h mxms CIA i, MERE MAN wisdom to listen. t The Guardian. Three Cents,- iiforning Dolly ,I'ounded 1887. 'Storm Delays »()ld Home Week Program; 3-Inch Rainfall Here Visits Here 0n Tour 0i Seed Potato Areas Winding up a six month agr]. cultural tour of North America in Prince Edward Island, a for- tunate young Scots farmer arrived yesterday for a five day's stay to find out something of our Is. land potatoes, Thvt-nty-fivc years old and a "practical farmer", John Sinclair of Croggish, Comrie, Porthshire, has travelled the length and breadth of the U. S. and Canada on a Nuffieid Foundation Scholar- ship in Agricuiiurc. The Nuffield Foundation was established six years ago by the well-known motor manufacturer, Lord Nuffield, for the purpose of providing a fund to enable re- (Conti Coming Events i ._.__ "Dance. M: rell Monday. 92nd. Jiood East. School, music. "Come to the regular dsnce in Bonshsw every Tuesday night. "Mau your l-‘ums to Gsrnbum Photo Studio. Charlottetown "Dance, Orwell Hall. August 22nd. lvlliiview Orchestra. "See Ray Iiittle Show in Wilt- shlrc Hail, 0n August. 23rd. "Dance. Lorne Valley, Tuesday, August 23rd Webster's Orchestra. "Dance. St Teresa's. Wednesday. August 24th, Webster's Orchestra. "Dance in St. Hall every Tuesday night. Peters Orchestra, Peter's Legion Cliff "Harrington Chicken Supper Wednesday, August 24th. st 5 o'clock. "Dance. Conan Ban Hail, Wed- nesday. August 24th. Melody Boys Orchestra. "In stock, Ccmr-nt. Asphalt Shingles, etc. W. I. Bowman, Hun- ter River. "Chicken supper, st. Charla Hall. Wednesday. August 24th. Dance after. "Ice Cream and Cake at New London school. Tuesday, August 23rd. In aid of Institute. "Ice cream Festival and Dance in MaoMillan Bros. new Ware- house, Conway, August 3rd. "Ice Cream Festival and Dance in MaoMiilnn Bros. new warehouse. Conway, August 23rd. "Ice Cream Festival, Springton School. August 24th, Part. of pro- ceeds for Cemetcry. "Ice Creams Festival, Mad. "Como to the open oi 010 It Rink Grounds. Aulust ma. Refreshments. spsnsoréa by Cornwall Junior Fsnners. "Come to Ice Cream social, New Glasgow Hall, Tuesday evening. August. xrd. sponsored Ladies Aid, Christian Church. "Don't miss s tins svenini 01 to be held st Johnston's River School. August mm and dsnce wit, st 5.30 P. M. "Meet your friends st the 1M 011mm Festival on St. Mark's An- Rustico, [ii Church grounds, M sy. August 22nd. _ "Hero's s show you have all been Miokdy Rooney with no punches ban-ed. et McDonsld Bros. Thostro wetting to see It's in "Killer McKoy" tonight. Plus Shorts. "Aiuiuu Lesion HM per. Bowling Ailey. vi Amusqnents. in! It 0-00 P. M. "The District Convention of the Mull. Iownsl lou ormcross 11.34». amiuwr. Walnuts: Donsglt, Mt. Alston and Johnna": Rivc, Women's Instituhs will hold in Mt. Kmart Orphans! It ls lie province of kswwlotlge to speak, and it ls the prime" o; ‘Bingo, Games, Refreshments, Dance, etc.. North Rurtico, Monday, August my. lforoll, August 34th. Chicken out»- Conteen ser- Dense. Hollie M oasis Orchestra. Supper start.- The worst. rain storm in several years swept Prince Edward Island YBSlPTd-HY. when over three inches of rain fell in the twenty-four hour period up until 8 o'clock last even- ing. The rain was accompanied by a Z8 mile an hour gale from the north, gusts of which reached as 1118b as 32 miles per hour, blow- ing down trees and disrupting power and telephone services in Charlottetown and country dis- tricts. Although the programme was canccllfld, the estimated 15,000 tons of ruin which fell on the Exhibi- tion Grounds stopped few exhibit. ors from loading their cattle for home. At seven o'clock last evening the wind changed to noF-tivest and the barometer started to rise. The horse racing programme which was cancelled yesterday is sched- uled for today. The heavy ruin and wind fiat- tened stands of grain and corn and soaked the stocked crops through and through. Orchards expo: to the storm, suffered broken li bs, and s conside able quantity of rip- ening fruit is believed to have dropped off. Falling trees disrupted power and telephone services in Char- lottetown. where the Brighton, Longworth and Weyrnouth areas were affected. About noon, a great tree at the corner of Fitzroy and Wcymouth Streets, dropped