MAXIMS 0l'A MERE MAN p--:- A P .,...uai:y. arj' ,, on-rleri h 5 5, 1, 30.00. other Provinces ualonless bride breeds divine Charlottetown. O-unmsrsldo sts.oo pg: umum, mung". and U. E. A. llB.00 per IIIIIIIIIL Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1952 NATO MEETING TO DISCUSS LAG IN DEFENSE PROGRAM . Gut Darn On St. Lawrence May Be Remove St. Laurent Plans To Lead Party In Election VANCOUVER. Sept. 3 - (GP) -Prlma Minister St. Laurent. rimming with vitality. said today 1. viii lead the Liberals in the "rt gcncral election if his health -o-operates. Th:-. 70-year-old Prime Minister. who also brought news of plans go boost Canadian television, made this remark after his inect-the- 3;-o;'c caravan rolled into Van- -mm-r from British Columbia's Dkaznuzaii Valley. A icportcr asked Mr. St. Laur- .M if he will continue as leader than a general election is called. llhe Prime Minister replied: "I rope that my health will continue -.n be such that it will be the right hint; to do." He said the government will ask my a start on construction "at in early date" of three new tele- .:sion stations - one on the Paci- Coast, one in the Prairie Pro- snnos and one in the Atlantic Prnvinc -Corning Events . "Danes lrishioivn hall. Thurs- ll'H. L'.1nlocn service. "Buying and cleaning timothy inerl daily. McGuigan and Boyle. "lmnrc. Baldwin's Road School, Friday. September 5th. Lunches. "lion: . Belle River -iali, l- .vlny. September 5th. Legion "Custom Threshing and Ballng. toy Gav. Winsloe. "imzm-, Euillvlew Hall, Friday. ;r;i'.cnibci' 5th. . "RM".-vn Sept. 17th for ham and cblckcn supper at Sc-avlew hall. . mg "ltrw-y-v Wednesday, Septem- rmr llth. for Klnkorn chicken map”, "ran:-e. St. Charles llall. every Thursday, 9.30 to 1. Chalsson's OP- rhrstra. "Farmers. ask about the Shut A;-.ln l-lord Finance Plan. For part zculars contact your local Ieed'i-nill To finance this construction. the government would recommend to the next session of Parliament that an additional loan be made to the CBC. Sites for the new sta- tions would depend on the re- commendation of television ex- perts. He said that because television will in its initial stages cover only part of Canada the govern- ment feels its costs should not be financed out of general revenue. "National television services should be paid for by those who receive their benefits, not by the people at large," he said. The question of how to levy payment for these services was "still under consideration" and there will be no additional licens- ing fees for private TV receivers at least until the end of the fiscal year, next April 30. The Prime Minister said the part to be played by privately- owiied stations "ln extending na- tional televlsion services” in Can- ada is being actively considered by the government. The Prime Minister. Mrs. st. Laurent and other members of the party were met at the Cana- dian Paclflc Railway station by Mayor Fred Hume, Senator S. S. McKcen and civic and provincial dignitaries. "Good morning. sir, good morn- ing," were the Prime Minister's first words to the mayor as he stepped from the train. Soon Mr. St. Laurent was sporting a rose in his lapel. 3 "Vancouver rose" presented by the mayor. Construction On The Upgrade OTTAWA. Sept. 3 --iCP,l- House construction. on the down- grade for months, has again swung upward. Officials of the crown-owned Central Mortgage and Housing Corporation said today the revers- al of trend came in May. Prelim- inary reporis indicate that the in- crease continued a least through June and July. The slump in home construction started midway through 1961 and "I. O. l.. members of Crap- a.