MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN The hearings of most subtle [1 serrations lie in the application of ob- ==~ . The Guardian Three Gent-a blaming Daily Ioundeil illi. .CHARLOTTETOTWN, caivaogvwaonasoav,“ Novas/tiara 1o, T1948 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CANADA HAS FAVORABLE TRADE BALA Cwontmunist Forces Continue To Make Gains Big Aviation Plant To Open Near Halifax Early In December (Canadian Press) ' All preliminary arrangements have been completed for the Mari- times’ first aviation plant and work 1, scheduled to get underway the frat week in December. Falrey Aviation Company of Can- gla, a $6,000,000 subsidiary o! the British Fairey firm, will establish m; plant at Eastern Passage, the largo mllltanv-clvillan airport near Dartmouth. across the harbor from llalifax, it will be housed in the former lribonnnued on Page o Col. 1) ——-—————i e Coming Events "Dance. Iona Hail, Wednesday November 10th. "Fliiclcen suppcr in Lorne Talley llill, Nov. llth. "Dance at Cherry Hill School Friday; November 12th. "Dance Briitzht Spot tonight 9.30 till t. "fiance in Long liiver Hall Wed ‘ n1 sday. Nov. 10. Door prize. "Regular Dance. Coins‘ Work- sl-ip, New London, Friday night. "liot chicken filllilPf. Si. Char lea Wednesday evening, Nov. 10th. "Hot (‘hicks-n Dance, "fracadie Hall, Nivrznbci‘ 10th. Slipper and Wednesday, "iiance, Mt. Siruart, vverv Thursday‘. Eastern Rhythm Boys‘ Orchestra. "Come to the Dance at Millvieii l-lakl. Noavmber 10th. Lunches. lililliit-ixi orchestra. "Chicken Supper. Plcasant Val- lcy School. November 10th. Serving from 5 l”. M. "FPme Thurs. ay to the ha; Ailliliili‘? Diuve. Islanders Cotinlry iixib ‘Travellers Rest. "fiance and Box Social. Pleasant Grove llnll. Thursdirv, November l"li. - "l.c:iiin llancc Strlia l-Liris iiilii 'il‘.‘ll'§ti<’i_\’. Nov. ll. Procncils in aid i»i rink. Arlniissitin S0 cv-uts. lo Pcwnal for Ho’.- "n Supper. Thursday. Novcin- , illli, Supper fi-Jl. ' ‘Pirkdale Wcritcnls ihinfry Stilt’, Friday". Hardware. lnFilllllti 2.30. Razors . "'l"i"iuity l'ti.itc:l 1'. »:i Tm ani Bazaar. l\ ivcznhcr ifl‘h. church After- Tliiirsdajr. "'l'i"von Uniicd (‘hiirch Chicken Flnncr and l3azaar lu Communiw Hail. Thurgilay‘. Novcmbcr llth. "Viiickcii niid ililill Supper r-t i¢ir~iivci~ Boyle's. Ncw ilavon, Wetl- iir-dav. Novri-nbvr 10th, Supper m vcd at 5.30. "Farmers Mertill. MIKE Hall, Friday night. to hear Super- ‘iiir-nticizi lixp~riiuculril Station and oiicrs discuss Artificial Insemin- auon. "Reserve Thursrla_i' nightmNov l ilth for Lcizfon dance in Itustico lloll. Art Gallmu and his Wcsl- rm Four supnlvini! Hill-ii? 01d‘ tlmc and modern. Refreshments- "Iinnual Meeting Kingston Branch Nn. .10, Canadian legion, Thursday. November 11th, at, 8,30 P. ,\i. in Kingston School. Old and new members please attend. "Come and enjoy yourself, Armistice Dance, also Cards. Vic- torts Hall. Thursday. 11th. Prizes. door prize. Admission 25c Dav» Roswelfs Orchest rn. Auspices Women ‘s Auxiliary Canadian futon. "For the benefit of those un- Ihie to gain admittance, York Concert will he repeated one hlizht only - Hiday, Nov. l2. Ad- mission at door 50 cents, This is positively the final performance, Curtain 8.1!! sharp. "Will he loading hogs at the foliowina points each Thursday’ Elmer Wigniorc, Bradalbane, until 11.30 a. m.: Borden Bagnall, Hun- fer River. mtil noon: Bummer- lide until 1.30 p. m; ‘kid Ken- , ilic illilifilllilllPili anti ls Promoted y To Command 17th Reece \\'ord tins il‘l'l‘|'i'i‘!i _\ ',»ll‘l‘ti-i_\' Ul [iromohnn Oi Nizljoi" A. \\', lingers, (‘lmrloiti .i,-\\ Il in (‘filillllllllii the lTih itccce ltegi- inent. Royal (‘anadian Armoured Corps iftrscrvi» FOFPPY, with ihr rank of Licuicuant Loloi ti. Ltstlol. Rogers had licz-n second lfl-(‘Ollllllilllfi of the unit since liliy, i946, ilc Stlt‘l‘l'f‘iiS Bllflilliirl‘ itciti. 