Viscount MOnigomgry _¢ - 0-0.3. 0.5.0.. Chief “MO L . IhOLISIIIIgS of” 5334;: kfi-grln t3 Darts of the Empire, '1, vmuiu ianado as s llueet of the can“- a" Qmwmnwnt- On his arrival cogntry to t ans are already underway t0 Iffigglt "U" 61W decorated for been g “and a public holiday has {or thndounced by Mayor Ahem in do all following hi5 gn-iva] m M‘ Cl‘ i-hlt ilhg ggngral public Iv loin in extending their m1- come along with the leaders ln firsaatii‘ “m” "a circlm - 11v and civic When “M i, '1 t _ ian soil, forontliic lsiresistfisfyilnig- gun salute will roar out frml his. toric Citadel Hill in honor of the occasion. a solute to the Empire's h-ghest ranking Army amber, Eastern Command Headquarters here today announced the plans and itinerary of the Field Mar. m" “arms his stsv in Halifax. Due the uncertainty o! his exact time of arrival. the prcgram for the first day will necemarlly have to be verv elastic and not too strenuous. In order that he mav renew old acquaintances who Sicilian. ‘Italian and Northwest; Europe campaigns. the melamin- shall has expressed the” desir to have his evenings free of of! cial functions, He is also very anxious to see as many veterans and as nsuch of Canada as possible dur- ZIIR the limited time at his d-ls- lmsal.‘ While in Halifax Field Marshall Montgomery will be conferred with the honorary degree of I..L.D., by Dalhousie University. He will be tendered a civic luncheon and a laresentstlon from the Cltv of Halifax at a dinner to be held in the Nova Scotlan Hotel the day after his arrival. On the dav of departure Field Marshall Montgomery will proceed bv R.C.A.P'. motor launch to the seaplane base. Eastern Passage. Upon his arrival he will inspect an Airforce guard of honor before leaving for Prince Edward Island. Says Rose llall Worked When Only Seventeen For RusslanPolieo OTTAWA. Juiv l6 -— (OP) - The espionage royal conunissien reported todqv that Fred R018. Labor - Progressive member of 1hr.- commons for MonIre-rl Cartier. had worked for the Russian secret police when he was only 1'1 years old and that as a. Soviet I80!" 1' was apparent he had reported ‘~41 his "masters" on a secret session of parllamenl Nov. 25, 1944. names of Rose and Sam Carl‘. former organizer of the Li-bu- Progressive uartv, were the main Oanadllan cogs in title organization fespon e agen . .,_ 030th Césgrr and Rose liad been schooled in Moscow." ‘The. com- mission said ‘t was not stire when ‘general manager of Canadian No- enlsged in the constmctlon of box . of coal snd he recommended that Carr otlerlded the Lenin Inslillite but. the evidence would indicate it was between 1920 and 1931. “It would not be difficult tn conclude that he (Carr) was s6":- lo this countrv in 1924 as a to fggs-irn-{ii Soviet agent and as acted as such continuously sine! that time." said lhe r9110"- The report so‘: Rose came to Canada in I010 when he was and lhatbeforene was Ilhesl- resdy ha worked for the Russian secret pol . Tfhere was no indicat- ion whether the work was done 1n Csn-sd_a__or elsewhere. Sees llo Relief For Potato Shippers Recommending that fs-ilmers provide as much potato slorase u possible and that they shio as many potatoes as they can before the fall's cold weather set-a in. J- P J L '. vice-president and tionsl Railways. stated yesterday he could see no relief for potato shiwetelnttleformofsnin- crease in the numbe of refriger- ator ears. He attributed the lsck of adequate refrigerator-car sub- ulies to the fact that those plants which in pence time are mainly and ref orator can. goonflned their sctivtios to the making of munitions during the war years. Mr. Johnson stated that. the Island division of the 0.11.3. is now brinlinlr in its winter subbly Read by Eveybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew ' Mirth is God's medl in ; Qwgfy. body ought to bathe Inuit.