MAXIMS I i OIL MERE MAN lhl WIOII- Be not blindly guided by the tin-oak, the multitude ie often Ln n; uurdlan. ‘three Cute. Months] Dell; founded llll. Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew aloft to keep watch on the lilo ol! poor hole. MAXIMS OIL near: MAN There‘: a Providence who elk up CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4. 194s 16 PAGES beer-lotions Delivered loll 05.00; other Provlneee b ILI. 01.00. O. S. VOTERS CHOOSE COMPLETELY DEMOCRATIC RULE Canada. And U.K. To lie-negotiate Food Contracts Truman Talks Peace And Happiness As Tributes Roll In e.___ Political Polls llave Deal 0f Explaining To llo -. \lYlW YORK. NOV. 8 —— (AP) — Plfflilifilll. Truman proved today he “as the best forecaster. He had the country's highest office to, prme it. its victory over Thomas E. Deuiv settled the dispute between h.“ nrd the pollsters over whether the national surveys -- which pie. wed his defeat - were right or uiorlg. ‘Sci-ping polls" '1‘I"‘f‘il 1110M. he proceeded to give them the President illr - rst lacing since 1936 when -.‘~.I~ Literary’ Digest picked Alf 1a.. tun to beat Franklin D. Roose- tr- Sflflfl thereafter, the Literary quietly went out. o! busi- \- ‘first one pollster got a laugh u: »f the results. He was Wilfred F l-tilt. the Literary Digest’: last “lenuntlen on Page-s Col, 4) Coming Events “I” - o5 Hall, Monday. Novem- hr- Mn l-lot Chicken Supper. l 'i.i"a‘-llfli‘ Dance, Cotes‘ Work- .\cw London, Friday night. "ltanrc, K. of C. Hall, Bouril. T! Ti\il.'\_\', November 4th. ".\li\t|ll€l‘i‘ll'l8 Dance, lone Hall, .\ v-ctnbrl‘ 5th. "Ptrluics at Morell every Tues- dot h‘l‘ld&y and Saturday. Show 8'!‘ l‘. .Vl ~l teu tickets left for the York i" c 1 tonight. Oome early! Boxt __ after. S t. ..t. Mt. Stewart every Eastern Rhythm Boys’ uillffi. "Ho: Di .\' ollxbrl‘ 10th. (Jhickeil Supper c. 'l‘l'1u-ndie l-lall, Wednesday. . . _A.- "lvuuc in Alberry Plains Hall, F‘ l‘ ll. Nznr-zilber 5th. Websterls “' ‘*"-'l'.'\. "inure tonight, Islanders Coun- l l KANSAS CITY, Nov. 8 -(iA'P)—— Harry B. 1311mm; the man who turned an apparent rout into a "miracle" victory, talked only of peace and "prosperity and hap- piness" today as the tributes oi‘ a nation rolled in. Now President of the United States in his own right, and the popular champion of its political arena, he accepted the honor with mid-western modesty. "I feel very deep‘y the respon- sibility which has fallen to my lot as the result of the election.” he said in a statement. "I shall continue to serve the people to the best of my ability. All my efforts will be devoted tn the cause of peace in lhe world and the prosperity and happiness of our people here at home." Gone was the fighting man who criss-crossed the country to win this hour of sweet victory from the depths of Democratic dcspondcnctr. Gone was the cocky air with which he closed in triumph a cam- paign the big-wigs of his partyhad said he could not win. Missing was the sarcasm with which he had promised to lflfTP the polluters to consign their forecast "to the ash cans." The 64-year-old onetime farm- boy was as humble as he was ha‘)- py as the friends of his boyhood and the comrades o! his (‘Rnlpnlltn showered him with praise. and con- gratulations. paign oratory when he predicted a Democratic vlctoiy that. would sweep the. Democrats bark into control of hnih Houses of Coucress as well as into the wintr- llntlsr. "Can you tell us how that Tru- man poll works?" asked a reporter. "No. I cant," he said. “When you wln- you can't. snv anything about ll. I'm lust happy." When the ucws came over tho Press Association printers that Governor Thomas Fl. Ttcwcy had conceded Truman's election. lrluchf- er and cheers rcsounded throuqh the