Maxims‘. or A a uranium, Aldrrtlsqqalllllnapoka. l Never was a bachelor yet tlsal a_-- s Four Soldiers ‘Killed In Traffic Accidon -__._.__-p-__n ll. S. Potato Imports Allowed By Prices Board OTTAWA. Nov. i - (OP) — The Board unced port enough from the United States prosem, ceiling prices to maintain normal coruumer supplies. The Board said that through N‘! be filled from the . Donscstic prics will be protected with thekcoit i)! mlllorled W118 hi! -n [no with Canadian ceilings throtlgh an arrangement between the Can- adian Wartime Flood Corporation and the UZS. Department of Agric- ulture. It is sarpscted the first potatoes will arrive early ne week In areas where avail-able Canadian Iuppiia cannot rill demand. Canuh/s potato crop this year is estimated at about 00,000,000 bush- els, compared with an average yield of about 721100.000 blashels. This yeal-‘s crop in tbk 11S. is estimated t more than 436,000,000 bushels, a the second largest potato crop in 011'- Sonja Henie And Husband Separate CIIBCAGO, Nov. 1 -(AP)- J. Mthurllktedlurul, counselor and kind of Sonia lien-ls and Dan , Add tonight that the i... film am and wealthyrtowlrcshergnowintlae Umhh-VOMBGOBOHII- p . e the I Coming Events "Dance, Iona Hall, Friday night. , 11-1-21. "lhow ... Murray River day- "lbow — Murray Harbor B! 1 Mon- 11-1-81 Tues- i-l-si. "Show — fitf-S-tewlrt Satur- day. 7.80 and 0.90 P. M. 11-1-21. °zlFaraergn wedafie bu lna cod a . c u an u" " y io-af-sl. b Boyle. I "Dance - Little Pond, Monday, November 5th. Chalsson‘: Orc - astra. 11-2-11. "Dlscontlnulng bu lng Weener Pigs until further not ce. Livestock Marketing Board. 10-30-41. "Show 4 Canoe Cove Friday, weather and roads pormittirlrlg. "Unloading Saturday, car feed barley bulk, Bring hogs Court dc Son, Bedford Station. 11-1-21. "Card party and dance in the Credit Union Hall, Bummerfield, Friday, Nov. I. 10. 31. 3-“ "Hospital Dance, Curling Club. Montague, Saturday, November 3rd, 7-20-Fri-tf. "Come to the barn dance in aid of gramme: Cross, _Frig:%.1 Nos/tint’. rgansens. es final. ° u-i-Il suing; Guardian, ‘Iapdrnllf. Coats. WINDSOR, N.S., Nov. 1 -- (CP) -Plunged over a. ilibfot embank- ment ln a Canadian army truck, four soldiers died to ht in an automobih: accident at miles from here. were being withh army au- thorities until the nextwf-lfln could be notified. The four in- jured soldiers wen rushed to hos- tal but the exact nature of their es was not announced. The a/rmy vehicle. a. SO-cwt. truck was roceedlng down s. hill ward indsor when it collided with a civilian automobile and swerved off the road. The truck pll-lnSfli» down the steep embankment end came to rest 1B0 feet from the highway. George Kewley of Parrsboro, N. S., driver of the civilian vehicle. was cut and bruised slightly, while two passengers, Frank Chipinan, Halifax, and a soldier, Lawrence Dixon, also of Halifax, escaped without 111111119!- to- Lauzcn, lioresky Plead llot Guilty KINGSTON, Ont, Nov. 1—(CP) Trial of Ulysse Lauzon, 23 Joseph Peltler, 19. and Walter lforesky, 22, all of Windsor, Ont., who are charged with bank robbery and jail breaking, opened in county magistrate’: court here today be- fore magistrate James B. Garvin. The trio pleaded not gllty to charges of robbing the nadian Bank of Commerce at Port Perry of $28,060 April 25 and of breaking and enterin the bank of Toronto at Preston. nt., and stealing a re- volver. Adjournment until 2 p.m. tomor- r ,w a nted at thougieqrgst of y-gonera . L. Snyder. To But Prince Nova Trips To Two Baily Mr. RE. Mutch, president of Northumberland Ferries