‘ MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN. CHARLOTTIETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAYJULY 11, 194a a iCommons Industrial Relations Comnfttee To Hear Strike I sue (By d'Arcy O’Dollliell. W OTTAWA. July 16-(0?) s of all parties in the _ scheduled to be pportunity to try their Appointed To War Assets Oorp. by Prime Minister Matkenzig as one which might develop st devastating sit- w out of a labor M11 Kins spoke in sei-ondillg a suggestion of Arthur Smith sury West) that the Com dustrlal relations the steel dispute settle the differencri and gener. e, and I am sure that ggestiou that ii com-y a“ Parties in this H0 oon as it is possible and tives of the pun Dute. and seek to get at lluhlic may he fillly “I would for my President Truman's nomination oi J. Leightcn Stuart. pictured above when he was a missionary educator at, Ycnciiing University. China. to be antbassador to Chin-a is viewed in some Washington quarters as another step in U.S. attempts to settle China's tang- led internal affairs. He is ex- pecbed to work closely with Gen. George Marshall in seeking domes- tic peace. mmittce arrange utmost expedition 1t before it those v/hd _ responsible leaders representatives of labor the manzfgeziieiily. mittee have pow-l (Continued On Page 5 Col 7) e.l.o. Official A Oalls For Meat {Buying Strike Clarence W.‘ Higgins, " r lflflnlgei- cf lhe Char- anch of the Wur Asscvs nfigegrtieriine Oiltaytbut it was . a a. office valid be upelged snarl}? ‘m g Womb)’ record as a flying officer. He was awarded the Dis Flying Medal in“ M having taken part in numerous tar ets in til Valley and ot. or such he and that the can“: three occasions he flew hi5 a back from Germany with one on. glne not ‘IUIICUOIIIIIZ and on two other sorties he successfully evaded rslstent attack by enemy He is o son of Sgt. J. and Mrs. Hlggln Parliament At A Glance (Bv The Canadian Freed) Prune Minister Mackenzie King, supporting a Progressive Conserv- ative proposal. suggested that the Industrial lteiatlons Committee be in an effort to settle A meeting of the committee was called later. INT. Mich. July l6 ter P. Rcuther of the Unltech Auto Workers tog}, consumers to part~ wlluify-vride one-week City Police Fbrcc. 5- Strike beginning :0. served with him in North- Africa.- ‘allkteuto refrain from kei 1513b w' O e o , person . e-O. P. A. rollv here, sold pfle-w. would then concentrate and other items to "drive them in- e plan was lo "terrorize and that the program wil contain ‘ei surprise as items to be concentrated on wit: not be announced until the day Leader Loses i Appeal; is A Nervous Wreek BELGRADE. July i6 — i091- Gcn. Drajo Mihailovlc. Yugoslav Cheenik leader who has been son- tenced to die at. dawn Wednesday. told his guards today his “worst 15 minutes will be those before the execution." The bedrded, controversial fig- ure-at one time a hero i-n Allied eycs-—is to die privately before a firing squad. Found guilty Monday by a Bei- grade military court of collabor- ation with the Germans. Mihail- ovic is described by guards as a nervous wreck who lights and throws away 400 cigarcts a dry. to the last moment, the man whose lengthy trial attracted international attention had hoped tobe sentenced to life imprison- merit. But Mihallovids last ho-pe for a lightening of his sentence was dashed today when it was un- nounced that the Presidium of the Yugoslav Parliament had roicctcd his appeal for mercy. The accused in the war crimes trial-ll awaiting the firing squall and others sentenced to various terms of imprisonment-are div- ided by their guards into two grc-ups—-“philandcrcrs" and "phil- osophers"--to indicate their dif- ferent temperaments. A report of a. royal commission servants recom- mend-ed upward salary revisions for deputy; ministers 8 Defence Minister passage priorities for servicemens dependents overseas have not been Resources Minister Glen said it; still was. impossible for the Gov-i ernment to determine when move-l merits of immigrants wlll'begin. rflNew Prieo Schedule. For Beef Effective July 22 er. .eiiect when the ceiling on thisi 31min“ whim dmurtmentpre“ ‘siade was suspended temporarily 0m"? B150 exmwed ‘mum ma‘ In other zuncs. ihe in-. _ _ _ crease in the utioiesale ceiling will , t0 Yllilflslavla Constantine Fotitcu. my mm fiffff Z310‘? l the United Stat-cs. FOtitch, how difference in freight costs between l i" Washbiflwll- “'35 seiliemed 1° m, vary,“ zones_ and W111 pm.l2_0 rears imprisonment in absen- equitable distribution‘. of light slaught-l 2. Blue brand bcef is being rc-i scpamwlForelgn Secretary Bevin t-old the grade. with the wholesale carcassl cellist! one cent a that for the red brand. 