-iri l-txirlct. visit at Lorna this rirnivrz. Iilectlng time 8:30. .”I. 0. L. members of Crapaud Tltvrcl visit at Lorne this 'el'lvi--sday evening. Meeting time in "Trv our Purina Finance Plan W fccrling your hogs and poul- '?3'. llillon and Splllclt. "Annual Oddfellowl - Rebekah rorn boil til the summer home of " A. Straw, Montague. this even- or "Dancing as usual Wlniiloc Station Hall tonight. Charlotte- lnriinnl Orchestra. Canteen. School Good W atervale 4th. in "Dance it September lay. "Sandy's Drive-In llirtvn Tuesdays, wednesdays Pttrinrs at 9 P. M. Theatre. and "i"iN.H' eleanlng- plant. will 5” vi"-rating daily at MacGuigan ""1 I"t.Vle's mill. "Ewing Timothy Seed. Get our nice before you sell. Cedric Ballam. llarshflcld. W"-Sllnw. New Glasgow Thursday. ylhr Painted llllls". A new story of tussle in color thrills A brave boy WI a fearless dog. "Wrens Thursday night Dance Rib -Stewart Canadian Legion Hall IIKcKcnzlo Orchestra. Canteen ser- ltct. Admission so cents. I '”Notlco-There will be a meet- :I 01' the members St. Peters Lllnch Canadian Legion in the Winn Hall ru- her am. at 3 p Plowlnl Match at R,"'r'4I8- Bemmber wit and 25th. "uh I"? macs adv. Prise list on West. Albert Acorn. Secretary. "Provincial Cardlgnng :n'?ld Mme fiddling and step ":3 hi! contest in Crapaud Hall, ' Md-.v. September 10th. Send rntrl . mmx In Secretary Womens In- 0 ,--nun. was; ,2: daftlsed fowl daily Buying live . except Fri- Pm Dd Saturday of each week. Pnumgb gflizllceiucentrnl HI and - r 15”. NM" "sou. Phone day "C”"" t0 Quaker film "low (In Full-o-Pep nae" technicolor) and school '"""Hl in West Royalty 1: ' niilly. September 5th, at Everyone welcome. Ad- on "links; iday night, septem-, M. continued to April last. , In May, said a corporation re- ,port. the number of new housing iunits started in cities totalled 7,900 rconipared with 7.500 in the some imomh in 1951. Figures for later lmonths are not available. I Officials said that because of the slump in the first four months of the year the over-all picture this year may not be changed much from 1951. In that year a total oi 81.000 new houses were completed compared with 89,000 in 1950. Five "filth I In Explosion MARSEILLE, France. Sept. 4- (Thursduyl -(APl-- An explosion In a benzlnc reservoir last night destroyed an oil and soap plant In this Mediterranean port city. killing at least five persons and injuring 34. Police expert the death toll to climb. Earlier lhry had said elghl bodies had been recovered, but this figure was revised down- ward when it appeared there had Dam Has-Been Blamed For High Water Tttnible 0'l'l'AWA. Sept. 3-(CPI--The controversial gilt dam in the St. Lawrence River--blamed by some for high-water trouble on the Great Lakes-will be removed by the Canadialf Government when the lnternation joint commislon approves the power phase on the St. Lawrence seaway project. Removal of the dam likely will start late next spring if the com- mission gives its approval to the bigger project in time, informed sources here indicate today. Announcement that the govern- ment has decided conditionally to meet demands for removal of the darn was made today at Albany, N. Y.. by a Canadian spokesman before the commission in its senway hearings. David W. lllundcll. Canadian counsel to the l..l.C.. said the government has agreed to re- move the dam as soon as river conditions permit following ap- proval of the seaway-power up- plicatlon by the I.J.C. In Ottawa, Transport Minister Chevricr confirmed this govern- ment decision. The 900-foot. dam. located on the river below Prescott. 0nt.. was built by Canada in 1901 to protcct water levels in the river canal system. It streiches' from Adams Island on the Canadian side to Galop Island on the other side. its construction was auth- orized by an act of congress. Since the damaging rise of lake water in the last few years. there hnvc been pcrsiseint. de- mands for its elimination, both from the U. S. anti Canadian sides of the boundary. However. the rlnmor has been strongest from the if. S. side. The view of Canadian and U. S. Government officials has been that lake levels are due chiefly to other causes such ns rainfall. in any case, they hold. the re- mnvnl of the dam would brink lake" levels flown by only about six inches. taking 18 months for this. A further cause for governmonl reluctance in moving on the dam issue has