,_ brciilléétillfl l-loh cacti _ Tuesday ville. giflcoe. OIL \ MERE “MAN hg ll IDIO- pfc who in able to do toe much mute to be able to do more than m galottfltown Glllflull. Two Cont!» Icrnllll Guardian. Founded ISBI. t QNAGO. A118. l0 —(AI)-Wil- tiam Oclcm today arrived at Doug- at 1:58.40 to set a 1.15 A-rport in Chicago put EDT t2z5840 ADT) new rutltid-the world flight mark. Hi5 record tilme was 73 hours. five minutes. Odom buzzed the control tower at the Douglas field. the point from s-hlczl m- Iiad departed at 1:53 p.m. gm‘ llltlrsdsy, and then flew 22 rlltlvs south to Chicago's municipal lbpcrt where a huge crowd await; pd lltm. The flier completed the last leg pf 111$ solo flight, a 57l-mlle hop 5mm Fargo, N.D., in one hour._41 lnlnut-as. Alvotig the-crowd awaiting hkn at Hilflivlllftl Airport on his anrival there lit 3.01 p.m. were his wife and two ttllldren of Roslyn. N.Y., his motltttr and father. Mr.» and Mrs. Dennis Odom. of llayvmcre. Mo; and his sponsor and owner of the rpcnrd-iirvflkl-llg plane. Milton Rey- nolds. wealthy pen manufacturer of Chicago. Odom ‘had set out on the 19,645- mll- jcttrney with the avowed in- tuition of bIN-lklllg the record for a wit» tll-ctlnd-the-wotrld flight set at m; mill-l, 49 1-2 minutes by the late Wiley Post 1'11 1933. This mark was easily outdistalnced. Odcnl. however, also shattered the record of 78 hottrs. 5 1-2 minutel tor pltlnos with a crow. This stand- ard had been set in April by Odom, Milton Reynolds. and T. Carrol Slllirc in the snmr- plane. the "Rey- tlclds Bombshell.“ a converted l."lll\‘ A-Dti bomber, vrhlch Odom usrd tor his solo flight. Th» 27-year-old Wartime pilot for the l’..-\.F. transport command, l'il'ttl.i‘.l_v sleepless since leaving Chirrlea. mude brief stops for re lullllnc the plane at Gander, Nfld; P0115, Cairo, Karachi, Indie; Cal- cutta. Tokyo, Anchorage. Alaska: m1 rat-go, NJ). lie spent nine fIOII-rs 50 minutes mule ground for tho service stops. 11.1; trip was made at an average cl approximatcly 269 miles an ‘hour including the ground time. Oct-rm, six feet two inches tall. raid :t tly am ‘id the record speed since ne met Wiley Post in 15133 tn Tulsa as a boy of l3. Post gave him nr autographed piece of the Winnie Starr's fabric. Odctn left. thrlt fabric fragment. in Xlnciiorngc this morning nt- larhctl tn a small wrcrltli. n trib- ute in the earlier airman who tiled at Pt. Barrow, Alaska. w'ith WT Rogers ln a plane crush in i935. Til! Odom: live in Roslyn. N.Y. Dttrnc .110 ivnr ill‘ made 36 cross- | lrg: of the Atlantic Ocean as a R A F I-‘erry Command pilot. and llltcr. Ito flezv for the Chinese Nattomil Airways. Coming‘ Events “Collecting Hogs Ptlckrrs each Tuesday. for Canada Earl Jay. "Show and Dance. Bradalbane. ilittrsritltl. "Dince and Ice Cream. water- vale School, August 12th. ".\"w in Stock Gtvn Sicaf flllttitr tu-inr. Dillon d; Spillett. "fkillccttng tings for Canada PBLKPTS each Tuesday afternoon W. Crane. “CW-vb: H085 ma was» UY morning for Canada Packers. obt. Dawson. Crapaud. "Collecting Hogs for Pflckrrs each Tuesday. Dnvld Pratt. Canada Signed M"Dllnce. ice cream. Belfast Hall wdlliy. Aug. 11th. Not-til. Pinettc "Come to the dance it Queen's films Canteen Tuesday. August Zlh- Canteen services and lunches It till times. "Dance Col-ran Ban Hall Mon- hv. llth. Rollie MccKexlzie and his Island Ramblers. aglaT-ilt? annual meeting of Morel C0. will be held In MorcllHll “Wily nilht, Aug. n. ten. "Regular Hospital Dance. Mon- tague Curling Rink. every Sutur- 0‘? Yiilht. Webster's Orchestra. “Come to the lce Cream Social. "ithtvwn null. Monday, Aug. 11. A"Ice Cream-and Dance at Fort llluatus School. Monday. August Hughes Orchestra. Canada rnckm front Vernon . Utll. Elllotvale. summer- I-lennttlle. Avondcie and Coll Ralph Lea. Vernal Ctlom