of gm," "41 Ila. .'MAxlMs A 0l'A.- Mans MAN: -oz--1 A AIHIIDIB is worth I B, cu-rlori Obarlothtowp. lunnaoraldo h p, 3-,, I. 30.00. Kothor Provinces maiden in hr flower huudrod coats-of-arms. 815.00 per anuum. Iiuwluro and U. 8. A. 011.00 pot aunun. Kilt .The.Pe Read by . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew - CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. REPORT REFUGEE A SPY RING OP THURSDAY, AUGUST 28, 1952 00 Maxims 0IAi MERE MAN Ba proud of those young Iona. I sight to make an old man young. Everybody, L Morning Dally Foundod i881. Tho Guardian. Five Conta. ERATING IN MONTREAL 16 PAGES First Tropical BI-lurricane OF Season Bweported No Speeches Ai Slate Dinner nAI.lFAX. Aug. 2'7 -(OP) - lm-ernor General Vincent Massey quuaxed a one-day whirlwind visit to Halifax tonight by attend- rig a state dinner where ,no Il')('CCl'leS were made because of the mseasonable heat." Premier Angus L. Macdonald hit r welcome note when he told the nany guests, sweltering in ninety ,1r,x-cc temperatures, that speeches had been waived because of heat. llmvcver, most of them had been mule at previous receptions. air. Massey will visit nearby Dartmouth tomorrow before board- -:.; his plane for Charlottetown. LARGE PROPORTION Quebec accounts .for nearly half he maple syrup and maple sugar ueduced in North America. Coming Events . "'l)ance, 0rlivBell-.l.-iall, September "Dance. Millvlew Hall, Friday, -lugust 20th. ' 'Dance, Lot. 65, tonight. iur-ns' Orchestra. "Buying timothy seed daily. iincuigan and Boyle. ”Rummnge Sale. 0. W. L. Hall, Friday, August 29th, 1.30. "Dance. St. Gl;les llall, every Thursday, 0.30 to 1. Chalsson'a Or- cheatra. "Sandy's Drlve-In- Theatre, shows Tuesdays, wedncsdays and Fridays at if P. M. "Dontt miss Stephen Mound ringing Scottish rungs. Victoria Hall, September 3rd. ”show. New Glasgow. Thursday. "to Please a Lady" starring Clark tumble. Show time 8.30. "Legion Dance in Waxing Plant It Canoe Cove, Friday. August 29th. "mod music, refreshments. "Farmers, ask about the Shut Jain Food Finance Plan. For part .culars contact your local feed mill "Special meeting in Argyle Flmre School Friday, August 29th. All ratepayers requested to attend. "Regular Dance Winsloe Sta- llon Hall tonight. Charlottetonians Orchestra. Dancing 9.30 to 12.30. Canteen. "Weekly Thursday night Dance Mi. Stewart Canadian Legion Hall Marlricnzle orchestra. Canteen ser- vice. Admission. 50 cenu. "Will be receiving at our Ken- suirton warehouse Timothy Deed, i-leaned or uncieaned. Paying too market price. ll..B, Willis Inc. 9 "Unloading car Quilter Ful-O- Pfii feeds Thursday. Ailgust 28th. Gnnd prices. Bran 32.90 per cwt. 5&1: Ilros., Central Royalty. Phone .4. i "came to chicken supper and Cake Sale, Orwell Hall, September 2nd. Auspices St. Andrews Church L-'i0iNi' Aid. supper served ll P. M. to 10 P. M, G "Poultry Wanted. Buying live and dressed fowl daily. except Fri- iiiiy and Saturday of each week. Pifk up service. Central Egg and PONHTY. Charlottetown. Phone day 1526- Nlsht 1388-2. "Come to Afton Hall. 'Prlday, Aiiiiiidt 20th. and enjoy."The dhnw-' and free dance by the western Entertainers." "Good musici" Proceed: in aid'of Hall. Sponsored by Rice Point W. I. I "Get our prices on straight liidxor assorted cars of bulk or bllsccl grain - Wheat. Oats and Eiiiiey. delivered at your nearest ltation. we also handle mill foods, lliid oil cake meal in straight car 00 only. correspondence invited. The Atlas Grain Company. 300 st Bacrement street. Montreal 1. ."Tha Moreilistreat Light Com- gill” announce their first annual slim in Morall Hall. Monday, member lat Labor Day. Modern :90 old Time-,Danoing. 