17.30., EL), wiia has noon ap- pointed in command a brigade. Co]. Rogers joined the P, E. 1 ilighliindcrs as a Lleut. in 193a and \vas called tip on actirt: $-'l\‘ll‘C with this uiiil at the \\‘lll' ill Sept. "Jill. ill‘ was irzinsfcrrcil to the \\esi Nova Scotia liiizhiunticrs in iilarch '40 and proceeded overseas with the \\'cst Novies that same, year. lis- ldught with the West bone; through (ho Sicilian mid lizilizm ('.'liil]lll,FiiS tllllii tho unai |'\'ilL‘ll<‘(i liic north of Romc, Before [il‘(.lt'l‘t'.‘(iiilfl to Sicily vloi Rogers was promoted to the rank nf (Yapt. in '42. ilurini: the fighting at, Ortonn he was promoltd to the rank of lllrijtir. While in i|1li_\' Col. KOgPIS was harlly smashed up in a -..uvo\ tic: cidcnt niiri was lil\'ilil(il.‘li initk in Eupzlzinil and then hack in Canada, in October‘ ill-ii. iic I'l‘t"‘l\'t‘fi 1t mcnlioiirii ir, dis pzilchi-s iinrini: the ill".‘t\'_\' figliiiiii, \\‘ili‘ii iili‘ Allied “(r smu iiiii; the lliilt>t' iinrl \\'li_v arixics iiii: iCnntuiucri nil (Robert Wilkins. his wile and 10- year-old son are in hospital today alter a rcscue from a Queen Char- lotte Straits rock ivhlch had been iilPll‘ Egg Island lighthouse home. The trio escaped being svcallowad tender rescued them from fotir day's of starvation and exposure. Wilkins gave this account of his family's 96-hour horror.) BY ROBERT WILKINS RED CROSS HOSPITAL, Bella Bella, B. C,, Nov. 9 — iCPi - We were‘ listening to elect-ion results last Tuesday night. There was a lot. of noise outside but we were used to the pounding of the sea. About midnight my wile, Marie. turned in. Our bedroom was on the main floor. At 2 a.m. the crash of breaking glass awakened me while I was dozing on the cheater-field. My wile cried out that a wave till‘! broken the window and soaked the bed. Still we were not exactly alar'med. Alter mopping up the water. I opened a door and found myself staring at black, swirling water. Shouting to my wile t0 dress I pulled open the sun porch door and Tomorrow being REMEMBRANCE DAY And o Public Hoi ‘ The neat issue o THE GUARDIAN’ Will V? FRIDAY, NO MIER i2 llhzton until 3 p. in. MacEwen and melee ,- “ t iulhrcak of‘ Bescribes Escap Lighthouse Swept Away up by the sea when a cannery‘ Named in remembrance, Soft tread the Angels on P.E.i. Ayrsiiires lScoreAtAmherst AhillEJllST. h’ 3%., Nov. 9—-ISyiec iallflln the heaviest Diiiy Cattle competition at the Maritime \\"in ter Fair. Island Ayrsiiues were showing to ndvliniani- today‘. with a faiirly even disiriliutinn .1.’ honours" between ilic (our Prime Erluzutl ‘Island exhibitors. Leitchcrnft fiallant, owned‘ by Keith Boswell 8s Sons. Victoria was first senior bull call and declared Junior Champion. out of over 2f; ‘entries, ifairvue Nita. fi\'»’l-,'(i oy A. l Mcilac Kr Sons, Churloiicluuii “a1. itamcd Junior Champion Friiiali- ovcr 56 entries. Almon Wood, ltiarsnllc/i. SilUiVlllj, at Amherst. for the first limo sunr- ed a first with his Junior Bull c-nlf. East River (lid Sill!