Ltd, whl r: S‘ handcuffed Fonncr German Commander Ueut. Col. James Regina-id art of Charlottetown, who hand- cuffed Major-qeneral Kurt Meyer, former German divisional oom- mamdcr. as he arrived from Bing- land to f‘ " -occupied Genn- any to answer chasgm of wholesale murder of Canadian prison Clunberland Street, City. v Col. Stewart Joined the R..C.M.P. in 1033 and took his corporal in the RCMP. when he enlisted in September of 1900 as a member of the Provost Corps. His rise in the Canadian Army has been rapid and at the time of his tak- the German general into cvs- tody, Col. Stewart was second in command of the Canadian Occupa- tion Battalion at Aurich, Germany. He served in England and North ad a brother, Fit,- “ " Stewart, killed v in February, i043, Another blot‘ ,, Cpl. RUE. Stew- art. served in the accountancy de- partment of the RC A.1"., and some months ago was managing accountant at Canadian Headquar- ters ln Pel-lvl, Palestine. He re- turned to Canada about a month ago and 1s now stationed at Sum- merslde. England. Col. Stewart h Sgt. Frank f‘ over German, British Satisfied opem-tes the ferry on the Prince Ed- ward Island-Nova Scotia service. said last night that because of the‘ danger of aging in and out of, Wood Islan and Caribou at night! it had been decided to reduce the sailings of the motor vessel Prlncel Nova to two daily. By dropping‘. the third round trip, to become ef- fective Nov. 4, it will be possible to revise the sailings to permit the ship to travel by daylight only. Permission to discontinue the third crossing was given by Mr. F.. E. Bawden. director of subsidized steamship services, Ottawa. Condi- tion of the channels at both ter- minals was the principal cause of the change. Mr. Mutch, commenting on the service. said that traffic fl ures showed a large increase over hos; of a year ago. The company was looking for another boat, he said, andsdded that prospects for se- curing one were “very cod" if they could get co-operat on from the right quarters. One ship articular, looked good, although t would take considerable work before ould used. But as much of t e work could be done st the Bruce Stewart and Compsn giant in Charlottetown it woul Because of the depth of water and the nature» of the channels at the terminals it was not possible to put A big boat on the service, so Hitler ls Bead BERLIN, Nov, l - (OP) — Bri- tish investigators todafi pictured Adoff Hitler as a tremb ng fuehrcr who aged rapidly in the wars last months and then shot himself while Eva Braun, his wife for less than a day. was taking poison. British intelligence officers said it had been proved "as conclusive- ly as posslifle without, bodies" that Hitler and Miss Bram-declared also by the Russians to have been Hitler's last-minute bride-commit- ted suicide. The report said evidence show- ed Hitler shot himself through the mouth, and that Eva Braun tool: poison at 2.30 p.m. April 30, in a bunker of the Reichschancellory. ‘KI-tier the suicide," it adds "the bodies were taken into a gar- ust outside the bunker by Goeb els, Bormann and other» genchad with asoline and burn- BLACK MARKET RAID FRANKFURT, Germany. Nov. 1 -(AP)—- More than 000 persons were arrested yesterday in the big- QOPWS ' new car ferry, as given by ‘Trans- Palpeir; p by Everybody Covers PrinoeEdward Island Llkethe Dew Reaches $1, Bid Bar Ferry Carried A Million llollars Insurance UITNWA, Nov. 1 — (befall) - ls aw dlceins 1m y .;'°?‘?“..;..