been the possible dan- gar of transferring some of the, high-water problems to the river areas around Montreal. For that reason. any removal will he in, gradual stages and will have to be timed so that the heavier flowi of St. Lawrence water does noti coincide with the shrink crest oil the Ottawa River emptying into the bigger stream. reder2i"e3"ri To Share In Costs. SAINT JOHN. N. B.. Sept. 3 - (CP)-Readlness of the Federal Government to share equally with the province in the costs of all ap- proved civll defence projects was announced today by Eris. -1- C- Jef- ferson, Ottawa, deputy civil de- fence co-ordlnator for Canada. Brig. Jefferson. addressing the Dominion Association of Fire Chiefs. said tenders have been called for pumpers. to be issued to the provinces for training purposes Bandits Snatch 0 been duplication. in the confus- C g I ion following the blast. The search for other victims contin- upd today, LONDON. Sept. 3 - (Reuters) The fire which followed tho.-Eight bandits, one an attractive explosion burned for four hourslgirl. snatched a bank consilnr in-torn firemen brought it under ment of about 63,000 in cash on control. a suburban street here today. Home-grown television goes nn the air here officially Saturday night. inaugurate reg- ular TV service over CBFT Can- ada's first television station and the product of three yeam' CBC research and study of the new me- dium. CELT. Toronto will days later. These two first outlets are the forerunners of what eventually will be country-wide TV service by the state-owned corporation. The cBC'a plans include stations at Vancouver, wlnnlpes. Windsor. ont,, ottaws, Quebec and Halifax. There is no definite schedule for the opening of the additional sta- tions except in the case of Ottawa. where an outlet is expected to be completed late in 1953. it -will be linked to Montreal and Togonto by microwave radio relay. The CEO will in two the CBC TV station open officially Canadian Television Goes On Air In Montreal Sat. MONTREAL Sept. 3 -(CPi- To launch Canadian television. the CBC borrowed tG.000.000 from the Federal Government. This money has been used to construct the Montreal and Toronto TV centres. purchase equipment. train staff and undertake the establish- ment of the microwave network which will link Montreal. Ottawa and Toronto with United states networks via Buffalo. N. Y. The CEO proposes to repay its loan from advertising revenues and licence fees on TV sets. The licen- ce fee. not yet announced. in ex- pected to be 315 annually. To expand. CBC officials say they will have to obtain I further loan. probably about 81,000,000 from the federal treasury. Although official service begins Saturday. the Montreal station has been on the air daily since late July with experimental pro- grams. including the tslecastlng of football a'nd baseball games. the CBC TV newsreel. films and child- Parliamentarians Delighted With First VEWHOI Island A large group of delegates to the Commonwealth Parliamentary As- sociation arrived by train last evening to be greeted at the rail- way station by Premier J. Walter Jones. The visitors come from all parts of the Empire and expressed a keen interest in this Province. They arrived at 6:40 and were met by Premier Jones. Mr. J. Wanton MacNaught. M. 13., who had been with the delegation earlier but flew over earlier in the day. I-ion. A. W. Maiheson, Min- ister of Health and Welfare. Hon. Forrest W. Phillips, Speaker of the Provincial Legislature and also a member of the Association: Lleut. Col. P. S. Fielding, M. M., Deputy Provincial Secretary, and Mr. George V. Fraser. Director of the Travel Bureau. llcacling the United Kingdom dtleizates is Rt. Hon. Lord Llew- Recently Ret Health Duties In Geneva Arriving in the city for A week's holiday was Miss Lyle Creelman, R-Nu recognized as one of the outstanding nurses in the world. she is a sister of Dr. P. A. Creel- man of this city and has just re- turned fi'om three years at Geneva where she was Nursing Consultant to the