9 to use clock. Music supplied by the 3.9”-r "chariottatoniana." Com! H ""1 dance and you'll have a good me. check room. canteen service. Admission so cents. a;t'Amateur contact in soul-la'R.ink whiirduy. August 80th. Open to Mooi ealiarsp of East King! 3:: ogriuaifor - i mus cal l,',i',,g";ii0nia. no. sums to be no gut "in Nlloorabo. souria. con- unhwmmoaoao a Ids sharp. Iiuiiiola M. uaiu -Auxiliary Holbitai. Admission we ion. Marking the first visit of a Can- dian-born Governor General to Prince Edward Island, His Excel. lency Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey will arrive this morning by air from Halifax and from then- until he leaves early tomorrow will take part in a steady round of official functions. when the Governor General lands at the Charlottetown airport at 10 o'clock he wil be met by His Honor Lieutenant Governor T. W. L. Prowse; Hon. J. Walter Jones, Premier; I-iis Worship Mayor J, D. Stewart, and the Honorary Aides-de-Camp, Brigadier G. G. K. Peake, D. S. 0.. who will be the Aide-de -Camp-in -Attendance; Group Captain. A. G. Kenyon and Lleut. Commander J. J. Trainer. In the party with His Excellency will be his secretary, Mr Lionel Massey, accompanied by Mrs. Massey. and his alde-de-camp-in- Wiiitlnil. Captain Nicholas Eden, the son of Britain's Foreign Sec- retary, Rt. Hon. Anthony i-"den. At Provincial Building After leaving the airport the of- ficial party will drive to the Pro- vincial Building where he will be greeted by Premier Jones before inspecting the Guard of Honor, comprising ranks of the R. C. A. F. summer-side, under command of Flight Lieut. W. P. Palmer. who also commanded the Guard of Honor when the present Queen. as Princess Elizabeth, was here last year. The Reece Band, under Bandmaster Thomas Mcliiarlane, will also be present and later in the day will present a concert at the garden party at Government ,.EoiIC9r;-.'lbA..CoiQur.. Party. wili..'ni! formed by members of the R. C. A. F. Following inspection of the guard the Governor General will be conducted to historic Confed- eration Chamber where the Pre- mier will present an address of welcome to the Queen's Repre- sentative who will briefly reply. He will then sign the Distinguish- ed Vlsitors' Book and afterwards receive members of the Legisla- tive Council, Judges of the various courts ,and a few distinguished guests. To Unveil Plaque The entire ceremony is expected to take only 25 minutes and then the Governor General will leave the Building at 10:40 to unveil a plaque on the east column of the portico of the Provincial Buildlniz. The bronze plaque briefly relates the history of the Province, trac- ing the different names it has had during the Indian, French and English regimes. its entrance into Cofederation and the names of its first Lieutenant Governor and Premier. when the plaque. has been un- veiled His Excellency will walk with the official party to the Cenotaph -where members of the Canadian Legion will be drawn up in charge of Charlottetown Branch President Charles Sin- clair. The local president will have a wreath which he will hand to Maj. A. H. Peake. president of the Provincial Command, who will in turn give it to the Governor Gen- Cordial P. E. Island Welcome Awaiting His Excellency The Governor General Attempt To Crack Oil Deadlock LONDON, Aug. 27-- (AP)-Brb thin and the United States made a new attempt today to crack open the long-standing Iranian oil dend- lock and” lift the menace of :1 Communist coup in the Middle East kinpzrlum. informed sources said US. Am- bassador Loy Henderson and Bri- lish Cliarge D'Aifaires George Middleton, in a iilrec-hour talk with Premier Mohammed es- sadelzh in Tehran, advanced a set of fnr-reaching proposals. Those involved American economic aid in Iran, a lifting of ihe British bloekaclc on Iranian oil sales nhronil and negotiation of British claims of compensation for the nationalized oil industry. There was no hint of how Mos- sadegli received the proposals. But Tehran dispatches said Henderson and Mirlrllctnn were grim-faced when they drove away from Mos- sadglfs guarded residence. "7-conftlnucd"oiTP?glT5"Col72)B . By Ian Fraser BONN. Germany. Aug. 2'! - (Reutera)-A staggering si25.000.