‘l€l covered by the committee is the information that the old ferry car- ried‘ a cool Il,000.000 in insurance wlhleh Govermnent collected, which will reduce the coet of the WW km! by that amount. The discovery came about when Tom Reid. the Liberal from New aminisig Tr CHARLOTTETOWNMZANACA; FRIDAY, NOVEMBEB z, 194s DERS EMER P. E. 1. Loan Total 958, 900 The view Province pic ed up s eed yesterday ncss last iective. early tod County outside, $188,150; $780,060; Queen's County outside, $196,560; King's County, $187,860. OTTAWA, Nov. 1 - (OP) -As Canada's ninth loan mov- ed into the second half of the three-week drive for 51500000000 National Loan Headquarters an- nounced tonight the two seaboard provinces - Britlm Columbia and Novla. Scotia-were still leading the inter-provincial com etitlon on the percentage of objec ivcs attained. Based on the general canvas and payroll purchase figures for the half-way mark, the close of business Wednesday, British C umblra. reported 72.41 per cent of Westminster was ex ans- Dort Minister Chevriu. I “Very Nice 5 “who carried the insurance onl tho old ferry?" adced I-LB. McCull- och, Idberai member for Plctou. ' R-C- Vlllchan. president of the Canadian National Railways was attending the sitting, replied: “On the old ferry we were fort» unate. No insurance was carried on those boats, but we thought that alnceshewastogooutinw the Atlantic around to Si. John where dry-docked. we should put some insurance on her, so we put on $1,000,000, which was coll- eoted." wrist-y nloe", smiled Mr. McCull- "Indeed it was". agreed m. Vaughan. (The total estimated cost of the ~ln Parlia- ‘rhent on April 3, 1944, 1,934,750,000. The contract called for completion and delivery of the vessel before the winter of i945 but there is now no hope of cbta it until the late summer of i946.) Ch'town Hotel Profit Digging sound into the cos‘- of operating the Canadian National Railways hotel system, the oom- mittee found that the Charlotte- town turned a profit of $23,184 last year, lowest flglin: in the comp- anyls chain of eight. The Charlottetown wok in 8164,- 603 in revenue and paid out e130 m in expenses and 15,150 in taxes. Biggest money-maker was the Chatea/u Laurler in Ottawa with a revenue of $2,258,706 and a profit cf $515,515. The hotel Nova Scotlan did an $826,409 revenue, spent $583,339 in expenses and paid $19,032 in taxes for a net of $228,927. IKEJ. Gets Little The‘ Canadian NatlonaPs budget of capital expenditures for Prince a provinces. All told. the C.N.i-t. will spend only c1638? in new facilities for Prince llkiwand Island this year. si,008 of it for new platforms, $4,916 for second hand rails and $5,700 for machine shop equipment. An item for $54. for repair of bridges rounds out the budget Truman Bcilfers With Labor Bhiefs NEW YORK, NOV. 1 — (CPI - s quota subscribed and Nova Scotia wast close behind with 71.43 per cen. In third place was Prince Ed- ward Island, with 60.47 per cent, followed by Alberta, Brunsw ,53.B2; Ontario, 52.12; Quebec, 51.39; Manitoba, 51.11, and Saskatchewan, 88.19. Wednesday's Dominion - wide sales totalled $97,230,505, compared with $90,561,000 on the correspond- ing day‘of the eighth loan, and sent the total for the first nine days to $792,197,350, more than half the national target of 51500000000. The total of large investments was swelled by a purchase of $25,- 000,000 by the Prudential Insurance Company of America, Former British Plan For lllvil Aviation, Junked Labor G0v’t To Wipe Out Private Enterprise In Air Transport. By JOHN DAUPHINEE LONDON, Nov. 1 - (CP Cablcl —'I'he Labor Government announced today it will wipe out private en- terprise in civil