World Health Organiza- tion. Miss Crs-'elman. a native of Nova Scotla. makes her home in Van- couver when she is in Canada. She trained in the Vancouver General Hospital and later studied at the University of British Col- iimbla. Bile was Director of Nurs- ing of the Metropolitan Health in Vancouver prior to joining U.N.R. A. in 1944 and going to Germany with that world-wide organization. She remained there until 1946 when she returned to Canada for a time before going to Geneva. Since then she has travelled wide- ly over all parts of the world. Last winter she went to India, Burma and Ceylon and shortly before visited the countries of Central America. Just one week ago she was in Finland. She has been in Holland many times and last year thoroughly enjoyed a trip to Yugoslavia. growing country which is indus- trializing itself rapidly. She riot- ed that many of the countries she saw have much to offer in the DACCA. Pakistan, Sept. 8 - (AP)-Pakistani troops were ord- ered to lndials west Bengal border today for a shooting war against smugglers. An illegal traffic in raw jute to India was of special con- cern. Jute is the golden fibre of which giiimy sacks. llneoleiim backing and many other products are made. Pakistan grows a lot of it-pybout 6.000.000 bales a year. Before the partition of India in 1917. most of this jute went to Calcutta mills for processing. Since the division of the sub-continent, Indiaf has begun growing some jute of her own for the Calcutta mills and Pakistan has been shipping much of her output elsewhere. meantime. threatening to build her own mills. Control of jute ranks not far be- hind the future of disputed Kash- mir as I cause of tension between India and Pakistan. Behind the Pakistani govern- ments concern over smuggling is the fact about 40 per cent of its revenue comes from customs dut- ies. - aj.-Gen. Mohammed Moons K an. comman mg the troops in this detached. eastern segment of r n. announced "a ruthless war against smugglers" was in the making. . "The movement of troops has been ordered in accordance with a recent decision of the East Pakis- tani Government to secure the'help of the army in the anti-smuggling drive on the border." the General told A press conference. "The army will work in co-ordination with civil authorities on the border, where ruthless H'IIIlLIl'Ca, including the shooting of culprits. will be employed to stop the uggling of all commodities, especially raw jute to India." JOINT HONOR In Spain and Spanish-speaking C0l.lI'lll'iC8 I DCTSOITS SlLI'IIll'l'le com- bines the surnames of both father funk, musical and variety jllogrllllullld mother. She termed the latter A fast-, Shoot-To-Kill Campaign Launched On Smugglers ellin, C. B. 21.. M. (7.. who spoke, 1n- formally of his pleasure in the visit and his hope of seeing much more of the Province during today's whirlwind tour. Among those with him is Siri Jocylin Lucas who will be favor- ably remembered by countless ls- land servicemen for the help he gave to many at the Overseas Lea- gue in London. Sir Jocylin said last night he hoped to have the pleasure of seeing some of the friends he made during the war years. i From The Gold Coast Hon. A. Casely Haylortl, Minis- ter of Agriculture and Natural ,Rcsourc-cs of the Gold Coast. Afri- ca, showed a deep interest in the agriculture and fisheries of this I ricontiriucd on VPageVl5 (501.71)- I l urn.ed From way of new methods and in the manner of doing things so dif- fercnt to those in use here. Progress In Finland In the field of nursing shr- lfound a great interest in all her Itravela in countries endeavouring I i icmniauzrmf-rige 125061.737 II.!illlnht:llCWtl-I'l-(iI'?"