- 000 is waiting for Alfred Krupp. Germany's steel king just out oi a war crimes prison. iltho West German Government accepts an Allied plan to reinstate him as one of the world's richest men. Allied High Commission officials indicated this today when they outlined some of the details of their plan Ch reorganiso the Krupp industrial empire. A huge protion of it goes back to Aifried, 44, as sole heir. Krupe is the firm that armed Germany for two world wars and which has been a dominant fac- tor in the German economy for three generations. The Allied idea has two aims: to break up the industrial mon- opoly the name of Krupp has al- ways signified. and to XIV: "ii! Krupp family out of the munitions business for which it has always shown I talent. Chancellor Konrad Adenaueris Government is expected to an- nounce the plan this wool: and to app-ova it without major revis- Here is what Alfred Krupp Von .'g-. Arms King Krupp May ' Have Wealth Restored to get: A yearly income of at least 84.- OCIIIOO. deriving partly from a 2 1-2-per-cent royalty on the sales of four coal mines the family owned and part from fixed inter- est non-voting bonds he will get as compensation for other coal and steel interests, plus his salar- ies as director of the other firms he will continue to control About 346000.000 in bonds and shares of the Rhelnhausen steel plant at Essen, more coal mines and ore fields all of which will be taken out of Krupp control. Krupp never has taken his fin- ger from the industrial pulse, even while he was sewing his 12-year sentence (later reduced to 2 1-2 yearn) for exploiting slave labor, looting plants in occupied coun- tries and "illegal spollation." He and six of his directors-who were with him in Landsburg'a Al- lied military prison-held board meetings regularly. complete with cigars and expensive fruit. The Allied had confiscated his property, but he was showed to continue funotioning' as a "twa- tse." officially. his prison Job was ioclramith.,but. in addition to his Bohlon Una lislbacb can exiieot board meetings he made toy pis- tols out. of aluminninu The Rt. Hon. British Still Grappling. a With Foot, Mouth Disease No Immediate Threai To Any Land Area MIAMI, F'la., Aug. 2'! - tAPV)- The season's first tropical hurri- cane lashed the Atlantic Ocean into lowering waves today l,000 miles east southeast of Miami. Winds of 85 miles an hour were found by n U.S. navy hurricane- hunting plane investigating a squally, windy area that has been under observation by the Weather Bureau the last three days. The hurricane does not offer an immediate threat to any land areas. It is moving slowly north- west at about 8 to 10 miles an hour. Grady Norton, chief storm fore- caster at the Weather Bureau, tinue its northwestward move- ment for the next 24 hours. "But these tropical disturbances lometlmes change directions and we are keeping a very close watch on it," Norton said. The 12 noon advisory reported squalls of hurricane force northeast of San Juan, Puerto Rico. The navy plane found the RF- mlle-per-hour winds - 105 miles north northeast of the centre and quadrant." The advisory said a gradual in- crease in intensity is indicated. News lliKBWi'Blel Vincent Massey LONDON. Aug. 27 -- (Reuters) -A government report published today indicated ihat Britain is still losing the scientific battle against foot-and-mouth disease. The Agriculture Ministry has been able to find no alternative to its policy of ordering immedi- ate slaughter of all cattle affected with the disease. it said. The report