aviation except for charter flying, extending its public-ownership policy to the transportation field. The Government _ has that "public ownership shall he the overrulinrz principle in air transport," Earl Wlnster, Minister of Civilian Aviation, informed the House of Lords. Surface transportation interests will be permitted no financial par- ticipation in two new ooer decided so . ‘The nationalization plan extends to airports. Earl Winster said all fields required for civil air services wfll be taken over by the Gov- emment. He announced that the Presi- wlck, Scotland, base, wartime ter- minus for trans-Atlantic services to Canada, will be designated an in- ternational airport. Earl Winner's statement drew quick criticism from the Conserva- tive oppositlon. Lord Swinton. Earl Wlnster’s predecessor in the civilian aviation st, said. "I think thlq is the most damn- inl and disappointing thing to the prospects of British civil aviation '9 which I have ever listened. ‘A racticsl working plan on wh-cll we had all agreed was ready to gunouon at any time and now has loan drive in this again and at the c ose of busi- night the total was $1,- 958,900, or 50 per cent of the ob- It is expected that the wo million mark will be passed a . - Byfdistlloll the total! last night were: Surnmerside, $661,400; Prince Char- 5601; New l _ sting’ companies which will be. set up.‘ id Sir Alexander Fleming, and two of his British associates have been awarded 1946 prizes in above, physiology and medicine by the Nobel Committee for discovery of penicillin. The 64-year-old Scottish scientist insists he discovered magic drug by accident. S’side Man Fatally Injured WINDSOR, N.S., Nov. l. -(CP) ~Elgin Gallant, 2'1, of Bedford N S., died in hospital here yesterday of injuries received in an automo- hile accident at Falmouth, N. S., last Monday. Onc of the three occupants of a car which failed to make a sharp turn about 1V.» miles from here, (luliunt was unconscious for four hours. lie was treated for a frac- tured skull and severe back in juries. John McGuire of Halifax was thzpHdrivgr-yzf the man-an.- Earl Sundaisp _ a faoldler fro Scotch VIHBQLYAVDS the other passenger. Both suffered injuries in the crash. Gallunfs Wife and son live in Bedford. Gallanfls body is expected to ar- rive in Summerslcle tonight. His mother. lVlrs. Aggie Gallant lives at Summorside. l~le had returned on- 1y recently from overseas. Probing Beath in Athahaska Fire ATHABASCA, Alta, Nov. 1 - (CP) - ‘The unrecognizable re- mains found Oct. 18, in the ashes of a fire which destroyed the home of All. Hinglcy, 60, Athabasca fur buyer and formerly of Hllden, N .S., were sent to Edmonton for examin- ation by a pathologist. No an- nouncement, has been made by the pathologist. ~ Royal Canadian Mmmied Police and district residents discovered the charred resnains after binning ruins of the cabin ccc ied by Hinlgley had cooled. Hing ey's pet dog was discovered on the prem- ises unscathed. Athabasca ls 80 miles northeast oi’ Edmonton. ll. B. Air Transport Station ls Blosed MONCTON, N.B., Nov. 1 — (Cl?) transport station at Lakeburn. opener; almost two years s80. “'95 officially closed without ceremrllfl today. Supplies and personnel for air force and army stations and outposts in Labrador, Newfound- land and the Gulf of St. Lawrence were flown from the station. Pre- vlously, it was No. 8 service Flyinl Training School. The Lalacburn landing field is meg! by ‘Trans-Canada Al!‘ 151186. Group Capt. RC. Basltervllle, lllt commanding officer of the stpticn. said all R.C.A.l". property on the field will be tlrrned over to the War Assets corporation 7°!