Sleeps. Just Misses Mountain FARGO. N-IL. Aug. l0-—(AP) —BI|l 000m fell uleep fur an hour and 40 minutes today whllc winging his way hstwegn Ami-himlkfl. Alaska, and Ell- monton on his round-tho-world fllsbt-Chlcngo to Chftljn —but awakened tn time to avoid a mountain peak. “It made me sick b0 my stomach for a few minutes" he told a reporter at Fargo during his bnlcf ltop. 000m mid hb automatic pilot was out of order and he had been flying manually from Anchorage. When he fell asleep. he had bcerrflytng at 20,000 feet. He awakened to find his altitude was 18.000 feet. "and there was a mountain peak ahead at 10.- 008 feet." Odom naldlt was “an ordeal for o few minutes." He didn‘t give further details. Odom said that during hll nearly dtustmur nap the plane apparently fie-w in a circle, and "f lound myself flying nearly due. north at practically the same place I dosed off." ItcunlI-The-Worlll Cubs Reach Labrador -tCP)—Two little Cub planes completed tbe second leg of e leisurely round-the-world flight to- clesr sky onto this lonely air bale in Central Labrador. ‘ Piiotcd by Clifford Evans. 26. of Washington and George Truman. 39. former Utrtited States Arimy Air Corps fliers, the light aircraft completed their GOO-mile flight from Presque Isle. Me. in just un- der seven hours. Truman. born in Saskacitetwan and former resident of Winnipeg. now lives in Los Angeles. The pair 12ft. Tcterboro. N._J.. Saturday on a route of 21.350 miles that they expected would t-fl-ke them 30 to 45 days. Their next stop will be an airdrome on the rim cf desolate Greenland. Sydney War Veteran Burned To Ileatll (By The Canadian Press) SYDNEY, N. S., Aug. l0—Mich- ael MacNeil. 29-year-old war vet- eran. curncu to death early to- day when fire levelled his home at nearby South Bar. His parents and a neice, 15-year-old Sylvia Crott. of Roxbury. Mass, escaped without injury. All inquest will be held tomor- IDW. BEAVIESI‘ TUNA CATCH WEDGEPORT, N. 3., Aug. l0- tCtPl-Ileavicst tuna catch of the season was bontcd yesterday by Russell 11. Frederick of Orange. N. J.. in the waters of Soldier's Rip. which has given up 50 blue- fins this yeal. The prize weighed 715 pounds and was hosted after a five-hour M. ..r mt.» ~- u, h. l‘, new. GOOSE BAY. Labrador. Aug. V10 day when they dropped out at s At . CHARLOTTEFMVN. CANADA, MONDAY, AvcusrflT, 1941 Prominent Charlottetown Citizen Dies One of Charlottetown‘; qlflggt PB-‘Md RWIIY suddenly at llll- hcme on the Mount Edward no" ‘g 12-30 P-TYI- lal‘ Saturday He would have been so years old yesterday. The late Mr. Peuden. who was born at ‘Ncod Islands, came to the City as a boy with Ziis parents and shortly afterwards entered the em. ploy of the late W1. Dawson as a clerk. I-Ie remained 1n the hard- ware business vtdth Mr. Dawson until the iatterb death when. with the lave JK. Stanley and Mr. DR-l-l- Shaw (at. presen: in Van- couver), he formed about 50 years ago the hardware firm still known as Stanley. Shaw, and Pr-arden. Probably no business man In the City had a wider acquaintance- ship with the people of the Prov- incc than the. late Mr. Peuden for his genial disposition and Interest in the welfare of others had made him personally known to thous- ands His wife, the former June 'l‘hornc. daughter of the lute Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Theme of Gior- lottctcwn, predeceased him 18 years Mo. Surviving hlzn is one daughter. Muriel. ct home; and one son. Alfred. of Stanley. Shaw. and Pearden. There m" also three sistersz: Mrs. Ensign Square- briggs, Toronto. Ont.; Mrs. Blair Taylor. Gonlc. N.l-i.. U.$.