outlined the work of ihe Pirbright Research Station, set up outside London in 1940 to de- vise vaccines and cure for the dis- ease, which swept Britain in a country-wide epidemic last winter and this spring. At a press conference today, Sir William Slater, secretary of the Agricultural Research Council, said though progress had been great "the end of the road is not in light." Pirbri;zht's work on fooi-and- mouth has been intensified since the disease reached epidemic pro- portions nine months ago. The centre has experimented on 5,000 cattle, developing and test- lng new vaccines during the last 10 years. The best of these pro- vldes immunity for only about four months. the report said. This extra toll of healthy cattle is hoped to be reduced The scient- ist; have begun using unweaned mice for their experiments. in- feeling some at birth with the fool-and-mouth virus. attempting euros and trying to prevent its spread. So far the only practical course approved by the government is the slaughter policy. The govern- ment has had to pay farmers i2,- 600,000 in compensation since No- vember and loss of meat supplies has been drastic. Since 1940, the Pirbrlght cen- tre has examined 500 samples of virus. from outbreaks in Canada. France. Africa. Palestine. South and Central America as well as from Britain. All these types fall into three classificltions, except for the Afri- can varieties. the report said. They have been able to produce 135 vaccines involving all avail- -(CP) - The John Q. M'cKella:', flagship of Colonial Steamship Lines, and the largest ship ever built in Canada, today was chris- tened and commissioned at .t.hls Lake Ontario terminus of the Welland ship canal. The vessel will .make her maiden voyage to Fort William for a. cargo of grain. VANCOUVER, Aug. 27-(CF)- The Vancouver Sun in a special dispatch from Victoria today fore-1 cast a provincial general electionl for early in November. The dis-3 patch said the date could be that second or third Monday of NO-i vember. ' OTTAWA. Aug. 27 -- (OP) Bans on the use of steel for non- essential construetion in Canada may be eased early next year, Dr. H. H. Saundersorl, Canada's mate- rials co-ordinator, said today. The iJ.S. plans similar action by next April. OTTAWA. Aug. 27 - (CP) - The Federal Government has awarded Ford of Canada at Wind- sor. 0nt.. a 53,250,000 contract to build trucks and buses to be ship- ped to India under the Colombo Plan, B. W. Roaenthal. assistant Colombo Plan administrator, said today. The contract, awarded some time ago, covers 450 buses and B35 trucks. to be powered by diesel engines. CAIRO. Egypt, Aug. 27 - il'trut- ers)- Premier Aly Mnher threat- ened io resign today in it behind- the-scenes clash with Gen hemmed Naguib. The cleavage be- tween Maher and his politicians and Naguib and his army officers is the result of the army's plan to break up large landlioldlngs and distribute farms to the peasants. SEOUL, Aug. 28 -lTluu'.sdavi -(AP)- Allied planes flying in force Wednesday for the first time in five days pounded Communist targets across the front and deep into North Korea. The planes de- livered their heaviest blows along the lbs-mile battle front. UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.. Aug. 71 -(AP)- U. N. officials said to- night that Russia's chief delegate here, Jacob A. Malik. is being re- placed by Valerian A. Zorin. who engineered the Red Czechoslovak coup of 1948. Both hold the rank pf deputy foreign minister. cruiser iiueilecHTo ablo strains of virus. the work of 75 major experiments, AIIRENSBURG, Germany, Aug. 2'1 -(Reuters)-- A court. today fined two men about 391 each for being a "gross public nuisance" in mailing a dud cat in a parcel to chancellor Konrad Adenauer May ill. ELIZABETH. N. (AP)-An eye-burning smog set- tied