- Largest Balloon i when Held In Paris in Mid-lhgember PARIS. Sept, 3 (AP) -The North Atlantic Treaty Organiza- tion ia opening I meeting in Paris Dec. 15 to patch gaps in the west's current defence program and nail down a rearmament sche- dule for 1953. The permanent council of NAT. 0, sitting here under Secretary- General Lord Ismay. called for a full-dress conference of foreign ministers of the 14 member coun- tries. The whole pace of the al- liance's defence effort will come up for review and readjustment. The date was timed to follow the' United States elections and still give European members a chance to fit their 1953 rearma- ment. goals into budgets for that year. Most European countries operate their finances on the cal- endar year. This will be the first session of N.A.T.O. ministers since the meeting in Lisbon last February winch fixed 50 combat.-ready divis- ions-active and reserve - and 4,- 000 planes as the minimum basis for its defence lines. At that time, N.A.TO. also laid down provisional goals for 1953. leading up to 96 divisions in I954. The forthcoming conference willy have to make the 1953 goals "per- I (Continued on Page 15 col. ill Delegates Register For General Synod E moment one is born. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN very moment dies a man. every 16 PAGES Morning Dally Founded 1881. the Guardian. Five Cents. WASHINGTON. Sept. 3 ---'AP pstate Secretary Dean Acheson as lsured Premier Mohammad Mossa-i degh of Iran today that there arci no booby traps in the recent Brit- ish-Amcrican offer to settle the lranian oil deadlock. In a statement, be appealed to Mossadegh to reconsider his quick rejection of the joint proposal made by President Truman and Britain's Piume Minister Churchill last weciz. The flow of oil from Iran to the west has been blocked for the last six months by a bitter quarrel be- tween Iranian and British govern- ments over Iran's nationalization of the oil properties. The Trunian-Churchill offer pro- miscd to recognize Iran's right to nationalize and pledged sl0.000.000 from the U. S. immeidaiely to keep Iran from going bankrupt. Iran was asked to submit to in- ternational arbitration the my argument over how much should be paid Britain for the oil instal- lations, which are reported valued in the neighborhood of sl.500,000- 000 Britain also promised to buy some 2.000.000 tons of all now stored along the Persian Gulf to rovidc lranls treasury with a, quick profit of- from S30.000.i)O0 to: 040000.000. Talking to reporters today. Acheson labelled the British- American offer "fair and reason- able" and one with "no string attached.” LONDON. Ont, Sept. 3 ICP)-- The first of more than 300 r-lcri-, cal and lay delegates to the 109 day general synod of the Church of England in Canada registered, at lluron Collngc today. The gen- eral synod opens tomorrow. y The delegates. representing 28. dioceses from Newfoundland to British Columbia. arrived as the church's religious leaders ended pro-synod deliberations. Thirty- one an-lrblsliops nnd bishops mel to discuss the agenda for the gcneral synod. The Archbishop of Canterbury. Dr. Geoffrey Fisher, attending meetings of the Episcopal Church in Boston. sent a telegram of greeting to delegates on their arrival. He will not be present at meetings here. The last. time he visited Canada was in 1946 he attended the general synod at Winnipeg. Prese-nliPellllon Against Strikers MONTREAL. Snpl. .1 (C?)--A petition to have 2,000 striking em- ployees nf Canadian Vickers Lim- ited declared in contempt of court was presented today in Superior Court. despite hints of a "break" in Quebec Province shipyards strikes callcd two weeks ago. Russel Thoman. of Vickers. told Mr. Fabre . Survcycr throw stones at him and threat- enccl him while he was at the controls of a donkey engine in the shipyards. lo vlt-l:.presiden: Justice l-I. that pickets NEXV BRIGHTON. Mlrin.. Seplw 3-1A9:-The largest known un-1 manned balloon. intended to bear cosmic ray recording equipment aloft, was launched today. I llowever, the "giant skyhnok." about the size of an 18-storey building. developed sev holes during inflation and th ay load" of scientific instruments was cut off before launching. It was set free at 8'40 a. in. EDT. About two hours lntcr. a timing device ripped out one panel of the balloon and it fell near