‘ d4!‘ pcsal Renewed Violence Flares In, Palestine JERUSALEM, Nov. l - (AP) — Renewed violence broke out in Pal- estine today with four or five per- sons lulled and sllht lildllrcd by mxlden attacks upon railroads and police lam-aches in two harbors. A British military communique blamed‘ the attacks uporril Jews. bl"- did no name any spec c FWD- ‘ In rmdon the Arab office issued g statement asserting the outbreak Wag "the work of the Zionist-s," and accusing Zionist leaders of trylIl-S "to force the British Government info declsla i_n favor of the Jews." n19 gtatemeflr laid that if wide- spread revolt develops "it will be a revolt of the Zionists against the Palestine Government and mi 10 PAGES ~ conunodatlom at the airport, pre- -'I'he Royal Canadian Air Force‘ An ‘lllfiih . actors. not vivfaoct Iran publicly. MAXIMS‘ ‘ or a MERE MAN Ildpreasntobaa- Three committees, each composed .411’ members of the Olly Council and publicmirtded citizens, were ap- pointed at last nights spzciall session of the Council to deal] further With the City's proposed. taking over of residential quarters at the local airport for reuumed men and others in desperate need of housing sccomodations in or near the city. The committees are to deal with questions affecting rental control. maintenance of buildings, and the financial arrangemenm - all three matters hecfissltating, study, the meeting decided. before the ma- chinery for the prospective exodus cf approximately 150 families to the airport within the next few weeks can be perfected. Hon T.W.L. Prowse agreed to act as liaison officer between the com- mittees and the Provincial Govern- ment and promised to arrange for the conunittees to meet the Execu- tive of lite Government at, 2 o'clock today. A large number of representative cltizvns were present at ,the meet- ing which was presldrrd over by Mayor .1213. Blanchard. ComnrM-ee Reports Mr. FEW. l-iyndman, who at the City Council meeting on Oct. fi. was appointed chairman of a mixed committee of City Cmmcillors and citizens to make a survlzy of the feasibility of securing housing ac- cented a detailed report of his cem- mitteds flndinzs. The committee, Mr. l-lyndman said had brolusn the investigation into several phases. including ren- tal policy. supervision, medical care, bus service. publicity, etc. He said his committee contacted Col. Hart, emergency relief supervisor, St. John. NIB» who told bile oofilmit- ‘tee thud {roost an the mindless asked for were available for lease l, not guarantee their rental by the City beyond that date. Bnbscrlpfloc Delivered. “Al. All". 01.00: also‘ IIUIIIIU b OLA, Ill. ENCY llousilll; COMMITTEES NAM courlzl: WlTil 00v’ i The buildings Which the 00m- mittoe inspected ‘rare in excellent condition, Mr. Hyndman said" with the rooms facing long corridors and they could be lighted and heated easily enough. Many of_tbe rooms available would be equal to thong for which people in the higher bracket income group pay high rentals. He thought it would be a full-tum; job for someone to collect the rentals, maintain order, and in general, see that the proposed new colony, got along harmoniously the one wtlh the other- The better rooms were centrally heated by three boilsrshnd Mr. Hyndman thought the ensineerlns costs of supplying heal, would! not exceed $1600, p:r_ month. $500. would put the boilers into good condition", one boiler would do the heatinS at the beginning and the others couidbeusedifthenmnberof tenants increased. As to