down on industrial sections of Elisabeth today, sending workers to dispensaries for. treatment. Phelps- Dodge Copper Products Corporat- ion reported that about 40 em- ployee! were treated. The smog made their area rod and awollan. Sail For Scotland The o,(no-ton wa.r.sh.,. uili ta Governor General Vincent Mars to st. John's join the aircraft flcent Sept. s in the Firth Clyde before the large-scale ma ouvon. fax about mid-October. Tito Quebec is commanded said the storm probably will con-1 , .008? - A congressional committee said ggtg-"de '22-0 "0"; End, lofiililiide toduy radio and television sets in ' W" t ”b”"" 50 "M95 "0"" the United States sometimes spout reported: "Seas very rough in tins- PORT ,WELLER. Ont.. Aug. 21', .Democratic Reforms For .Vi0- l Danes And British Sign Information Two-Year Bacon Contract M .-M.....m,..M From Defence- , Plants Sought 2- i::;:.::.r: ::l:...:"r.r:..t:rz - W”) '" DEM” "id Brmsh "e' er .ent on this year's avera cl N-pp -(-Hm . gctiators concluded a new tu'o-lg,-megp l E ida1f)OH((.PF:g'heAgie:e M" :9 'VB'lltralr?g0flllxl1(lll1'horlodlgliialh illlggll The ""01 ”””””t t” be ””pP"lida.v in n front.-page story that a takes to buy not less than 90 per was um dlsclosui By the end .6! W'3”'0iiiZ3"1Zeii Spy ring. composed , - the present contract. Britain uill.0f refugees from Imn Omtaln want of Denmarks exportable sur- ,have llouzht more than 110,000! , - .h t d C d - lPlU5- Starling P7109 35 535-53 PET tons of bacon from Denmark. mun Hes E 0 on C”: Mm a In ,1 d d .i ht . p , , ' , the last three and four years, in .i":.:e.::::... ?..'.Z...l2:"f:;. I.” .”.:"."r't in -pe CH" 0 M D 3 am" WP" The story says that two inform- price cannot be varied by nlOI'9i)')lICS from Denmark. Provincial C. W. L. Convention Concludes Mrs. Lorne L. Noonan of Char- lottetown was elected as Provincial President yesterday afternoon at the cmicludliig session of the an-, nual convention of the Catholic Women's League. Other Provincial officers elected and installed by Rev. P.F. MacDonald are as fol- lows: - lst. Vice-President, Mrs. J. Austin Murphy, Emerald; 2nd. Vice President, Mrs. D.F. MacNeili, Sum- mersicie; (ird. Vice President, Mrs. J.E. Rossiter. Morell; Recording Secretary, Miss Lphigenle Arsen- ault, Cliarlottetowri; Corresponding Secretary, Mrs. James Pendergast. Kerislngton; Treasurer, Mrs. F.J. Steele, Charlottetown. The convention Mass was celeb- rated at ll A.M. at St. Dunst.a.n's Basilica by Rev. P.F. MacDonald who also addressed the delegates at ants, whose names must be kept. secret to protect relatives still liv- in: in Poland and Czechoslovaha. said they had been asked by Rus- sian agents to transmit secret data. ,on Montreal's defence industry. R. C. M. P. officials here have refused comment on-the matter but the story says that the disclosures of the two in- formants have been the sub- ject of serious consideration by government officials in Ottawa who are said to be checking the identify of persons involved in the ring. -;- The two informants told the newspaper the ring was formed some three years ago, its main elements being Communist agents who posed as bona-fida refugees to pass Canadian immigration screen- ing tests in Germany. t On arrival in Canada, they get- iled near defence industries and then got in touch with diplomatic representatives of Iron Curtain cnuntrles, who referred them to "key-men” for special assignments. Russian Trained The informants said the "key- mcn" were Russian-trained party members in charge of the cipher departments of consulates and oth- er diplomatic missions. They said the ring in Montreal included two immigrants from Czechoslovakia. one from Poland and one from the Ukraine. one of the informants, I girl, said she had been asked by two spies, allegedly working at the Canadian