corridors outside the llvinr rorxn where the President talked with his staff. Soon. the door uaas opened and (Contlruezivon Pole 5 Col 5i Two Killed If Plane trash ln Alberta m, ‘CALGARY’, Nov. a — 1GP) — ‘two meu are dead and nuc of A1- hertlrs leading oilmen is 1n 110s- pltal IOllC-Wiilg an airplane crash near Crossilcitl. Alia. last milli- Dcacl nre A. Lloyd Harrison, ill, anti J.C. Hairy. hotly of Calgary‘. tMr. ltarvlsnu was pilot of the Cab, Air Ltci, single-engine Slinsoli *1" Filth. Travellers Rest. Orchestra aircraft which crashed into a har- 7’ -' "P Vouligv Pioneers. ~ \l't:cli. Friduyu November <~ n'l clsi-ivhere in this issue. serve Wcdtiesulal’. November fol" (‘thicken and Hem Buppzr Andrew's. l‘ \" e Thursday. November Bros. Warehouse. Central R ‘aPv Music by Downtowners aid Rollie MacKenzlefs Orchestra. "my Fortune United Church Ovrken supper and Bazaar in l- .1110 Hail. Wednesday night, tuuhrl‘ 10th. “Roving llvejhliokent. caponr. Y"'»\'I Tuesday. 10 a. m. until I p. S» Hllziiest market price. R. L. Dic- . l-vm ffiwissionaryévfilldes on "One totally". Friday. November 5th. at :3‘ ‘M. St. John's Church. Crap- ll . "Prcetou-n C. C. P‘. Club meet- lnr at. the home of Alfred Curley. Friday. November 5th. Everyone aelcomsv "The Annual eetlnl or the Ksllys Cross Credt Union Limited W" be held Friday. November 5th ‘l’ f‘ P. M. special speaker. “Old tkne fiddleas and ' step dancing mnteet. Kelly's Cross flail. Mm“? fllkht. November 0th. Good prises. mnee after. Bile ofdunehee. "A Committee Meeting of the glllbooed Hospital is to be held ln_ N" Glusw inn on hie-y night. "limbo-r 5th. A full attendance it ‘Pftllested. H"In stoolncoiemen Oil Ital-nine Millers. Owen Heaters. Asphalt ‘lulu. a tow om: arllnelee. "mo: at $.00 per M. agent lattice on teed Wheat. . I. ‘Wilhelm Hunter Riva ' l u‘: forgot big annual DBllCEigafs_ 5m lihc lialcy l l t I icy field while nearing the end of a flight from Edmonton to Cal- fylr. Haley was prcsidcnt o.’ loll! Supply Compmly of Calgary. In hospital suffering from shcck and possible internal injuries is 0.0. Cross, 53, prominent Crllcalgv oltman and president or the o»: company braving his llnlue. Hos- pital atlthoiitlrs flC5CT‘lll‘(l his condition M R004- Search By Ron Corelll STONEY CREEK, N.B.. Nov. 4 — (CPI-An intensified probe for oil and natural pas deposits is hitting its stride in New Brunswick. A 15.000-squere mile lease ~ blenketing the eastern half of the Province-ls under exploitation by New Brunswick Oiifields Limited. formed 18 months ago. The area has been described as “fine potent- ial oil territory." The company, with workable ss- sets of more than 31.000900. have confined their operations mainly to fields in this district 10 miles south- west of Moncton. The IZO-equlre mils Sioney Creek fields are among the oldest in North America. Since commercial gee production began in 1019. out- put. has averaged 530010.000 cubic feet s. year. But officials prodlrt shortages for consumers in the Moncton district this winter. The search for oil and natural an are separate operations but. in many ways are complimentary. The need for |u is the most. urgent. protect. Residents of the Monclou eree, Where the majority of kitch- lnl are lea-equipped. have been subject to the inconvenience of o weekenine supply for the last few edema. Winter ll the peek period "SI I n "r s olisgliail all. c“ ' OTTAWA, Nov. 3 — for)‘ Member: and eat-member! of the Royal Canadian (Joe-pg of Signals will observe Saturday, Nov. ti, u “Signals Day" mcroaa Canada. Army headquarters today said the ceremonial will range from n drulnhead service in Charlottetown to l. parade in Toronto. Twenty-one thous- and nffleevs and other ranks served ln the eorpa in the