transport- ation. the ccmuiittee had boazrad- vised two buses were available and‘ that the cost of a single one-way. trip w the airport ncr passeneerl would be l5 cent-s. ; .'l‘he School Problem ,1 The education of the children moving out to the airport Wvllld have to be looked after, Mr. Hynd- man said. and it would be necessary to have the Department of Eiduca- tics); supply teachers for the child- ren His committee was reluctant to make only definite commitmen- as to their opinion concerning the City's taking over the project, Mr. Hyndrnan stated, but it would ask the City to formally request the rental of lhe bmldines. They could be bought, he said, for freon eight to ten per cent oi their value and Mr. Hyndman added "it is a blLWfs market, now." It was difficult for anyone to give a definite statement on the matter. It would take a month to get th: boilers in 800d condition. but the housing protect was a Rood means whereby to N- lieve some of the City's congestion. Up till flve o'clock last night. I there were 61 applications in for | accumulations at the airport, Mr. ‘ rlyndsnan said. Most of those were from returned service per- sonnel who were in need of living quarters. Coun. B. Earle MacDonald said in "hated lo be the first Coun- cillor to rise and say ‘I wld W“ so’ ". He‘ thought conditions for taking over the airport would be more favourable nelxt smnrner than now. He could not see how the City can “posdbly effect better homing conditions." I-le boilers would have to b: rebuilt and he would sufliest some ortmlll- tion take over the prolect M I profitable venture. He fllfvrd ‘Vail; opinion that Mr. H (man's oom- mittee had changed he plans dealt with at the previous meeting. How- ever he was pleased with the re- pore and would move ltsadoptloli- Conn. J31‘. McKee ceoonded the mciicn ulllch was carried. K PAH 6W1‘ CUTlQd 01117 JIM-USS 111 1 th _ f’ -_- v5.1.2,’. ‘hiifllli’ n:.'":...2".".:rr. l» m» owes» - e- swarm "mpg-scram m.z=“ciy.s.d.ii°'..r..r.rs.. IAIII‘! SOCIAL and dance in slderstion would, have a lar or cs- WWW °°°dl "m4 “M!” A‘ mo; 1n wash] gpy mid that shipping com anies and rall- r st. Thomas Aquinas Society psclty m». the present lnca mule-n "clouds. . oil and . “Tm ' wa lose the n gt to nv South 0 threats that the atest major work Y! use l FtfIld Knights o Nova. cheap femur-y. ‘ in the United sum ... American and opean services, gailurgblu qiéall. W ’ " “Bligh the (ire hound bus strike-might relpetcegvslxyiderwlilrg plggcyoutmfgg‘ ' “'- "= ' ' ‘pifidmfililf"lsc'fil°u'fl?“dasv l‘ whit» s a 1w Seuss by "is ‘" annual eetlng of the were ‘in p tion for n“; Mm- Churchill (£131 on Government - Ma urisra’ Association will he _ ', d, q wnfgmngg o- n,‘ "by"; a government in which Labor was tf§"l‘t"‘-a..l°'s.§.i‘i Estimate, 1, Continued use “~- w~c- ss...:*:.~:.s=,.=s;- ~ s o - - ' 4 a peace mes . ' Mollalllrl. W- ~ But in New York, an AIL. un- 19800118311111?- l '_" “ML a orroacl llTbnnr T A '11. grmlggkhg‘ tommélfllm": N3‘ LHQIANN§OTIQSI 1 k f 0 wur Ill". JO , ., V. - n:v'ie°?"slrahun I by vigil 0T1“ . NOV. l — (OP) — thregm-infsntry ftlgolm lira-wax‘: Lulxklgd Ylgicglxalllgdm llugmlllabll-Teld (W) - New Brunswlclrs victory m», o» v-m- . "s": starches =- w» s M» s --.s:.-1,..~.s" c ~*~~*:....~"~..:~=. '3...."'l1§l3'."&¥“' f° ‘f been’. 133a w! f" lfiflledliflwv 1' - ‘numb 14 l "M"! 