‘ ucuinsi h cn- trics. which included Lr-nlaniis Royal Tops, owned by licith [>05 well and Sons which came fourth. Senior Yearling Bud section wvith thrcc exhibits was won by Experimental Farm, (‘harlntituouii with Charlottetown Sir I-{odiiick 7th and A. McRac and Suns saint- first in hoth the Jtuiioi Junior Gct of Sire sections. iZ-YEAII SICNTENFT SYDNEY, N. 5., Nov. ii -- iCPi v William Fyfc, 42, of nearby Suyitey Mines today was sentenced ‘.0 l2 years in prison after con- iiction on a charge of incest. eAs uldnt believe my cycs. The whole porch was goiic. l "Get the boy," I shouted to my ivilc. ivho ind only time to pull on a pair of slacks as she rushed upstairs, With a chair. I smashed a window facing the landmxiangled my feet trying to find the plank walk l knew should be there. When I let go I dropped about six feet 'irito the ravine the walk vised to span. i I got my son oti the rock and ltook him to shelter, then went lback for Marie, My wile lowered ltlie boy's cncker- spaniel, climbed out herself and we traded ashore, l By then the whole rock was quivering like jelly. We crossed the lbridge onto Egg Island, which was lnlso quivering. The lighthouse was on a separate rock. Bridge approaches had been swept away, but we clambered up and crept to the other side of the slope. We stood there watching a huge ivave mount higher and ihigher until it covered the rock we had just left. That monstrous wave lifted the lighthouse bodily several feet into the sir and swept it over the bridge we had just, crossed. In less than an hour, the rock was swept. clear of all buildings. We stayed in the lean-to shelter nearly two days. on the second day we could not stand to see our son Dennis iio hungry any longer and killed our 1 pei rabbit... and lucked into the animal, cooked over s small lire. Saturday, the crew of the boat Sunny Moy answered our signals and we were soon comfortably swatheii in blankets in its bunks. licrii and The Little Wooden Crosses There on the hillsides row on row they stand, Hallowed the ground wherein each liero lies; Each spread his wings on that great homewurd flight , to new horizons, for beyond the skies. Let not eocli mother‘: feors like jewels full in vein, nor broken hearts more anguished be, Theirs is u birthright‘ better for than that! Tlieir choice is Home! Deep Love! Peace! Hormonyi Lord, from eocii little cross, iieor Thou this plea, Eternal is Thy watch o'er load and seal Witlt glory crowned, supreme on liill and ploln Out there beyond the cenotupli they stand; Out tliere—the cross of sacrifice so great’- Deutii’; toll of manhood’: flower from every lon., Each little cross baptized with falling teors even through i-he years Crosses, wooden crosses fringed with vulour: Rest liero rest, ull wars for thee ure o'er; O'fi' comes this thought, Soft tread the Angels on that Golden Shore- o soothing balm to sorrow tltof Golden Shore. Earth needs Thee and Thy Peace, Ol hasten Ldrdl Soon may all peoples voice this, in accord. -John Robert Lamont Campbell lSurprise Hurricane ilieported Off Florida l , MIAMI, Fla., Nov. 9 -- (APi —‘ ‘A sitrpriso November hurricane; ivhippcd the Atlantic ofl Florida, with 75-nule winds tonight. i The storm was centred abouti 450 miles east of Melbourne, l"la., and was moving worst-northwest- ivard. 4 " ' Grady Norton. chief storm tore- caster licre, said the disturbance, liegair to develop the proportions of it storm lastnlght, and a nayy hurricane hunter today found it, had reached hurricane force of 75 miles an hour. Further increase in intensity was expected. Its course was in the direction .o.’ the North Florida and Georgia coast. jiiritish ilave No iPians For Deep Air Ilaid Shelters l LONDON, Nov. o~ (AP) lLciboi- Government docs not plan‘ to di: deep air-raid shelters for lcivillans for protcctioti against lhel latom iitmb until they are proved. l necessary. The Government recognizes the} l§l0SSll1ilili0S of new weapons such, !as the atom bomb