3. The commercial have a carcass ceiling one cent a bound lower than blue brand. The grades previous-iv desig- ilditd “cow and bllll beef" will be TO LEAVE HOMES ' ivIE. July l6 - (Reuters) -- About 2,700 persons in Ends and "Rois vale-y districts awarded once by the Big Four forelgl. ministers conference, have decided to leave their homes, the Italian news agency reported today. The agency said they are moving galnst lhe Big Four de- on senior civil A State Department official said today that as fur as he knew the lntcrcetle with Yugoslavia to pre- vent the execution of Gen. DraJa Mihailovic, convicted Otietnlk lead- (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. July iii-The Prices Board announced tonight. VASOQ schedule oi beci pricing and designed to provide a more workable system of meat dis- tribution. will become effective a- cross Canada July Z2. The new system was anticunced July 3 when the Board disclosed The oommlasnn said that tile , grades of beef woud be two cents a bound effective July l retail ceilln s. n g uniinicated to Yugoslavia cvidencel pricing cCACGUIC \\'lii lli\i.‘i\'l'3 price '9 changes to the consumer varying from two cents a pound beiow." to a maximum of six cent:- o bound above previous price levels. "In other words. beef will be uhcaper and a few of the urlme cuts will bc more ex- pensive. but the over-till effect on the average household purchases need not be noticeable." nouncement said. Under the new schedule. Mont- real and ‘Toronto will be placed on will be no change ,during most of the war. brought ivholcsaie prlccs and cutter qualities of beef in any 5. On red and blue brand beef the retail mark-up is being reduc- ed by approximately one cent a hound from the previously auth- The rcst of the increase in the wholesale price in l-he l0 zones. where it is in excess of one cent a Pound. is cased to price level for red. blue and com- mercial grades. The boundaries of all pricing woes will remain as st Following are the major cha es in the new pricing and ill‘! sch du ceilings of red brand heel carcasses. basis Toron- to. will be rclmposed at a level two cents a pound hlzhcr than that in 6. Wholesalers and slaughterers are required to ‘invoice at not more than ceiling prices on deliveries made on and after Jilly 22 and retailers are bound bv the new re- hllospitai Ship FOR BETTER BAKING- 0380 "ANADA FLOUR on ubllodoitsbebtt t t- wat!" u“ on no: the aalafWia-i. m‘ m Mm‘ ,cen Mav MacKlnnon and daugh- 12 PAGES Russian Oertain Information iBv The Canadian Press) OTTAWA. July l6 — Evidence that Russian asenis were inter- ested in the two major Canadian wastal ports of Halifax and Van- couver and that they had prepared a 200-page report on Cqxiadais iiav_v WAS contained in the final report of the Royal Commission on espionage. made public yester- day. The report said "certain infor- mation about the construction of shins in the Halifax shipyards" had been handed to Col. Nicolai Zabotin, head of a Russian net- work of military intelligence in ' Canada. I Ronni-ting that there was some |evldence that a. naval intelligence system was being organized here bv Russia. it said that in i944 Captain Pantzern-eyx‘ who had been working in New York with the Soviet commercial counsellor u a naval engineer. came to Ottawa. He gave to Zabotln this “certain information" and said "he had obtained it in the course of