aircraft plant in Mont- real to transmit secret data. on air- craft changes, just received by the company's engineering division. She said a Polish immigrant ai- legedly employed at Canadian Vlckers Limited in Montreal also offered her data. on defence orders for transmission to "headquarters." The other informant, a. man whose business contacts included. Iron Curtain consular officials in Montreal and Ottawa, said he re- ceived similar offers. Both informants said thoir names were placed on the "black- list" of the Russian-supervised sec- ret police when they refused to co- operate, and their movements were watched. In Ottawa, top officiail of In xlustice and Immigration Depart- menLs would make no comment on the report. Charges lied Propaganda in TV Scripts WASHINGTON, Aug. 27 - (APD Red propaganda subtly woven into scripts by pro-Communist writers. Y A report by the senate internal ,security sub-committee quoted clos- led-door testimony by two writers. ii-Iuth Adams Knight and Welbourii lE. Kelley, to back its conclusions. 1 For itself the committee traced lowed aild took for his text the convention theme, "Women's ob. ligation to Safeguard the Banctity members with most scripts, in con- :fmtl::d,::me',' ram” Ml;0D9g:”d trailed by a pro-Communist fac-i ' 9 V” W5 WW5 " W 95 Ho” isanctlty should be cultivated in the , The Radio Writers Guild. an in-i :l,”meLf,"d slfffd the 1"”'C””9 ”l idepeudent union. said in a state-; 1e V Ales O "mmw imd cm” :ment that it has never "aligned it-l self with or supported any Com-l munist. or pro-Communist organ-i jization." It said its officers all have' filed the non-Conlmumst afiidavlt lrequlrccl by the Taft-Hartley lana- law. drive dating back to l94.'l to infli- trate the broadcast field. It said the Radio Writers Guild, whose Mrs. l'.J,. Steele, President of the Charlottetown Sub-division presid- ed at the communion brealcfast and lCOiltliiliCd on Page 3 col, 5) i OTTAWA, Aug. 2'1 -rcp).. Tm iLnb0r Department said today the trend towards longer paid vaca. ll.lOnS is continuing in Canada. A SAIGON. Indo-China. Aug. 27- report from its Economics and ma. -(Reuters)- French union fore-isearcli Branch says an annual va- 55 mdiiy T9i70W3d kmlnil '76 Com- cation of at least a. week now is munist Vletminh rebels and tale-lalmost universal practice in man- lng 998 ,prisoners in fighting ufacturlng. There appeared to be northwest of Hue in the last threcla trend towards lIWO week' vgca. dais. ltions after a year or less of service. B 't' h G ' P1 ed lease of dispatches exchanged be- LONDON, Aug, 27m (Rguw,-g)-vtix'een Lyttelton and the Gover- Tiie government today announced "OF- democratic reforms including uni- Elffctarnl roll! of tho Miult versal adult suffrage and more i30DU1a5'i0ii MB Mink Prelhlrid Ind elected members to parliament tor',nx'x'angcmcnts are being made for British Guiana, one of the rich-li1b0Ui 00.000 illiterate Voters in ..:::s. ; ; BONN. Aug. 2'! -(AP) - United States and German officials denied today reports from Madrid that West Germany would turn out: est colonies in the British Eln-Wile 0010113". which has A popula- madam weapon, 10, Splint. grmad 9"” lm” M 435-150 forces with the U. S. paying most Though the constitutional N- WC Pi'CSCIii- Hint. the GOV- 5f the Costa, Ramble mum" in changes are a step toward self-rernor is president of the I.cgisia- Madrid mm yeuerdly nut new”. igovcrnmcnt in the fl3,000-square- tive Council, which consists of mu lmilc cnlony, captured from the three officials on his staff, seven 3013?; igaglgalglfnuiggglnigtsonn inutch in 1796. British Governor members iiomiimivd by him and along with talks on renewal of a isir Charles Woolley will remain 14 elected members. in". ,,o,.