-A.; and Mrs. Clifford Herrick. Stoneham. Mass. The late Mr. Pe-aroen had no brothers. . Ford Motor Co. ' Cfiicialllics WINDSOR, 01st,. Aug. 10-(0?) -Walace R. Campbell, 86. chair- man of the board of the Ford Mo- tor Company of Canada, died at his home here today after an lil- ness of more than a year, Former president of the com- pany. he retired as active head in April 1945. becoming chairman of the board of directors. He Joined the company at the age of 23 and was named president in Mil-ch. 1029. An elder brother, Malc0lm_ G. Campbell. former president of the Kelsey Wheel company. Ltd.- died a few weeks ago. II. S. Expects S0 p. c. Tourist ‘Trade _SaIn HALIFAX, Aug. 10-(CP)- In- dusts-y Minister I-Iarold Connolly of Nova Scctia told the Halifax Press Club Saturday night a tour- ist trade worth $16,000,000 was ex- pected to be realized in the Prov- ince this year. a gain of S0 per- cent over last year's record fig- ure. New’ Wood Substitute Iloportali ~ln Brltalli LONDON. Aug. 1(¥—(RC\.liI0l'§)--A new wood substitute made from bacteria and wood flour and clalltl- ed to be harder then oak was dc:- cribed In the current issue cf Chemistry and Industry, Journal of the society of the chemical il- i! By EDWIN BIIANKB BERJJN. Aul- l0 — (AP) — The vanishing jewels of German royal- ty lured American investigators! on a $2,000,000 treasure htlnt today through s bizarre mule that al- ready has involved g 19pm y". "OIIIHLE! n. Berlin’; underworld and promises to lead to an inter- national incident. . German Prince Ferdinand von Echoenzluh-Carleth told interview- ers Saturday he Ind his wife had submitted to truth-serum tests to satisfy investigators co the accur- a of hi; ltory that tlic jewels bglionglng to his mother. Princess f-Iermlne. the late widow of Ger- many's int Kaiser, hid meteri- ously disappeared from a trunk In the house of an American friend where he had kept 5.000.000 of the German royal treasury. A woman emissary. he said, lled "rilked her neckMco smuggle the travels from his mutter’: apartment-at Prank- furt-on-tldcr in the tul acne. whore like died Thursday. into the American rector of Berlin The nervous, rl-yur-cld Pltnce slid he had been shadowed by two German Jewel Case Has Complications NKMD. (Soviet secret police) agents before the 20 Isms disap- peeted and was certain he had been betrayed to the Russians while moving from lplrlment to apartment in an cflort to shake them off his trail. Amelfielln quarters aid the cil- appcerame of Princess and jewels had the possibility of Interna- tionnl complications become they had been smuggled from the Rus- sian lone and the Ruulanl might ’T'TJ7“-'":~‘ and most prominent business men. in the l-erson of William Pcardcn‘ (H8859! crcamery butter and concentrated milk Products over July last year stocks of shell eggs, meats. and poultry meat at the beginning of August were higher than lest year, evaporated whole milk dropped. Large Iiumbers 0f Visitors Arrive For Old illcme Week with the opening of 01d Home Week in Charlottetown but a few hours away—the Exhibition opens at 0 o'clock to-morrow morning- literally thousands of visitors from the Mainland are pouring into the Province. Both Borden and Wood Islands have been scenes of great activity during the past few weeks. for this has been the greatest tourist season the Province has ever known, but unusually large as has been the average daily influx of visitors to those ports for the months of June and July, it has been made to look insignificant compared to the numbers which ‘nave been coming to the Province daily for the last few days. Char- lottetown is full of visitors and the end is not yet. Yesterday the car ferry “Prince Edward Island" made nine cross- ings from Tcrmenttne and carried between 45 and 50 motor cars on cnch crossing and it is expected ller carrying capacity will again be taxed today. It. is the same story at Woud Islands where the ‘Prince Nova" and the “Charles A. Dunning" are filled on each trip from Ca.ibou. Among the reasons given for the unusually large number of lflsitors who are now pouring Into (Continued on Page 5 Col. l) .. ._~___ Aug-In...