but policy re-, |mains against. construction of deep: l —The i-licllers at, this aime. This was disclosed tonight with. the publication of the Govern- ment's measure for creating a new ,civil defence organization. When the bill becomes law the Government plans a recruiting campaign for volunteers, Matty lWlll he veterans of the German air raids of the Second World War. | Thcy will he sent to fmlr train- ing centres which will be opegd as soon as possible. Men e54 ‘women will PQCCiVQ instruction, The bill calls for halting demo- ilition of existing air raid shelters used in the last. war. The Home Office has already issued orders ,to this effect. f There will protection which war. be less emphasis on against pciison gas, was not used in the last. island Foxes Grand Champs AMHERST N5. Nov. 9 -(Bpr,c- lain-George A. Calibcck of Surn- merside continued his successes at the Maritime Winter Fair today by winning the Grand Championship, and Champion Male and Female in standard Platinum Foxes; Grand Championship and Champion Male in Standard Silvers; Champion Male in Glacier Blue and first in both medium and light male. whelped in 194! in the latter colour phase, He won five other classes. Ernest T, Mill, Kensington, won tile Grand Championship and Champion Male and Female in White Marked Silvers. In standard Pletinunis he won both the male and female classes wheiped in 1948. and showed first female. wheiped before 194! in Glacier Bluel ltlateway To Nanklng is Menaced NANKINO. Nov. 9 -(lAP) _ 511N100" Bateway to Nanking, was menaced today by three Chinese Communist columns driving in hard from the north, west and east. Simultaneously. Communist guer- rillas knocked out a 100-m1le stretch of the rail linking Suchow with Nanking. Suchow is 170 miles by air and 208 miles by rail north- west ol Nanking, Adding to the troubles of the bard-pressed Government division on the Suchow front was an unof- ficial but reliable report that six regiments there went over to the Ccimmtmists, Gen. Chen Yrs Commiuiist, arm- ies oi’ Eastern China appeared bent on isolating Suchow, head- quarters for all Government forces in that, area. and setting it [Up for a knockout. blow’. Unofficial reports reaching this nervous capital nave this picture of Suchowfls shaky position: The Government armies are strum: out, on a front shaped like a giant. cross with Surhow at, the centre. The perpendicular bar of this position is the railway from Nani»:- ing to North China. The cross bar is the east-ivest Lungihai railway cast and west, of Suchow. One (‘omimtinist column, moving directly south, has captured ilanviitianz. on the railway to North China 24 miles north oi Suchow. A second Communist, coluiznn- trylnae’ to crumble thewvestern win; of this line, has seized Tangshari. on the Luiiehai railway wrest, of Stu-hon: The third Communist failing upon Suction"? eastern plank. has overrun Tariciheng, 70 miles cast and slightly‘ north of Stichow, coin-mu. All vras gloom elsewhere in China, Rice riots broke out in Shanghai. whore a ticw surge of inflation has left thousands hunsry The United S ates mission to Cilillti promised n mot distribution of rice, but, the sittiaiion in slianchai was be- coming steadily itzlicr. Chinese were clamoring for place seats to’ not out, of Pciping in menaccd North China About, 47 of the 2B0 Britons and 150 of the. 525 Americans ll’l Pclping planned to leave. One wild ill-Tim‘ siveepinz Peipin; was that, vice-president. Li Tsuna- Jean, Gen. l'~‘u Teo-Yi. government "orrmander in North China. and Li Yl-Sao. No. l (‘ommuiiist leader in Maurliurla. liari banded