last war. 0B0 Defers Decision 0n Television OTTAWA, Nov. 3 — (OP) — The CBC hoard of governors dis- closed today that recommenda- lions on applications for television broadcasting stations in Canada have been deferred pending study of the possibility of developing the new radio medium on a live ltasis. AD, Dunton, chnirnlan‘ of the ltoard. snlri that. broadcasters and mnnufacttncrs will he sounded out on the possibility 0f their Joining ‘lthe CBC in initial television pm. giants. He said it mirzht he three or four nlouths before a decision on the matter ls rezicilcd. but he Lhclzeved that. television will be in- ‘trnclucerl in Oanarla within the inext- two years. . . co-opera-l Democratic Elections At-A-(llancc (By The Canadian rresn At 1 AM. A.B.T. Presidential: Truman leading in 28 states with 304 electoral votes. only two of these states —— Idaho and Ohio — apparently in doubt. Dewey lead- ing in 16 states with 189 electoral votes. Of these Indiana was in doubt. Thurmond won in four states with 3d electoral votes. (266 required to elect). Senate: 133 to be elected) Democrats elected 23. Republicans elected 9. Democrats leading 1. House: 1458 seats). Democrats elected 259. Republicans elected 157. Other parties elected 1. Doubtful 18. Gains: Republican from Demo- orat 2; Democrat from Republican '72: Democrat from American Labor Psrly 1. Governors: n33 to be clectcdt. Democrats elected 23. Republicans elected 9. Doubtful l. t é_.-.-..... lFederaiiiherals To ;Stay Out 0f Provincial . Politics In lluehcc , OTTAWA, Nov a - lCPi __ ‘Liberal members of the Commons fmm Quebec. have decided that they \‘.lll tint partltipatc any longer in lhc party's ll(‘tl\lilCS lll the pro- vincial field, it was learned today. Several members who attended in ifl-hoilr caucus of Quebec mom- ‘brrs yesterday said that it. was Eazrccd the l-‘cdcral party should stick strictly to its own field. “We are finally irachlili: uhcrc we realize that mitt/l our own business in the Fedora‘. field and not. try to ltcll our pcvpie how they should unto lll the provincial lielrl," said lone of the mcmbci-s He said that. the ciucus had dealt strictly with Fcdcral platters. Some nlcmbers had argued that ‘Federal pflfllClllflllllll in the last iclcctioii cmnpnigzil ill Quebec had tun-l thc Lihrrni candidates runn- _:nl: iu llll‘ Pvuviticial flclti. i The nlcmbers said that Prcmicr inilplflfisifi repeatedly stated that ~_the members from Ottawa should ‘mind their mm ilusnlcss and not parlzcl mo tn a Pl'0\llll’ltll elect- the ‘IE zun cwnpalur. Aurl. lllt‘) adri, he-‘ l h iColitlnltrd nil Page 5 Col. ‘ll ti?» Gas Ana Oil Hitting Stride In N. B. for domestlcgos cnirsulnption. | Some Motlctonians have been re- duced to such a. slow trickle ofgas tile-y have been forced to do their cooking at night wilcn the load on the big tnnlus ls lightest. Electric- it)", oil and other fuels have been used tn some extent as substitutes hut. the great majority of Mnnoton housewives are depending nn netv natural gas deposits to relieve their cooking problems. Gas is piped to Monctnn and neighboring towns. but unless sup- plies can be boosted, hoped-for ad- ditional markets will not be sought. Since the field was discovered ill i008. 131i wells have been drilled. Thirty-three today are produclnr natural gas. 22 are producing oil. and six produce both. Natural (as is used almost entirely for heating and cooking. Consulting engineer I. Holley Poe of New Yolk says the corn- psny will continue efforts to over- come expected shortages. Engin- eers were doing a "fine lob" of de- veloping an oil and natural (as in- ditstry for the Province. He said drilling operations have not produced as much natural gas as "we would like.