“ Cable Shlpiltlcks llp Unusual llcck ST. JOHN'S, h-Kldq Aug. tReuterst-The British cable ship John W. MacKay now 1n port here has presented to the geologi- cal survey a piece of rock that is puzzling scientists. 1t weighs near- ly a ton, and was hauled u.» in mid-Atlantic from a depth of z 1-4 miles. Scientists are interested because of the unusual size of the rock for the depth at which it was found, but are puzzled by how it got l0- there. One theory is that it was de- posited by an ice sheet a couple of million years ago. The rock measures only two and a half feet square. and is compos- ed of diorite and gneiss. Canadian Butter Cutput Increases .___ OTTAWA. Aua- 1o -tCP)—Iri- i-n July production of brought Increases to Canadian stocks of butter and skim milk Pvwder on Aug. 1, the Dominlcn Bureau cf Statistics reported to- day. A marked decline in meat-lu- cheese production blrcugh a cor- responding fall in Aug. 1 cheese stocks. The Bureau also reported that froaen egg while stocks of Creamery butter production In July gained thne per cunt. from 41,000,000 in July i946 to 4.2.240.- 000 pounds, bringing stocks of but- ter on Aug. 1 to 58,560,114 pounds. a fraction above tut you. In July. 22.301000 pounds at ‘eddnr cheese were produced, against 25,300,000 in July 1946. Aul- I studs cl cheese were 48.- NSAW pounds compel-ed with 41» 014.990 on July 1. and $2,020,942 on Aug. 1. 1948. .-.. ....»-.--._.... M-‘w-w _ Port Arthur Michael Angelo Vescic. described by his former landlord as a "very quiet, u-ell-behatted young fellow" today stood clouble~murcler of two 13-year-old Winnipeg boys. Roy McGregor and George Smith, whose killings ter- rorized the city in January September, 1946. " mo» >..'..<rs-.1:t.».>w' "~ 2m $1..»- s. Read by Ev Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Thousands View Ferry “Abegweit”; CJLR. Accepts Ship The Q.S.M.V. “Albegweit? in the last chapter before taking-up ser- vlce between Port. Borden, P.E.I.. and Cape Tormentine in the “across the Strait run" was offi- cially handed over by her builders, Marine Industries Limited, Sorel, Quebec, through the Department of ‘Transport to the Canadian Na- tional Raiiways at. a ceremony held yesterday aboard the ship, docked at the Marine Wharf. Thousands of Island people were given an opportunity to inspect the new boat. when she was thrown open to the public yesterday from 10 a.m. until well into the even- ing. An impromptu band concert was rendered by the band of the 17th Reconnaissance Regiment under the direction of Baridmaster Sgt. Tom MacFarlane. During the approximately eight hours that the ship was open for inspection it was estimated that. between 15.000 and 20,000 PC5015 were taken aboard. At times stand- ing space was at a premium on the Marine Wharf where trie Albeg-welt was docked. Transferred to C.N.R. The informal ceremony of trans- fer to the C.N.R took. place on the automobile deck of the ferry in mid-afternoon and in the pres- ence cf a large gathering of citi- zens of Charlottetown and other centres in the Province. Among those present were His Honor Lieutenant Governor J. A. Bernard Premier J. Walter Jones His Wot"- ship Mayor B. Earle MacDonald. Commander C. P. Edwards. C.M.O., Deputy Minister of ‘Transport rep- resenting the Minister of t ‘Ira-ls- . port. Mr. J. Edouard Slmard, vice- presiclent. Marine Industries Ltd. ' Horace German of the firm German and Milne. Montreal, the ship's designers. and Mr. J. P. Johnson, vice-president and geri- eral manager. Atlantic Region, Canadian National Railways. In addition to the above also present at the ceremony were Is- land Federal representatives to the senate and House of Com-mitt! and members of the Provincial Government and Legislature. when the Abeglvelt left Quebec on her trip down the St. Lawrence. to the scone of he. l lions. undel- the command of Capt. “:13 wagulm S}... was flying u... riot-so-old sea dog with an excit- blue fut'l'e opera- elisign. At tile (Canttnued on Page 5 Col. 2» tllllllcrll Says appropriate Murder Suspect Quiet Fellow WINNIPEG, Aug.