together to from a coalition g'i\'l'l'llll’l€l‘ii. Li Tsunv-Jcqn repeatedly has denied "itch Tfl‘1f‘"i<, Qqiiarp "old Snail I]! Rocky Mountain Area iliilNYER. ‘Nov,’ 9 - VAT" —,A cold snap almost like that of dead of winter swept much of the Rocky ‘Mountain arca last night and to- day. Fania was Colorado's coldest snot with ilte incrctiry shrinkiuz to four decrees below‘ zero. If, was t-hrer hciruv at Leadville, Golo. and two below a‘ ‘Laramie, Wvo, Ala- mosn, Cold. checked in with zero. Three Rivers Man , iicquitted 0f Murder THREE RIVERS, Que. Nov, i)- ICPi Fcrnand Grenler, 28- ycar-old insurance salesman, was acquitted by a jury today of the strangulation killing of 15-year-old Rita Lafontain. The jury deliberated less an hour. The girl's body was found last January hanging from a school lire. escape, her scarf tight about her neck. A crown medlco-legal ivitness, Dr. Jean Marie. Rnusel, tinder cross- cxaminniion today testified that a suicide theory ivas "more probable" than murder. Regard For Law Proves Costly in. This Case TORONTO, Nov. 9 --iCPi - Police said today that one Toronto citizen's regard for the law per- mitted a small lire in the window of a downtown store last night to gfflw into a $5,000 blaze while he stimmoiied firemen. The window could have been smashed and the fire smothered by hand, police re- ported. but said the citizen told than, "I didn't want to break the law." than - Maxims _ OIL MERE MAN True poets are the guardians of the ehta. 16‘ Subscriptions Delivered 86.00. Mall 85.00; other Provinces I U. I. I'M». WITH U. S. I11 China lEXIIOTtSEXGQBii Prince County. l’. E. l., (centre) receives congratulations Bailey, President of the Maritime Winter Fair (left) and Fraser Boss of C-I-L, which donated the grand championship cash prize of MR5. Rotate King Acclaimed Mr. L. Frank .\lurph_v, i948 Maritime Potato Kim: nf Carleton Siding. from (l. F. Island Honors in‘ Jersey Glasses AMHERST, —N.WS, Nov. 9 (Special) -_ Island Jerseys con- tinued to score heavily at the Maritime Winter Fair yesterday with ,\laid's Pansy. owned by Edi- ‘miz the Senior and Grand Female Championships. Edison B. Mutch and Keppock Jersey Farm divided the other Island honours as follows: Class 25. Sec, 26. Senior Herd. 1, ,E.'dlsoit B, Mulch; 2, Keppock Jersey ; Farm. I Sec, 26. Breeders Herd. l, Edison IE. Mutch; 2, Keppock Jersey Farm. ' Sec. 29. Senior Get of Sire. ll, Keppock Jersey Farm. Sec. 30. Progeny of Dam. Edison B. Mutch. A Jersey breeder for 20 years, Edison B. Mutch has been show- 1. standing success. Last year's winn- ers have been sold to breeders in Quebec, British Columbia and Vermont, U. 5., where they continued to win many honours. year, to say nothing of the many firsts and placlngs, Mr. Mulch has repeated his last year's successes. Showing for the first time at the Winter Fair, Dr. J. P, Lantzfls Keppock Jersey Farm entries with Harold Stead in charge and LEO Gallant, herdsman. have made an lcxccllcnt, showing. Fine-honed to a ioegree. these Jerseys were popular with the show crowds, mapy re- marking on their likeness to lawns, The entry consisted of 5 sons and R daughters of the famous Bramp- uiirs Standard Chester II \\'ili(‘ii is owned bv the P. E. l. Jersey Club. Qu OTTAWA. Nov. 9 — (C?) -~ A si,fl0o,000,000 dream was revived today when Canada and the Un- iited States ordered another look ‘at ilie Pnssarnaquoddy project for iharncssiniz the tiltlllillilil BM‘ 0f iPuucly tides for electric flower. l Dormant, since 1036 after a 87,- lotxinfln investment by the US. the giant snltetne, came back to life sweats lcd by Senator Oven