“ but old wells have been cleaned out and some (Continued on Pen ‘I 6-1 l’ {Expect Results From Most people put. it doun in cartl- l ‘Reefer; Car Conference Potato siizppers Lilruusihtiut the. Province have been encouraged as a result of Tuesday's night. ference at the Charlottetown Hotel bcttveen members of the P.E. Island Shippers’ Advisory Board and of- ficials of the Canadian National Railways, a local potato shipper said last night. The usefulness of sin-h an or- ganization as the Potato Shippers‘ Advisory Board to the potato l1- dustry was ivell illustrated at the ‘conference. the shipper said. for the Railway officials were able to obtain accurate lnfortnztlion re- specting the shippers‘ minimum reefer requirements for weeks in advance. They received. ton, in- Vformatlon on all phases of the ls- |land's potato industry which. dir- ,cctly or indirectly. would have a Iaeitrlng on the prclrrm of supply- ing adequate quantities of frciuilt lcars for the ntovlng of the Island‘: ‘crop. They. lllCrfllflfl‘, were able to 3 obtain all overall ‘pzcture respecting jthe shippers’ prublous which had never bcforc bccll available to them from any source. On the other hand. the members of the Advisory Board received a franker statement firm the Rall- way's rcprcscxltativcs respecting l-he xiumber of rccfei" cat's available than the individual shipper could lhupe tn receive shit-e the Railway frcpresentntives realized that the _ men with whom they were conferr- ing were qualified to spook for the f wholc potato industry of the Prov- lllfT‘. That does not mcnu, lln- shipper said. that the Railway men com- mitted themselves to supplying the island with a definite number of reefers daily for the next few weeks. nor does it mean that the Board was told in definite terms what reefer car resources the Ruli- way haeio draw upon tomeet. the present. emergency in the Province. But. the fact. that the Railway men were impressed with the prosenlatiou of the Boards case and promised all assistance pos- tContlnui-d on Page 7 Col 3) Coll- l VIGUII PAGIII I Sweep Shock To Business B! Harry T. Montgomery (Associated Press Business Editor) NEW YORK, Nov. 8 -- (AP) _ The Democratic ClCflhlufi sweep was more than a surprise for the busi- ness community. It was a shock. Wflll Stféfit and many buslnggg and industrial leaders had felt a Dewey victory Was a sure thins. Although they did not expect that s Dewey administration in Wash. tngton would bring many import- in: Policy chances. they did ex- Now they are dusting off the extensive legislative program which President Truman outlined earlier this year and which a Republican Congress vetoed in large part. lfor the last. 16 years campaigned against reactlonsries" as privilege." “glultoins and promises to rontiiluc to be for a while at 168st. which came under one Democratic FY1905‘? find PE!‘- Busincss in general has felt. the‘. Democratic regimes in Washington lF-Fflbllbll’ “Ill lllvluiifi Fwd Mllli-St- l have been .9? hostile to it. Now it is girding for lMinistry as at least four more years of goverm iTreaSUYY- ment directed by a president who Finance “Wall Street Agriculture Minister Gardiner and‘ or mrmbers Business is still good. however. also may enter min the talks. [Speculation Quantity May Be Increased By George Kitchen OTTAWA. Nov. 3 tCPt Quietly and behind the scenes, Canada and the United Kingdom} ‘are preparing to re-negotlate thel all-important food contract be-i tween the two countries. Preliminary overtures already are reported to have started in Can- ada and London and a British pect a better climate for business, ‘llcbotlating mission is expected to‘ a come to this country late this month lo open talks with the l Canadian Government. This far; there has been no public announce- unent of the negotiation plans. l However, the British mission Stratrhcy and officials of his well as the British They likely will meet Minister" Abbott andl of their Departments. Other Cnnatlznn Cabinet Ministers The contracts cover the sale to‘ Prggpgftty .l3titaln of Canadian wheat. bacon. They lapse at lregime obviously can continue under \Zll'.