the Dower line on the phone csblos, leaving the Mount Ed- ward road area without power and telephone communication. Another tree fell in Cumberland Street. Some 400 telephones were out of commission in Charlottetown. Phone lines in the Montague and Souris areas were also disrupted. Power circuits were cut in the Millview and Chen-y Valley areas and crews were still repairing fai- len lines at Cornwall late last night. Potatoes Helped The rain will help the potato crops in the drier areas of Mount Stewart and St. Peters. states Mr. Henry MacLaren of the Seed Po- tato Certification Service, and It general. the potato crops are do- ing well. Up until the present, the spread of late blight has been slow sress affected in Queen's County. Very little. if any. hu appeared in Prince and King's. It is expected that after the ‘storm, when conditions permit, spraying will be under way in ef- fected areas. Heavy Storm In N.S. HALIFAX. Aug. l9 - (CP) — A violent wind and rain storm rock- ed mainland Nova Scotia today and tonight, \ At least two ships were in dis- tress off Halifax. Other vessels ap- Prfllilhlng the harbor had m sn- chor for a time. Sheets of rain had a crack at Cape Breton Island s ii. S. Consulate Closes As Reds ‘ Near Canton By SPENCER MOOSA CANTON, China, Aug. 19 -(AP) — The United States Consulate- General closed this afternoon and the Embassy planned to go on a commuter basis from the nearby British colony of I-Iong Kong m. marrow due to the Communist ad- vance on this Chinese Nationalist Capital. Acknowledging Communist cap- titre of Tsyu, 1'70 miles northeast of Canton, the Nationalist Defence Ministry said the situation on that from was "unchanged" today. However. Tsyu's fall leaves vin- ually open an easy valley road to Kukong, '70 miles west. Kukong is on the railway only 120 miles north of Canton, and military observers said the strug- gle for Canton itself could be con- sidered started when the Reds reached that point. Its loss would isolate from Canton the 200,000- man army of Gen. Pal Chung-I-Isi, now opposing the Reds near Heng- yang, 205 miles north of the cop- ital. Washington Reviews Potato Question Beauty Contestants In Bills Squabble TORONTO. Aug. 19 — (C?) —A squabble over meal bills today added to the troubles of the 1M9 Miss Cansda- conteliiiv" Some of the 30 contestants, when checking out of a downtown hotel with their chapcrones, said they were handed meal bills. They said the hotel cashier told them that only meals served in the cafeteria were to be paid for by the contest sponsors. Later S. ‘Radcliffe Weaver of Hamilton, promoter of the con- test, said the sponsors would pay for the meals. But, by that time. some girls had already paid the bills and left. - Margaret Lynn Mann of Tor- onto. formerly of Vancouver. last night. was chosen Miss Canada nf 1949. Only 1,000 persons turned out for the contest. held in Maple Leaf in Gardens which hos seating capac- ity of 15,000. Meanwhile, Edward S. ~Stock of Hamilton, former assistant execu- tive director n! the Miss Canada pageant, said i a statement that the contest. he cl in Hamilton in other years, could have been stag- ed this year in Halifax. "Last year H-aligonians sent their ex-mayor all the way to Hamilton to implore pageant officials to put on the show in Halifax as part of the bi-centcnniai celebrations," he aid. The fact that Betty Jean Ferg- uson of Halifax won the award last year was considered even fur- ther reason by l-Ialigonlans why blotted out the coast as effectively u if there had been a. dense fog. Liverpool. 70 miles southeast of Halifax, reported 4.15 inches of (Continued on P1130 5 C01. l) they should have the show, Mr. Stock added. The greatest earthquake of 1556 which occurred at Shensi, China, took an estimated 830.000 lives. . By Nste Polowetzisy LONDON» Aug. 19 —(AP) — Mrs. Richards Morrow-Tait. red- haired former Artists’ model and mother of s two-yesr-old, completed early this evening her ride arognd r1110 world in e sing-leeng ed p one. , It took her s. you end e. dsy to fly the long wsy from London bank to London-HMO mili-lbut she is the first woman to girdle the globe st the controls of s-n air- plsne. The fi-yesrold aviator sot down her tiny silver Vultse