Brew-‘ the two countries ordered their international joint commission to ,make it limited review of the lQimddy prospects as a possible lprelude to a lull-scale investiga- ltion. , But. the External Affairs De- lparinient maria it, clear that, be- iycnd a preliminary study, there ‘are no Government Cfmimilmetlts rm either side concerning the pro- posal to produce horsepower from the great, tidal range of the waters on the Maine-New Brunswick bowler. The, itiqiiir' by which has jrisdictlon over Can- ada-US. boundary waters, won't. m. beyond finding out how larza and expensive an inveiitization would be needed to determine whether Quoddy is feasible. Alter that. it will he up to the Govern- ments to decide Ll ihr! want. this fuller investigation, While today‘! action is a join‘. one, it is understood to result a ing for some 5 years with out-I have , With two Grand Championships this _ oddy Power ljioject Dream Again Revived (War Veteran Killed In Parachute Jump RIVERS. Mali, Nov. 9 -—tCP)—- Lieut. Gerald A. Lynch, 30, of Montreal plunged to ms death to- ,clay in a. parachute jump that was l part. oi a tiotnbined operations dem- onstration put on for a. party of , press and radio visitors to illIiS ‘ijilillt air school. Officers said there lwas only one chance in a million lfor such an accident. An overseas veteran and a skill- , ed parachutist, he was one of about .47 nmgsuson B. Mutch. North River, \\'illl‘i- 45 men in a special company who Jumped from three Dakota aircraft l at 700 feet, He had made 64 Jumps ‘previously and was an instructor, , Thirty reporters and as many ‘servicemen, none aware of what WES actually happening, saw him ‘hurtle towards the ground as both this main and emergency para.- lchiites failed to save him. l Officers said the automatic main iparaohute opened only partially. And when Lynch pulled the emer- gency it apparently caught in the lines ol the first chute. He was alive when medical aid reached him but died about an hour later. ‘His was the first death of more than 20.000 paratroop training jumps Canadian servicemen have made since the war. Lynch's widow lives st the army base at nearby Shilo. , Officers said the company, part of the staff of the Combined Op- erations School. makes a jump once a tnonth and that this jump would have "been made regardless of the press visit. vsncoovaahiaairiifisooraa VANCOUVER, Nov, 9 ~— (CPI- Tito street cars collided, traffic \\ as snarled and hundreds of com- muters and motorists arrived lat-e for work today as the year's worst ‘fog blanketed Vancouver and the ‘ZOWPT mainland. The “pea souper" delayed all ground and air transit ischcriulcs. most entirely tron LLS. initiative ‘The Canadian Government, has ;not taken any actue P?!" in Push‘ lint: the Qucddy scheme. The US Government itscit‘ ap- pal-gully h,“ hccu content. to let the mailer slide siiire i906, but 111 recent months it iia< ‘pfpgguffl from some “nine inter- ‘ester, Republican of that, state The new move reopens consid- eration ril a scheme that has been in the public eye, oil and on, for ,around a quarter rl a century. 