\'1\l2 dob“- rlrhcudins H0011 "l! lannthcr. duration of inc production year; Some segments of business are. for each l1l‘l'lf‘lll'l ‘ particularly concerned about these Their importance is two-fold. outlined this summer: 1. All excess profits tax. 2. Allocation and inventory Controls. 3. Atlthorlty to ration scarre products. 4. Price control over scarce product! essential in manufact- uring and consumption. 5. increase of the minimum } wane from 40 to ‘T5 rents an hour. ' Other points in the cause less worry. but are business. They include: 1. Restrictions for commodity spci-illailon. 2. Strmlucr rcnt. controls. 3. Authority to control wage increases which might cause a break through price ceilings. 3. Restoration of luoi-e than $50.000.03O “lllvll had hccu nut from public power and reclam- ation projects. Business as a ivhole looks with no particular relish on the prospect of revision of the Trait-Hartley ;in Truman's campaign tilatform. l-Iere, as in other llnianccs. Presi- ldent 'i‘i'uman will have a fricud- Ilicr Congress, not. one opposing him at. every turn. Business in lzeilcral does not. like the new prospect. uf lucrrnscd Federal spcudiulz. already running above $42,000,00i,0'.‘.0 a year. This and other prospective uicastircs all imply higher taxes. Popular Vote WASHINGTON. Nov. 2- -IAPl--At 10:15 pm. AST rcturns from 1‘_‘-.l,- 506 of 135,867 Vflllllil illllts showcrl the popular vote: Dewey .. 3O 171.311 Trip-n; n 22031.08‘; Wallace 1019-150 Thurmnnrl 1139.024 Total 411.107.1375 NEH’ ARFTIC PETS CHURCHILL. Mall — lCPl — Arctic Lemnitlizs are the latest household pets ilcre. Among others ‘to adopt the small nnilnals. which are plentiful this soasniz. are the. ‘Ohlate Fathers. ulto hate a pair -thnt were found on the road. ALIA?! Illll points in the Truman program as They are llllPflHRilt. in Britain be- program pvill tally and the prices she. must none- lpay Canada for them. theless getting close attention from l labor law, one of the biggest planks ‘ pause she needs them to bolster the rzcaizcr British dirt. ‘To Canada, they loom lorlzo as the kcy factor in the. Govnrulncutis policy stabilization for the farmillc, iildust- , -t'_\. All other cutlslderatiolls lint-W it-llhslandmo. they have helped to O ». koop farm prices hiizh since the lint‘ _\'(‘.1l's. \\lhl‘.o here, the British mission‘ ‘ill ti§CllSS quantities and prices’ ‘-.he quantities of produce she May Increase Buying ‘ Observers here noted that Brit- lfllll has becit prcsslnlz Canada. to release the lll1Fp€l1t but "frrvaenfl li-emaindor ~ 370000.000 — of the l (Continued on ‘Eggs 7on1.’ '1) t rcpt [year-old Toronto youth who made o short-lived escape. from Kink- ston Penitentiary last April 26, to- murdering John D. Kennedy", prison messenger For his filarnvnry that DD] was in the world. Dr. Paul Mueller. Swiss research r-llcinlst. was awarded the and with the most powerful insecticide Nnhol Priz" lll phyualolocy tncrllclnc. ltlYl" is vreilltcli snvlnr: tho livcs nf thousands ‘servicemen and civilians (lentil h_v inscct-bnrne diseases. News In Brief OTTAWA. Nov. 3 _- iCPt — In the first nine months of i548. ell- ough beer “as produced in Canada citizen l0 gallons were i distributed to let. every man, woman --- - and child smoke more than 900. to give every apiece and enouah clgarets KINGSTON. Ont.. Nov. Ii Howard Urquhart. day was acquitted of durintz the break. OTTAWA. Nov. 3 lC/Pl Purchases to date of Canada sav- payroll savings plarl amount to $90.5’l4.350. and the Bonk nf Canada announced come will place the. total above last year's mark of $l0fl.000,000 and possibly record of lngs bonds through the ‘odny that returns still to around the first $1l4.