- 9 ~ tCP)—A man. 22-year-old charged with the and Chief Constable Charles MacIver. whose department had worked on the case for operation throughout Canada and the Un- ited States. said at a press con- ference. “he (Vescio) has admitted both offences." 19 months in co- with police officer! His apprehension quieted the fears of Winnipeg's children and their parents who. since lvlcfireg- (Continued on Page S Coi- 2t Killed III rut r65 Two-wheeled Sulky " DIGBY. N. 8., Aug. 10——l.£0flll'd IVThIte of nearby South Range was killed yesterday when thrown from a two-wheeled suiky by the horse he was drlvzrlg Dr. J. R. Mc- Cleave slid death was caused by donond the rut of the ‘ returned. ' The ramming as ptscu have been deposited undu- Unlhd Staten guard m jkenkfuri-on-Mahi. Am- erican hoodqulrtnrs city in Ger- many. . mo Prince uid the 0B pieces. including gem-studded tiaru. our rings, brooches. con-be. inlet. ma. snuff and powder boom. bracelets. rings end watches, were worth S0..- 000.000 murkl. or 86.000600 at pre- lcnt rats; of military exchange. He gsve the value of the mm pieces at 9.000.000. ' Alrlertcan investigators rad not been able to uncover iciul. c. broken neck. ,- ftfl/é’ [fl l f1; it’ B/i/H/i/G Bl FLOUR 0530 CANADA Itlisk of demobilization ibuilding cf peace-time permanent - forces. " ..-_ ,. ‘ Killed In Crash KINGSTON. Ont... Aug. w ._ (CH-The engineer and fireman were killed when" the fast Mont- real-Torcnto-Chlcago pooled p355- Cflker train was derailed as it ap- proached the Kingston station to- night on its westbound run. There. were no reports of other casualties. Etzht coaches. including the din" 0nd 17588880 cars of the train, operated jointly by thl- Can- adian National and Canadian Pacific Railways, left the track but remained upright. Officials ccud not immediately explain the cause of the accident. The engine was slolwirlg to its scheduled stop here when the coaches derailed. The derailed coaches blocked the eastbound line while remaining on their wheels. Other eastbound trains were re-routed through the Kingston yards. Two special t-rains were made up to carry the west-bound scngers, one leaving Brcckvllie with passengers and the other joining at Belleviile. Ilismembereli Body Found In Detroit (B! The Associated Pres!) DETROIT. Aug. lO—'I'l'IE dis- membered body of a young wo. man. the heud missing, was found today in an East Side alley. Police said that sections of the bcdy. wrapped in blankets. were found in a trash can and on the pavement. in the alley. Officers estimated the woman's age at from 20 to 25. 'I‘hey said the body had been dismembered at: the neck and at the thighs be- luw the knees. The head and lower parts of the legs were not found. The bcdy had been deliberately dismembered and not accidentally mutilated. police said. Clll Sea Dog And An Airman lTc Retire Soon i OTTAWA. Aug. 10—-(CP) —- A ing life afloat to remember and an airman who destroyed two Ger- man zeppelins in the First World War will retire next month as head of the Navy and Air Force, their war and post-war jobs completed. It was learned authoritatively Saturday that Vice Admiral H. E. (Rastuso Reid, 50-year-old chief naval headquarters. and Air Marshal Robert Leckie. 