cori- versaticrts with naval officers and en-zinesrs at the shipyards." Admit Stealing Oietator’s Belly ~ l ROME, July 16 - (Reutersh- Twenty persons were arrested in Florence today after enquiries into the disappearance of Benito Mus- solini's bodyfrom a Milan came- tery last May. The arrested persons. who are be- ing sent to Milan. are alleged to haye admitted taking part in the stealing of the former dictator's body and to have said they only in- tended to give Mussolini a more honorable burial. Theft. of the body of Mussolini. executed.by Italian partisans in May, 104-5, and buried in a secret grave in the Maggi-ore Cemetery, Milan, started one of the biggest po-lice hunts ever held in Italy. dThe body has not been recover- c . i The phlianderers are led Pcbyl aM-lhailovic and Darghi Janov‘ h. chief of Belgrade police during the German occupation and also sen- tenced to be shot. Leaders of the philosophers are Dr. Vellbor Jonitch, education minister in the Quisling Belgrade government, and Lazar Markovich former justice minister who face six years‘ imprisonment. Dr. Jon- itch was sentenced to death. Not To lniercede WASHINGTON. July l6—(AP)— UlliLOCl States is not planning to the government would turn over former Yugoslav ambassador to ‘Auto Workers said 20.000 left the tla, No Intervention i LONDON, Juiv lfi~lRcuiersl— House of Commons today thatthc rltlsh Government. having com- i-rgardinl: Gen. Drnia Miral. vic did not third: it had an": ~ ht to intervene fltriilel- ill a ‘or.-. con- ducted’ fl(‘("ll'flillI! to lalvs of a sov- ereign state. Anthony Eden. foreign secretary uD the matter. asking Mr. Bevin, whether. in view of the fact that‘ the former Yugoslav war minister was the first to wage gilerilla unr- fare against the Germans and that the British Government had supported him for more than two vears in this struggle, the Foreign Secretary would lake his services during this neriod into consider- ation in connection with the drnth srirtencc imposed Monday in Bel- grade. Arrives Friday ' (By The Canals.» Prell HALIFAX. July ill-The former hospital ship Letitia. carrying more than 800 dependents of Can- adian servicemen. is expected to arrive here Friday. military auth- orities announced today. Prince Edward Island depend- ents aboard are: Mrs. Dorothy D. Malone. husband. Pte. J. M. Mal- one, Charlottetown. and Mrs. Dor- ‘walll on Jobs DEIROYI‘. July I6 —tC'P‘- An estimated 20,000 tr. 30,000 Chrysler Corporation workers walked off their Jobs this afternoon to attend a "supporl-\I1l=-O.P.A." doirlnnstrat- 10l'l in downtown Detroit. Officials of the C. I. O. United Dodge main plant, while Chrysler Company spokesmen said 30,000 were out in its nine Detroit plnnls. Company officials said they were unable to determine immed- lately the exact elfecl lhe walkou’ had on iis production lines. General Motors spokesmen slid "as far as we know. none of our workers havg walked out," and the Flord company said a preliminary survey showed 1hr: same situation American Officers .é‘.i.l;.....a.i..w Held By Russians lily Richard O'Regan) FRANKFURT. Gerhiahlw July l6—(AP\—Amcriciin and SQVIPL’ armies in Germany cngaged in a, strlnge ultdcrcovel‘ clash of in- telllgtlncr- services tonight. e Russians were hclicvl-d to he holding two Anlci“’-?iin vffitz-rs incoinlnuiilcadn in Soviet terri- tory and the United States army said it was releasing in tile Red Army three Russians, officially described as “clandestine opera- tives in the United Slates zone of Berlin." in the Russian zone are Capt. Harold Cobln of New York and Newark, NJ. and Lieut. George Wyatt of Oklahoma City. missing since they were seen boarding a train for Ol-anicnburg in the So- vict zone July 4. United States officers declined to deny there was any large-scale espionage activity in Germany. Likewise. they refused lo lien or confirm rumors that arrest were made in addition to the three suspected Russian operators, who dressed as civilians. were picked up tworweeks