(t00.000. series from ‘Complex U. System Delayed Resul NEW YORK. Nov. a ~to1=>--‘ More than 12 hours passed after all pulls closed in yesterday‘ presidential election before Gov-. crnor Tlznnlos Dewey of New York conceded victory to Harry S. Tru- limit. ’I‘hut wfls an indication nf the mmost-uilprcredenicd closeness of ‘he contest. For a time, political experts in Washington thnulzht it. might be a stalemate. with no candidate ceiling a majority in the electoral troilclze which. under the constitution. chooses the Presl- c dent. in that case. decision would; have been up to the new Housel of Represervativcs. I S. Voting lions. The result. of a Canadian gen- leral elect-inn oftcn is known with certainty before the last polls close party of Parllaltnrnt. forms the new govern- ment. Its leader normally becomes 1n HfltlFh Columbia. The which elects most. members Prime hflnister. The ballots a sinlzlc cross a few mulM-mrirlhcr czcs» The count lzocs quickly. Not so ip the United States ContlnViiVPdAZnAEh-atzehbwColiB)’ l Gypsies Quitnlklcllifiax As Police Get Tou ts But it was more than a close vote that. caused the delay. It was l .the complexity" of American elec- to be counted have tor two or three in constituen- gh are mlt to lVictoryOne 0f Greatest Upsets In ll. S. History By Clyde Blackburn NEW YORK. Nov. 3 -(CP> -< Harry S. Truman today won in hie own right the presidency of the United States which he has held by succession since April, 1945. . The former Missouri farmerand haberdasher. who defied -all “ex- pert" and popular belief that he could not twin. beat Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York in one of the great upsets of Ameri- can political history. And he not only extended the 16-year Democratic regime in thl White House—to an all-time record of 20 years~but he led his party back into power ln both the Senate and the House of Representatives where the Republicans took cons trol in the congressional election! 0f 1946. "I feel very deeply the responsi- bility which has fallen to my lot as a result of the elections." h! said in a statement from his hornl ln Independence, Mo. "All my efforts will be devotedt-I \ the cause of peace in the world an the prosperity and happiness ‘ our people hcre at. home." Dewey (loncedcs Defeat At. 12.15 a.m. AST~12 1-2 hou after all polls had closech-Dewe made public a messare to Truman contzratulatlnc him on victory. henrtloat. congratulations tq ;vnu nn _\'rlll1" election and avg rcontlnuerl on Paz-JT-Cnl. 5i tirnao Aoour (HE) ' ouvlo suavavov. n, Wllo Wttltco (o ltttevi rllow FAR APART." to our (sauna. Post's? ‘r ' § TORONTO. Nov. 3—(CP)—Mlnlq mum and maximum temperatures] Vancouver ‘~15, -—; Victoria 44, 53 Edmonton 34, 43; “Winnipeg 40, 44 London 45, 54; 'l‘oronto 50, 56', Oh tawa 38. 56; Montreal 43, 57, Que- bec 34. 50; Saint John 32, -; Mono- ion 25. 52; Halifax 35, 50; Charlottee town .11. 49; Sydney 28, 51; Yarn mouth Ill. 51. HALIFAX, Nov. K-ICPt-Offi- cial inland forecasts issued tonight hy the Dominion Public Weather office at. Halifax and valid until midnight Thursday. Synopsis: By Thursday afternoon there will ho signs of a break in the spell of finc weather, xvhlcli has favored the Wariilmes. Skies ll ,ihe soilthwcstcrn regions will be- come overcast. By Thursday even- ing rain la expected in spread into Southern Now Brunpvlck and Soulhwcslcru Nova Scoiln. ‘These Pllnnrgcs trill Tllitlll from a tllsturh- nnco, now south of New York. By tonlnrrnv.’ it will he. npprnachln] the hint-Him»: from the southwest, On Friday rnorninrr rain ll likely t4 spread over molt of the district‘ During the night temperatures will i T! mink ‘h’ l“ P’ he lmv nnri frost will nccilr in mp5! HALIFAX, Nov it ICPt .. may“. 1» it»; for u=_'" sold one oflof H,’ rg:1r"\“> $01119 290 S."l3~‘l°5 "m “H313 llhlsilllfi 811W" i Regional Fr-recarts:—- city because one cl their number. Il- The i.\'l7‘"‘5- lit‘ Falfl- "Ellldmi Prince Fitlward island: Clear to- youusz dark-eyed heaut-l‘. landed the trial of Altlxle _ hcr ace haslmgh; and Thurgdn,“ Fm" “nigh. C0111‘! Mid ‘hf P"?! MP- “ilFtllflit varied from l8 to l4 with sufcfl-sbll’? hilt. mild daytime temperature! much." . court appcnroitccs - n: their own linlrsriay. Light winds. Low early The rnanlillg gypsies — lamest‘ ilinl. Alltllc snirl slu- took her silr-l,'l‘lllis-srin_v ntornin: and high in tho colony ever in settle here. at one; ‘time -~ are atoning only to heal-l the court's sentence Nov. if“ azairtst. Annie Dcmltnr, charged‘ with stealing while zlvinlz tum a healthy hull. l. Pm- mm-e than a weak Anoiewl counsel tried hard to prove her. innocence and get ball but the maiztstrste said: "Not even $10000 Gypsies are birds oi’ pnssltzc. Yoirvc got them today _ and you llnveul not than tomolrcov." But itifldv Anule appeared in; ~ourt with a change of munscl‘ and surprised a crowded court-l _rnnm by pleadllll lullty‘. The hll-l larious lentil aranglo fimled nut‘ just when it seemed about. in imp.‘ As an anti-climax the magistrate; mgr-cod to release her on 8300 halll llfld set Nov. l0 fer sentence, Her‘ inew counsel said: "I don't. think ‘there's naurh rirqiht to whether she will he hcre next. wreck." Already forlune-telllitg booths: have closed and trunks are packed with gully-colored clothes and bright ornaments. Some families. prepared to leave tonight. mime mitm. Kin: Dex-nit ro arrived here m- dav from his 'l‘nrontn home after ~ , . a sertnatfs til-allot . "noting rlr-layrrl iw Llness. His son,‘ {mm n‘; gypsy ‘K111i! l)€-',-'lili‘1'YlOl)ll nl (‘hnrlottetntvn 33 and, i531 i l-ilizh tide this afternoon at 1).: and tnniqht at 12.34. Sun sets this afternoon at 4.4! n mm” by (yynsv raving, giro trawl rt-n-s tomorrow rnornin; at in Halifax. 1O“ Th‘, Gym“, WW1,‘ m“ H, n. Milrisgélugrl; moon Novelnbll‘ .h ‘t .Th ‘ik it. ' » - - mum f" i” Wm" w i P Summerstde tide eighteen mine here, but. they say they can alternative to leavlnlr. They will probably hen-d hack‘ to Toronto from where most came. Aunio om taken into court. altar, l‘.l< l an Estonian seamen TlllSEPtl wallet, and $12 after hein: hunted black-haired beauty. The. recently l Gatinda after cross- ins; the Atlantic in a small boat. He t~l.'l police he woe llaselul ll hy the roamsn had been just admitted to l?! I10 mites later than Charlottetown. Dally Except Sunday CAR. FERRY "AREGWl-‘JT’ Fllentlsrd Time lmavea Borden. lHll AM" l PM; . 6.30 l"- M. 2.40 P. M., 7.30 l’. M. SUNDAY Leaves Borden 8.45 l’. M. Loaves Tormcntlno I I’ .M. “T100 ISLANDS -- (‘ARIBOU watrrli l‘ fortune-datum shop Mflnm" Nnvmbef l“ "h" '1'" “m “W” ‘m m’ “'1'” Dolly including Sunday tiftw .1 t". ill" iotfifil him tn Antoni ghndud Th“. llle did and mot. with her enthrnce ‘ 'I‘hcu he was told tn leave, he said. Susplclmls paxsershy -- wit- Lenvee Wood Islands. Prints Nova. I A. M, 1 P. ‘.\l. Charlee A. Dunning. 11 A. M. rlesses st. the hearing ~ stiller-steel 3 p, M, his wallet might. be misting and, ‘ a check proved their theory cor- ping l A. M. l P. M. “We don't went to leave. hmlrm‘ Leena Cortisol. Charles A. Dr Pd"?! Nova, l]. A. M. I P. II- l-nartln Tormrntlno 10.!!! A. l.