Lake City. Minn.. some 50 miles southeast of the launching site. It had reached an estimated altitude of 35,000 feet. Donald Melton. in charge of the launching. said a new "giant sky- hook' will be constructed. but it will take at least several months. Melton said the balloon. made of strips of fragile polycthlene plastic with a total area of about two acres. was only experimental to de- termine if such a thing could be successfully handled. ' I v LCM -,. Two Loggers Eleclroculed DUNCAN. R. (T, SI-pl. .'i HIP) --Two Duncan loggers were elec- lrocuted today while working along llw B. (T. Power Commis- sion's high tension lino right-of- way. Dead are Lloyd Samuel Rralih- walte, .12. and Bert Leakey, 50. both of Duncan. R.C.M.P. said fhe accident oc- curred while the men were erect- ing a pole under the power line. A guy wire attached to the pole. came in contact with the high tension wire and the men were lciuos instantly. Mr. Thoman said he went p work on lhc yard engine hocaiisc, Vickors wanlr-d to move a 30-inn: piece of equipment from the yards. Clinrles Gauthier. an official of the National Metal Trade Work- ers Union (A.F.l..l, said member.- of his organization idle due tnl the strike in which they bavcl not taken part also were threat- cnrd by strikers. I The petition socks to have an estimated 2.000 mcmlwrs of lhcl national syndicalo of slnpyarrli workers tC.C.C.l..) declared in I contempt of court. ithere must be a trap hidden some- Intormed off;cials said his pub- lic plea was designed to allay Mos- sadegh's fears that the British- American proposal looked so good nhcre. Acheson, in I move to clarify one point, assured Mossadegh that Iran would be free after national- ization to sell oil to western coun- tries besidcs Britain. But. he noted Iran's nationalization law itself gives the British priority of pur- chase. Polio-Sblealhsi! Pass Becgrds EDMONTON, Sept. 3--(CPI Polio deaths so far this year in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Bri- tish Columbia have passed the tntals for the respective record years of these provinces. Four more polio deaths were reported today in Saskatchewan. two in Alberta and two in B. C. to raise the 1952 toll in the. four western provinces to R5. Meanwhile .lhe case total in the west soared to 1.250. A week ago. i the four provinces counted 69 deaths and 988 cases. The totals by provinces. with figures of a week ago in brackets. are: Alberta. 355 cases and 251 deaths 1289 and 24v; Saskaichc-, won, 508 cases and 20 dcalhs (368 and 18': RC. 2110 cases anti 20 deaths H74 and 170i; Mani- toha, l5? confirmed and 1.16 til.- pert cases and lil deaths il.'i'.' ronfirmcd, 95 suspect and lili death” . i Hull's. Condition Slill Serious IV'ASlIIN('vTON. Sept. fl -- (APO The naval medical centre re-1 portcd today that Cordcll l-lull is slimviiig iinprovrmciit but thivp his condition ('DllllllllPS to be serious The 80-ycar-old formcri stair sncrctarv was lakcn to (hr: naval hospital at. Flcthcsda, Md.. last Pi-irlay for treatment of ai coronary thrombosis. ; School Rooms Crowded In Many Parts Of Canada Many of the thotiaancls of Can-I adian children who trooped back to. school this week found classrooms' crowded. I A Canadian Press survey today shows that while crowding is the big problem in a number of Can- ada's fast-growing communities. a teacher shortage is the main worry for other school boards. Twenty-five to 30 teachers still are needed for Newfoundland schools with two or more class- rooms. even more for one-room schools. But Ncwfuhdland and Nova Scotia are short of accommodat- ion. despite new buildings and ex- tensions. In Nova Scotia the shortage of teachers continues. Cape Breton officials may start correspondence courses for children in some grades. Manitoba accommodation pre- senta a few problems in the rural areas. Twenty-five hundred more pupils than last year registered in or additions either have been com- pleted or will be finished by the end of 1952 The Alberta situation proved during