13 hlimgflhlolllh oolplyfoomllfe gfltilswsw. a Obfectlve u sai- gnuuu ~ men by two V two pro-war cavalry regiments - m,“ you. at midnight set night 600,000. r1 . -two per cent of the t -,*-- l“ N" mwlllm “"35 m“! awmm‘ u"! l" after a break-down of nego a- mic sales Quota 010199001700 has argon‘ the dance in Holy Defence star Abbott said to- Royal Canadian Draaoons - now m,“ on w", “mm” "whim, n“, gt; ten ll y. do in the v are armored regiments. However, m", e at or thahlooalbranoh force you have the usual the total pro-war strength of the gmpmauk $31: ugiwnrosialfi h’.'§‘.i'.“‘&"'.oi."° flit. mmreservma‘ n21;- ‘WWW Abbott nude his ' ,3,“ , l. u-a-si including‘: artill ma! nhoélfisuem arguing \___,,,. l’ l‘ ’ t hld not received definite ly fllrsnalllrlmordor u: arf-gtlfleéln: from the company M’ onallze W "g ato Li stock ens sailhl M140 f0l'_ , ,e . - , workers a ' climate’ l... "ac-sac ,, .... "" “has s... as: inhale at.b.a‘t30r&r'l:=3 ggflfi ‘ pant Ttthvgmom, one. ' Lnhoaill; ~, 11‘ ' the re of a Government in- 21‘ ‘,, a sagrnogdoitnuueomtotso- ~ onll- e“- - o; Joanna; cu.- nar- . u J worm“ ' be, a gmliableld“ u: m: , m‘ “irmi , it was received by the l9“ ‘In’ , t l,._.,_......-.-_- * ' ' i q n- | out! a civil war between Arabs and Jews." \ (Continued on Pale 9 and and rises tomorrow morning at: lmderslood the P utes later than Charl tatown. 4nunnn 1 l A Bolder Winter ls Predicted OTTAWA, Nov. 1—-(CP) Weather experts at t l that this winter will be ld-oold i than last. w “I n “m Dr. R2; DeL . Government astronomer. blames it on sun spots Russians Begin Today Withdrawal From Manchuria BY SPENCER MOOSA CI-IUNGKING, Nov. 1 — (AP; _ Russian lows will begin their large-scale mchdrawal from Man- churia tomorrow and will be out by Dec. 1. a semlofficial ddspstch from Tientsin said today. squarely BCIOSS the path Chinese Govern- ment troops would take to relieve ‘ham. however. are ntassad forces of fighting Chinese . Nevertheless, Government soldiers will move north this month in strength. and will take over from the Russians by Dec. 3, a Chinese. dispatch from Changchun insisted. Scattered fighting-with wooden cannon and home-made knives, among other weapons - tinned todaythmlsgfhg-ll ppm - ces. Government sources here ack- Ilflwlédged that: l. Communists now control most of Shantung Province, vlrurally iso- laifng the United States marine- held port of Tsingtao from which Central ChlILs hoped w get coal.- 2. Both Central Govemmcn-t and Shansi povincial forces which en- countered Chinese Communist troops in the north have "taken a beating." Sons fouls Aw: so Tom or Bosaowluc. (Rouble (llsv raven METEOROLOGICAL OivrlUu, Toronto, Nov. 1 - (CF) - Mini- mum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 45, 4B; Edmonton l9, 33; Regina 28, 33: Winnipeg 31, 34; Toronto 32-; Ottawa 26, -; Mon- treal 31, is; Quebec 27,-; _ John 34,-; Monclnn 30, 44; Haii- *- fax 43, 40; Charlottetown 36, 43¢ Sydney 42, 59; Ysrmcuih 4i, 45. FOBICAITI: Lower St. Lawrence - Strong easterly to southerly winds with occasional rain or part snow. Lake St. John - Strong south- east and south winds with some snow or part rain. Gulf. Bay Gialeur and North Shore - Fair at first followed by , strong southeast winds with rain or pirt snow. Maritime West — Fair and cool = at first, followed in fresh to atren .1, southeast to south winds wlt ,' showerl. " Maritime East - Fair and cool. followed by fresh to strong winds and showers by Saturday. l-li h tide this morning st 9.07 onlght at 929 Sun sets thifsftornoon at 4.48 .40. Nfiw moon November 4th. 6.11.‘ ‘Summerslde tide el hteen min- IEVISED SCHEDULE Leave Wood Islands I pl!» 1O _ a.rn.. 2 pan. Leave Caribou, I LI». flfllo f . p“ BUNDA! BIIVIC! 5.10 p-Is. cna - NIW ausdovv than; can Sunday) vs 1.1a 4.