1 The plan, proposed oriiltiially in the early 1920's, rxriuld call for the productiiin n: rimomio kilowat‘, hours of 0if",'il'lf'li\' annually ‘through a huge development for titiliziiiz the tides. It, ivould involve the dammina inf Passamaquoddy Bay, on the ‘border, and CohscoOk Bay. lrlnz ‘uilioliy’ within the State of Mainc. the Commission, Poiivcr would lie pl'0(‘illl‘<‘(‘i by con-i Lffiiiillg iilp flow between the ti». ibasins ' Opposition in the original plan developed in New Brunswick and 'Nnva Scotia, chiefly because of lpossihiliiyc of damaee t,o the her- Tififl-Sdflllllc iitdusiry of the area. lA joint. US-Canads committee tinvestigaicd the fisheries but iii-ought in an aspect inconclusive - | report. been under l limports First Time In 3 Years OTTAWA. Nov. F! -(CPi -Can- atlas Iona-sanding Adicrse baf- ance of trade with the l‘ni=c,l States has finally cracked under the pressure of the Government program to cut down imports and boost exports to her southern neighbor. The break came, the Bureau of Statistics reported today, durinz September when the Dominion, for the first time since August. 1945. awning the trading balance her way by selling more goods to the Amer- icans than she. imported lrcm them The net. result, was a favorable balance for (‘anada of $11,400,000. Excludinz izold. (‘anada sold the U.S. $162,000.000 worth of merch- andise in September and imported only 31.52.700.000, The Bureau said it was the first credit balance since August, 1.045, when war shipments to the ITS were tapering off, and the first substantial peacetime credit balance since the middle 1930s. The September credit, together with sticcessive decreases in the adverse balance in earlier month- of this year. brought, the cumnlpii. ive debit. balance for the ‘hinti- months ended Sept, 30 to 8205.700,- 000 against, $718.300.000 in the cor- (Contlnued on Page 5 Col. 7) faaniias AREN'T (it: only ones-to that: fit-WAR Liviiie Fkotliffiie-Soii. ' iiow ‘soot Kile.‘ i Laminates; .-_.->, TORONTO, Nov. 9-—tC?)-—Mini- mum and maximum temperatures. Victoria 27, 47; Edmonton 28, 47; Regina 15. 33: Winnipeg 16. 38, Ton onto 41, 57; Ottawa 33, 54; Montreal 41. 53; Quebec ——, 50; Saint John 37, 54; Moncton 30, 56; Halifax 41 56; Charlottetown S6, :32; Sydney 36, 52; Yarmouih 40. 55. HALIFAX. Nov. O — (OP) _ Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax and valid until midnight Wednesday, with an out- ' look for Remembrance Day. Synopsis: On auesaiiy thin men tlioud spread over the Maritimes. After- noon temperatuures were mostly ill the low 50's. By mid-evening thick cloud had begun to spread unto the western regions. The high lpressure centre near Sable Island !l! continuing to recede eastward land a ilJSillrbBHCe over the Great. lLakes is moving northeastwarrl. .This will bring an increasing wurrent of warm moist air from the south into the Maritlmes. Rain ivill spread into the western regions ,wednesda_v alight. while in the eastern sections of the district the clouds will thicken. As a fresh mas: 4-! cooler air approaches from tht west the outlook is for shower: ‘on Remembrance Day. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Clea: ‘ becoming overcast Wuinesday ‘afternoon. Mild Wednesday. Light ivmds. Low early Wednesday morn- ‘mg and high in the afternoon at iCnarlottct-oun 40 and 5B. Outlook for Thursday - Showers 'and mild. lligh tide this morning at 1.10 and this evening at 0.44. Sun sets this evening at 4.38 and rises tomorrow morning at 652. Pull moon November 16th. 2,31 M Summerside tidc eiahteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. iiaiiy Except Sunday Standard Time (‘All FERRY "ABEHWEIT" Leaves Borden, 0.10 A.M.. ‘l 12M. 4.30 P. M. [leaves Tormentine 10.85 A. M. 2.40 l’. M" 7.50 l'. M. SUNDAY Leaves Borden 6.45 l‘. M. Leaves Tnrmcntine ti I’ .M. WOOD ISLANDS — (‘ARIBOD i Beginning November 1st Daily including Sunday ' Standard Time Leaves “'00s! Islands. Prince Nova. I A. M" 1 P. M. Charles A. Dunning. ll A. M. 8 P. M. Leaves Caribou, Charles A. Dun- ning I A. M" 1 P. M. Prince Nova, ll. A. M, 3 l’. M; _l gss-pezc». xfif-"f 7; ~