57-year- cld Chief of Air Services. will be placed on reserve Sept. 1 after lengthy and brilliant service on the sea and in the air. Defence Minister Claxton is cx- pected to make an official an- nouncement next Thursday of successors to the two veterans who brought the Navy and Air Force through the final stages of the Second World War. the difficult and the Rear Admiral H. T. W. Grant. 48. of Halifax will become head of Naval Headquarters and Air (Conttnued on Page s e31. 2T TZTPAGRS UNEXPECTED DEATHOF FISHERIES ll Odom Establishes New Round -The-World .Mark pas- ’ done that the law does not for- bu. MAXIMS OIL. MERE MAN Modesty forbid: much to be Subscription Delivered 86.00. Mall 85-00. other Provinces A U. l. A. 81M IN ISTER i Eiuilittt-Fittma" iPassing Is Shock To Official Ottawa THE LAT!‘ Mlf BRIDGES Witiéllftiatl Search For Missing Plane HALIFAX, Aug. 10—(CP)—PriV- ate and R.C.A.F. aircraft conned l ltlo-mlle strip between here and Fredericton today for a light pon- won-titted Fleet Canuck carry rig two men. reported missing since taking off for Fredericton Friday. Halifax Flying Club officials identified the plane's occupants as John MacLean of Hopewell. N. S.. and Norman Crewe of Waverley. NS. With MacLean as pilot. they had taken off from the club's base at Waverley Lake, 15 miles north of Halifax. at 6 pm. Friday to de- liver the single-engined craft to its owner in Fredericton. It was not equipped with radio. Club officers first learned the plane was missing early today when they telephoned Fredericton for a report. They had 118B"! nothing of the plane after it left; Waverley. Weather Friday night was re- ported clear in all areas except for occasional light showers in New Brunswick. Iluarrel In Restaurant IIas Fatal Ending MONTREAL. Aug. 10-(0?) —-A customer making apurchuse 0f Ice cream in a. restaurant at near- by Cartlerville was shot and kill- ed last night in a dispute that in- volved the restaurant owner. Po- lice said tonight the arflllmem started over a broken utensil. Norman Milne. 33. died almost instarttl from a bullet in the heart s. ter a scuffle with restaur- ant owner Marcel Vaillanccurt. 37. Police said the gun which fired the fatal shot was one Valllnn- court kept In the restaurant as protection. (KER. PLANS ORDERS WINNIPEG. Aug. 8 --iCP) - Orders for $22,500,000 worth of new locomotives and freight cars for the Candaian Pacific Railway will be placed this month. bringing the season's total expenditurefor roll- ing stock to more than 5471110000. WM. Neal. chairman and plesldecit said tcday. Attlee Faced With New Party Conflict (By Robert Hewett LONDON. Aug. 10—(AP)—Prim0 Minister Attlee. accused by the Conservatives of seeking "totalit- arian powers" to deal with Bri- tain's economic crisis, faced a re- ported new conflict within hil own Labor Party tonight over the Government's nationalization pro- gram. Persistent but unconfirmed re- ports that some Cabinet members wc-e opposed to carrying out plans to nationalize the steel Industry during the crisis were followed by the culling of c. special private meeting of Labor members of Par- liament for Monday. One political writer said leftist intellectuals apd 'I‘l-ade Union members would demand s direct "yes" or "no" answer on steel from Attlee. Most London newspapers carried ‘stories reporting dissatisfaction among Labor ranks with Attleew "anti-crisis" program. The Daily Express political writer said ‘fina- jor changes In the Government.