twvnooter st 6:40 psn. GMT (2:40 pm. With her was her navigator. Michael Townsend. M. of Cam- bridge. Hor husband, Norman Morrow- Tslt. sn engineer living in Cam- bridge and doirq the dishes and billy-lilting these lut $06 days. rushed to Croydon Airport- 10 8N6! her. He took along their daughter Anne. now nearly three. _ Richards phoned him earlier is the day from Prsstwiok. Scotland. where she hsd landed to Isl u sf- ter the over-voter hop rom svik. Iceland. e few persons were st. u: greet the pretty flier when sho ended the lsst three- s hour l . Wesrfig e rod-plaid shirt. frown mu, on Monday, August ma. at no“ slacks d lieok fly! b W. Ii" ate an m“ _W s N?‘ myths mwngm d m. ‘vim m! t! "J British Woman Completes World - Girdling Flight srms of her husband. Richards then picked up her lit- tle girl who was frightened by {he propeller noise and was sobb- ng. Mrs. Morrow-Tait looked tired but was full of plans to keep on flying. She told reporters st Oroy- don she is going to join the wom- en's branch of the R..A.1". "That's the only flying I intend to do from now on," she said. Townsend. a short. blond. stud- lous-looking young man. told rm porters there was nothing exciting on the ocean crossing. "We hsd s known on the Atlantic route." e_d to produce s book, wasn't all. . . "I went more family.” she ssid. m only child. do you?" ' gator had been held girdling flight on verssry of its stsrt. in N0 hours. 9E7" -send..to Canadian-w, Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY. AUGUST 2o, 194.9 RESCUE cum SPEED t0 in) SHIPPING 0w N. s. COAST aanada Names Powerful Delegation For Washing! Crack Trains Collide. Head On, 44 Injured Stellarton Girl To Wed Man From Iron STELLARTON, N. 5., Aug. 19— (CP)——Cccilia Brownrigg, 19-year- old silver bionde from this Nova Scotia coal mining town is engag- ed to marry the son of a provin- cial governor of Iran. The engagement of Miss Brown- rigg to Kourus Sturap, son of Governor and Mrs. Reza Sntrap of Tehran was announced today. Mr. Satrup is an economist and statis- tician with the United Nations at Lake Success. The marriage, which blossoms from a luncheon date on the cam- pus of Columbia University at New York, will take place here Wednesday. ' Miss Brownrlgg was crowned Queen Northumbrla at the Pictou lobster carnival in 1948 and par- ticipated in the Miss Atlantic beauty pageant at Halifax lost month. She has studied fashion designing at New York. Post Writer The Montreal Star curries the following despatch from its staff correspondent. Ed Hadley, on a subject of much interest to island potato growers: WASHINGTON, Aug. 1'1 — The U.S. potato subsidy, which poured $67,000,000 into the State of Maine alone last year, is coiled "a. God- fl-by one of this capital's leading newspa- pers, the Washington Post. today. In s. special review of a situation which has plagued relations be- tween the two countries through the last. several years, the Post is publishing a series of articles pre- pared in an on-thc-spot study in Maine by its chief agricultural writer, "Our northern neighbours have benefitted in two ways," the writer says: "l. A lot of New Brunswick pota- toes crossed the frontier into Maine. Some observers assert that thousands of bushels of these found their way into the American purchase program. At. least, they replaced in the mar- ket, the Maine potatoes that the government bought. "2. Millions of bushels from Prince Edward Island and other Cana- dian potato areas moved into markets served ,for ycars by Maine growers. Favorable freight rates and the high prices due to price support purchases made Canada a gift of those markets." . Price Set In the UB. subsidy program, the government sets s. price, fixed last year at 90 per cont of what is called "parity", at which it buys all potatoes offered by growers. Over the whole country, it spent $225,000,000 on the program last year. As a result. U . prices were high enough to inv e Canadian im- ports, even over the U.S. tariff ivall, which the Post writer est.- imnied for last year at 10,000,000 bushels, nr about ten times the av- erage annual shipments of pre- war days. For the period from 1937 to 1944i, inclusive, the annual av- straight-forward flight,” he said. "once out of Mont.