-M bl-hind, parliament, British Guiana. is rich in min-- s:?;gm'0m Gennamspanmh kw” British Guiana. on the llOi'U,llF.i'RlS including izold. diamonds p ” - 1 east coast of South America, will and bauxite, the ore of aluminum. i have two chambers of parliament In 1951. 14.083 0iinCE'8 Of gold ' Wind it ministerial council for the WPFO l7mdUi?P0- Diiiiiilind 9Xli0FiS t (o3.(HE'k lflrat time. But the six minlsters,,ln 1950 totalled 37,034 metric C ijunior ministers and six inembersi,e:iml.s and bauxlw exports to the eYo (com inf the state council-the upper United Slates and Canada alone -I " 7 l house --will be named by the gov- lasi ,ie:u' uere unrtll .S16,4i7,492. ' cl-nor, i But, the colony's economy is , . l Oliver l.,vttclt.nn. colonial mc- based mainlv on agricultural pro- if :1-etary. hopes to brim: the new ducts and it exports sugar, rice, V . ycenstiluiion into force during the coconuts. cnlfrr. iiiibiwr niid Cli- flrst. half of lf)5Il. Tile reforms rus fruits. 'l'liere is also A flour- iw e alilioillired day by the ro- lslilnlr rum iudus V. lCanadais Armed Forces Nearing 100,000 Mark UITAWA. Aug. 27 -- (CF) - rolls. The three regular armed forcesl Thg three forces as It whole ro- shmlld be liK),i)iiii strong within a crulted 2.314 men in Jilly including month dr two. 270 for the navy, ll-ti) for the army Nfld.. en route and carrier Magni- Both ships will return to Hall- Oapt. Patrick D. Bullies of Victoria an lniifsrl Official figures for the end of July, released today, showed they topped the 99,000 mark by 67 at that time despite thq-, fact the army lost strength because of heavy dis- charges of special force men. MWAg Official statistics for . . .. . hm, HAHFAL Aug. 77 ,,,CP)gg nont be out for seielal necks , The "mu, Quebec Wm Mn (0,. the word is that it hasnt. taken the total over the. lii0.0i)ii mark Europe Friday to participate in t umnnbucelu me Mg NA-I-0 Her. September traditioiially is cues in Bnmc! WHEN, navy omc. month when lerlllitlrig picks up, his um yonmhtp after the not-so-good ke months. e,v Korea and able, in charge was this: Joined active force, 2.711: charged, 4.04R; their minds. 3,372.. of 3. Another 500 have been classed as dlscliargc. since the brigade was wouldn't. lip surprised if its total um later than Charlotteuywn. deserters formed in the slimmer of l9.'v(l an by summer i charged about At the end of July, HIP pleillrr at the I'll on the special force men back from take is dis-i oncl l,:'.0-i for the air force. It was --G....r.m.'--.-.-C... l HALIFAX. Aug. 27 -(CP) -OW the best recruiting month since rm,” mremsu tgued by the -pom. ,, April but the not gain over the mmn Yum-,6 wpamm. strength at the e d of June -- Ham”, and Vaud unm 98,358 -A- was just bout 'll)ii. That iis, for every three, men they took August : in they lost two. Thus the army must have dis- l.l00 lnen in July ,becausc it was about 300 stronger the end of Julv. Officials hope a fair number of lihc special force men will rcenlist. in the late autumn and entitled to 11,05 A, HGMGUBTW” Bummerslds Army rilsirrlmh rlorsn't. show much if any have never been written off army i gain in the next half year. The, strengths of the forces at Mm-mm;-5 (oynnn-aw, The the end of the month were 14,133 will continue sunny, and temperat- for the navy. 49,5ll8 for the urrry urns near 90 degree; wlll be com. the and 35,3451 for the air forw. (I of June than it was at-,winds. Low at Office. in midnight Thur-sda,v Synopsi Lmll-, rhnngli is foreseen in Ilia weather mrm. Rglonal forecasts: Prince Edward Island-Clear with little cliange in temperature. Lighl Charlottetown 60 and 85. High tide today at Chnriof-W dls- , But with anothcrwlliiio, married mwn ,5 334 A, M, ma gm P. M. still to make up men coming home from Germany lligh tide on the North share all M. and 10.20 P. II. this eighteen min- sun rises loriay at 5.20 A. M. and sets at 0.58 P. M. A