‘ . may result from a rift over the future of the steel Industry. "If a state monopoly is decided upon, Mr. John Wiimot, the Min- ister of Supply, will go out, and Mr. Ancurin Bevan, Health Min- ister, will move over to supply to take charge of steel." said the Daily Express. "If the Ministers decide to postpone or water down the nationalization scheme‘ Mr. Bevan is likely to leave the Oov- ernment. Government comment. Other political writers said For- eign Secretary Bevin, Chancellor of the Exchequer Hugh Dalton and Deputy Prime Minister Herbert Morrison were reported favoring postponement of plans to nation- alize steel. Winston Churchill, continuing the Conservative attacks on the Atttee bill to extend broad Gov- ernment control over mlnr cment. and workers. was schediPd to make another attempt Mcr iay to amend the measure and limit con- trois. sources declined OTPAWA. Aug. 10 - top) _ Burly. fieniol HFG Bridges. Can. ada's Minister of Fishm-ies Ind one of the youngest members c4 the Doninifln Cabinet, died sud. -c‘enly dlls morning of c. reart ail- lment st the age of 45. i The tuwertrlg, broad-shouldered ylawyer-soldler-statesulan from New Brunswick. who steppe-l glgnost _ ‘directly from the Army into the . ‘Cabinet less than two wars ages died at 9.50 a.m. in Ottawa's Civic Hflspital only a few days after thl discovery of an unsuspected heart conditim. \ Deflih 0f the youthful Fisheriel Mlnlste.. who moved into the Cab- inet imrmdiatwely after hi: first election to Parliament in 1H6. came in the ascendancy of a fast- rising political career. From a schoolteacher who stud- ied law in his spare moments, hl had plliltd himself into the speak- ersulp cf the New Brunswick Leg- islature at the age of 24. broken with his party leader; In that Province and then. after war ser- vice overseas. swept Into the Bed- eral fie-id in the 19-15 general elec- tiorl. Had Promising Future Until omit Illness struck hit; dc-wn. ‘rte had been nlarized by pol- itical observers here as on the way to Cabinet posts regarded as of higher calibre than Fisheries. At one time or another, he was men. fioned cs slated for the Defence or Veterans’ Affairs portfolios. His death was the fourth of a Oabinet Minister since ‘he start of the Second World War. Defence Minister Norman Rogers was kill- ed in e plane crash in 1040. vlnl-liil J ice Minister Ernest. Lapcirlto died u. 1941 and Senator Danduh and, Government leadc‘: in ihc Upper House. died in 1042. Loss of the Fisheries Minister reduced Liberal representation ill the Commons to 120. The other seats are as follows: Progressive Conservative. 6'7; C.C.F., 28:.Socia.l Credit, 13; others, 10; vacant, one. Friends and relatives said today that neither Mr. Bridges nor hil closest associates "ncd an inkling of his ccnditlc-n before he entered hospital for a checkup at the end of the recent Parliamentary ses- sion. He had beer feeling tired, but this was assumed to be the weariness of a Cabinet member a! (Continued on Page 5 Ool. 7) tulle l ls tllluur Mattel: 0F h0g2“? ‘fill: \ , . Moi-lain’ 2 ‘IYZGONTO. Aug. 10 — (OP)-— Minimum and maximum temper- aturesz-Vancouver 55, 6'7; Ed- monton 41. '12; Regina 50, 70; Win- nipeg 71. '16; Toronto 62, 81; Ottawa 56, 82; Montreal , 56. M: Quebec 48, 84; saint John —. —; Moncton 50. 74; Halifax 59, 75: Charlottetown 54. '71; Sydney 59, '10; Yarmouth 63, '79. HALIFAX. Aug. 10 - Weather synopsis and official Inland fore- casts issued by the Dominion Public Weatner Office at Halifax st midnight. tonight. Synopsis: ' Skies were clear and tempera- 'ures near normal over the Mari- time: on Sunday. This fine weath- er was associated with high at.- nospheric pressure which w... centred near Yarmouth by the late afternoon. Little change is fors- tast for Monday over most of the district. However. showers are expected in the northern section of the district due to the ap- proach of a disturbance from f-Iud. son Bey. Forecasts, valid until midnight Monday: Prince Edlvard Island: Clear and warm. Light winds. High Monday at. Charlottetown '12. High tide this afternoon at 41H and tomorrow morning A‘. 5:50. Sun sets this evening ot- ‘lzll and rises tomorrow morning at 4:51 Summerside tide eighteen min utcs lamr than Charlottetown.