- resl we itsd the best weather I've ‘Mm. Morrow-Tait said she want- snd that. "You don't thlri I'd letAnno be Mrs. Morrow-Tait and her navi- up by bod weather in Iceland. This prevented them from completing their globe- the first anni- A you ego. when she took off. she had hoped to circle the world The elapsed tune of the trip wss boosted from the target m0 hours to the full yeor by e series of en- crage was 904.000 bushels. The Post. writer. however, fails to mention in his Irtlcle that lust year's favorable situation for Can- adian growers may be affected greatly by a big reduction in the US. government's purchase price this year. which already has been (Continued on Page 0 Col. 4) Saysit Was iieds Fired 0n River Steamer HONG KONG. Aug. lJ—(AP)- The Chinese captain of the steam- er Kisngiing Liberation says Com- munist shore guns~not the Brit- ish sloop Amethyst-shot up his ship during the Amethyst’: escape down the Yangtze River last month. When the Amethyst escaped sf- ier being trapped for more than three months in the river, the Communists charged she had sunk the stesme Klsngling Liberation, causing several hundred deaths. The Admiralty categorically de- nied the Communist accusation. Information seeping from be- hind the Rod curtain vie reliable travellers quotes the Chinese osp- tsin is agreeing with the British (By The Associekl Ki CANAAN. N. H, Aug. l9—'1‘wo crack Boston and Maine Railroad trams hit head-on today at a sid. ing- inll-lring 44 persons. Auth- orities were checking a report that _a confused brakeman threw a switch in error and brought the trains together. At. Mary Hitchcock Hospital at nearby Hanover, authorities said the injuries were mostly bruises and some fractures. The hospital list of injured in- eluded four Canadians. They were: Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Henry Car- rier, Quebec; Pierre La Cassc, 17, Montreal; and Raoul Ovingct, Quebec. I Robert A. Jones, Grafton Coun- ty solicitor, said he was investig- ating an eyewitnesses story that the brakemans slip opencdJahe switch and brought the railroads Montreal-bound Ambassador into a siding where the southbound Ambassador was waiting to pass on the single track. Leon Barnum, a mail carrier who meets the northbound Am- bassador daily as it passes through his town, provided the first eye- witness account of ho\v the col- lision occurred. ' Barnum has the job of hanging up a mail sack to be caught a- board the northbound express as it rolls past. Canaan without stopping. l-Ie said he was Z0 feet away from the switch at the south end of the siding when he saw an un- identified brskeman run forward from the waiting south-bound train. ,"Tl1e fireman on the southbound yelled at him but the northbound train whsflnskirig‘ so ~ much‘ noisier he couln't make himself heard." Barnum said. “The brakcman ran forward and threw the 'switch. and the northbound train just pioughmi into the other one. It all happen- ed in a twinkling." The Boston and Maine had no immediate explanation. iilfikes" man for the railroad said it was the southbound brakemans dut)’ to throw the switch “and he musi- (Continued on Page 5 Col. s: ._P__€..s_ URGB YELLOWHEAD ROUTE vanoouvbs, Aug. l9 - tor) — A police motorcycle guard es- corted a. caravan of 50 Prairie and interior British Columbia automo- biles as it arrived today ending s tour from Edmonton. The motor- cade is organized to publicize the Yellowhearl Pass route for the Trans-Canada Highway. (By The Canadian Press) sr. ANDREWS, N. 1a.. Aus- 19- Strong opposition to the develop- ment of the long discussed Passa- maquoddy tidal power project dc- veloped this afternoon when wit- nesses representing the fishing in- dustry testified at a session end- ing a one-day Canadian sitting of the International Joint Commis- sion. The Commission, meeting to de- termine the cost of surveying the project's economic feasibility and ultimate cost, will be at Eostport. Me., tomorrow to examine the technical aspects of the suggested developments. Hearings of the preliminary survey will conclude Monday at Eastport. Opposition came from Senator A. Nell McLean, president of Con- nors Bros, Ltd, at Black's Har- bor, N. B., C. 1". Inches, K.C., Saint John. N. 5., counsel for