the last. ycar , In British Columbia prolonged. strikes in the construction tradesi have affected schools along the lower mainland and on Vancouver Island. Work on nerded additions and new schools was brought to ai standstill for more than a month. The Vancouver school board hay instituted "portable" one-room classroms which can be moved on has im- truck from one school to anotht-rp In interior British Columbia. schools didn't. open Tuesday as scheduled because ofa pollomyelius outbreak. Seven hundred thousand children went back to school in Quebec which has more than 9.000 schools been under way. In Ontario. some 832.400 pupils were enrolled. an increase of 38,- winnlpog, where eight new schools 000 over last yul twill leave Tokyo tomorrow Extensive. building programs have 5.26 A. M. and 8.07 P. M. , sets at ass r. M. J MeelingWlll Be iAcheson Asks Iran To Reconsider Oil Deadlock pi .i Hikes-llncerlaiti-E: About American Foreign Policy By J. M. Roberta. Jr. Peasant union leaders and other exiles from behind the iron curtain are warm to anything which keep: alive the idea of ultimate liberal-' ion of the Satellites. but wary of any overt acts and even of airing the proposals lll public. Referring to recent speeches by John Foster Dulles. one peasant union leader says Dulles is right in principle. but spoils things by talk- ing about any program of sabotage before it goes into action. "The British do it without talk- ing. Why do the Americans sn- nounce what they are going to do?" Well. the Americans and the Western Europeans are talking about so many things. and with such a wide range of viewpoints. that if the Kremlin is listening II can only be confused. Next to what Russia is going to do, about the least known thing today. is what specific turns cast:-i'n policy may take That's because policies are form- ed not by men. but by the pres- sures of events. and revolve around ba .c. national interests. if stern I-Zuroperins get frighten- ed when they hear the American talks about the initiative to free the satcliics, end the cold uar.and. return to normality. When you talk to western Eur- npcans about direct aid in the undergrounds in middle l-Zuropa ihcy are inclined to ccrtaiii pract- jcal rejoiiiders. What woul France do if Germany Marl? dropping munitions and other sup- plies to an anti-French under- ground in the Saar. Or if Russia. did it in Tunisia? What, for in. stance, would be the western re: action if Russia were in try 1:, mm" in Iran, which is lint, ;; wean-rn, sairapy and which. indeed. has dc- clared its hatred for and independ- cnce of western influences? lap ltarllride I On Way To Canada ICIVMONTON. Sept. .1 ICP) . Cnnadais first Japanese. war brain for her new home in Medicine Hat, (Alta. army officials here said to- 35'. She is .'llrs. F7. R. MacMillan. the foimcr Toasako Matsuno oi tlhlrr. Japan. with her husband an army private. she will fly by mmmcr:-;al air line. to VRni'Ulll'Fl' mvl is cxoccicd to continue to Mcd:i.nn liat by train. An ilrml spokesman said fvva nr :.v (imarlmn soldiers serving in linrea have married Japanese: jz.rls. but Mrs. liIacMlllan is the firs; to co r- to Canada. AM OUNCE or Patvtnuou is uoafli A PECK or llAl.lFAX. Sept. fl-(CPI Offb rial forecasts ismcrl by the It. l'TllflIOfl Public limit-.er Office II nnnfnv and v-:tl.:l until midmzhi. Thursrlay. S,V7lf!llSl.S' Cooler and much rliunr all from the WPSI hr-:1n ny1lPrin: who Marltlmea tonight and by noon Thursdnv Vllil color Ihr- district. Sunny and cooler weather is fow- cast for all rcgmns on Timu- day. Regional Forecasts" llrtncr Edward Island: Thu”:- dny sunnv event for n IVWT cloudy intervals in lbc afternoon iloolrr. Souibcily winds 1-": ahiffiyvrz to um! 15. Low anrl high at (lharlnttclown on and 70. Summary fnr 'l'hursday- Mostly sunny. FOOIPF. High tide toEdrTy.Cat Charlotte- town at 10.26 A. M. and 11.18 P. M. ltlgh tide on the North Shore at Summcrside tide eighteen min- ules later than Charlottetown. I Sun rises today at 5.38 A. M. and