ago in the Ameri- can zone of Berlin. Asked if there was any truth in the rumor that Germans have reported to American authorities trating the Uni d Slates 1one in Berlin. officers b1 headquarters refused to comment. The decision to release the Rus- sians, reported to be two officers and a driver. followed the return by Soviet authorities of W0. Sam- uel L. Harri-son of Ben Antonia, Tex, and his wife. Helen. who had been held in the Rilssiait zone since July 1. However. no regress was made in the case of tor. husband. Gnr. R. O. MacKin- non. Northsm. Subscription Delivered 86.00. Ola-ll. $4.00: other Provinces I 0.8.5. "all Prepared Report On Canada ’sNd vy yards Oonveyeii To Ool. Zahotin Agents , About llalifax Ship- Th:- commi" miliifill was - sureiisen “db reps: d to be giv-l ing.” One of the Russian Emlba-asy documents before the conumsaion. sald:— f "Surenscn. l-le works in the' naval department. He works in intelligence. Used to give mater- ial on the construction of ships. Hr has left for overseas." _The commission said it had. at hi5 own request. examined aLieut. H. I. Sorensen who worked in ,naval intelligence during the war but it was unable to say that he r ihad communicated any lnfcrmat-l on Its report said “two men who- were Russian naval officers. work- lug in s commercial organization in Vancouver. came to Ottawa and had a conference with Zabotin- and Motinov (one of Za-botinb aides) at which the latter mowed them a 200~page_ report on the naval forces of Canada. “In I943. the Canadian Govern- \ ‘TORONTO. J . Minimum and moximlan tempera- lures: Vancouver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 4B 69 Hdrmnwn 45% 7F iivegninnfpsg .' so as Tiaronto H 7i! Qiflalwfi. .. 44 ‘l1 Mignireal .s 51 TI uebec . . 4B 69 Saint John .. 40 ——- 2: ZS “ s ll winds... . . . . . . . . . . . ..'. so 6'! miCPl-Ofticlal inland forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office here at 12115 l-m- A.D.T. today. tonight. s little warmer. Lilhl Wind! be‘ coming west i5 mph this after- Moncion f-O and BO. Campbeiiton 38 and 8O and tonight at 2. rises tomorrow morning at 5.29. The two Americans believed ‘ncid P M lites later than Chariot Charlottetown B A- M. 10-30 A. M». -15 P. M 5 Arrive Xlharlottetown 12 P. M. 5.55 P, M" 7.35 P v1 Charlottetown 12.55 P- M. Arrive Charlottetown 4-55 P- M- isqow - Leave Charlottetown 12.4! P. M Arrive Charlottetown 5 P. M. that Russian a ents were inlil- m4 430p obin and Wyatt. merit gave permission to establish ~ a Soviet Consulate at. Halifax This is still ln existence. At Von- couver there has never been s Bo- vlet Consulate but when Canadian mutual sid shipments to Bulls began to flow out of Vancouver. . from the Canadian Government to send a shipping officer there to see to the loading, vlctualling, and so on of the vessels. “The staff at Vancouver consist- ed of two men with s snail cleri- cal staff. Gousenko says that tbs . lunlor Soviet consul at. Hall!“ had been a worker in the military t intelligence system. This man made a trip from Halifax in I948 f? discuss questions with Zabo- .n_.. ) PRoVERBSL Fools f Lwlr. ME Rsrsar ’EM / is. .\_; 1r i" a ‘I u1v16 -— (Q) -- HALIFAX. July lL-(Wodnesdayl Forecasts. valid until midnight Prince Edward Island-Clear and oo-n. Low during night and Iligh oday at Charlottetown 41 and ‘l5. nigh tide thiswafterlloon at 1.20 Sun sets this evening at 8.43 and Last quarter moon July 21st, 352 “Sun-imerside tide eiglhtom min- totmm. AIR SCHEDULE Chariottetown-Moncton — Leave Charlottetown-Halifax - Les. Charlottetown - New G Stsndoskglme thtgylheub "PRINCE EDWAID Ill-IND" Hillard ‘lino Leave Borges: It 9-05 A-M» 1 P-H Leave Tormentloe 10.30 A. M. 3 P. M. 7.30 P. M. Extra tripe are made between. ova which automobiles are carried. SUNDAY SIIVIOI From Borden 1 P. M., 8. 45 P. M Prom Tormentine, 3 P. M. I P- It W00!) ISLANDB-CAIIDOU Daylight loving have Wood Islands 1 A. M. 9s. M,11 s. M..1P.'n., r. M Leave Caribou daily. some hours,