the firm, end H. W. Welch. president of the New Brunswick Fish Can- acrs’ and Assemblors‘ Association. Senator McLean lsld the pro- posed dam would be in the heert of an sres which supplies food Pearson To Fishermen Opposed To A Quoddy Power Project nun 11in Head Group OTTAWA, Aug. l9 (C?) — Canada today named a- cabinet- minister delegation to speak her thoughts at Anglo-Amerlcan-Can- adian financial talks whose im- plications shadow far more than the world of finance. Prime Minister St. Laurent en- nounced that Finance Minister Abbott, External Affairs Minister Pearson and six senior civil serv- ants will represent the Dominion in Washington conferences pro- vokcd by Britain's dollar crisis. He said, too, that "questions may arise which will make it. desirable" for Trade Minister Howe to join them. ‘Trade Minister Howe i-s ex- pected to be in Washington about that time for atomic talks. Norman Robertson. Secretary of the Cabinet and former High Commissioner in London, will head the six-man team which will take part in preliminary fact-ifinding and technical discussions starting o. week from tomorrow. The talks will switch to the cab- inet level Sept. 6 and may last an- other week. No particular significance was seen here in mention of the three Cabinet members. Britain and the U15. sci’. the pace by naming their Financial and Foreign Ministers and Canada followed suit. For Canada and for the Western World, informed quarters said here today, the talks have a significance that transcends the field of fin- ance. Their successes or failures or compromises could have vital re- percussions in politics. in defence and in western cohesion in the face of Communism. v Informed‘ observers elsewhere have speculated that. they may -wetl settle" the date of the next British General election. The Canadian delegation. on of- ficial said, will "not; go down with any panaceas." A.l'i three delega- tions will know the sort of prob- lems to be faced. Canada will raise no entirely new angles. Canada, he said, will probably try once again to act ‘in the med- iator or interpretive role that has become familiar. Her stakes will be tremendous because she will sit between the two countries, the two monetary systems that. tradition- ally have been the bulwark: of her trade. “It is enormously important to us," the official said, “that har- mony reign between them." All three Ministers named by Mr. St. Laurent were out of town today. Mr. Abbott and Mr. Howe on vacation until the end of the month, Mr. Pearson until the end of the week. tric power developments, there wouldn't be a power; dam in the whole United States." He termed the Quoddy site "the most. unique in the world," with all the elements present for a successful power development. Dr. A. G. Huntsman, of the Fisheries Research Board of Can- ada, estimated that an investigat- ion of the project's effect on local fisheries would require three to four years and might cost about 16 PAGES budgetary surplus l‘ Mo's not neoecrily n relig- ions bird boon-use it keeps mowing from s steeple. i MAXIMS fiA tuna: MAN n-ii 1 on Talks Canada Hus Surplus OTTAWA. Aug. 19 ~—<CP) — A of $254,000,000 for the first four months of the current fiscal year was reported tonight by the Federal Fmance Department. It compared with a surplus of $587,900,000 in the cor- responding period of the 1048-49 fiscal year. Revenues in the four months beginning April 1 were $878,- 800,000 and expenditures were $624.- 800.000. Nanaimo Man Heads Druggists SASKATOON, Aug. l9 —(CP)- J. Sheldon spurr, of Nanaimo, B. C., was elected president of the Canadian Phmmaceutical Associ- ation today at the closing session of its convention here. Vice-presi- dent last year. he succeeds E. P Foley of Summerside, P.E.I. Mr. Spurr, a retail drugslst since 1936, has served as president of the British Columbia Pharmaceutical Association. Succeeding him ssvlce- president of the National As- soclation is Noel Farrow. gory, twice president of the Aliberta Association. As chairman of the committee on the status of. pharmacists in the army, Mr. Farrow was instrument- si in getting pharmacists recogniz- ed as commissioned officers. Heavy Death Toii in Airiinti Crash QLDHAM, Lancashire. England. A“; 19 _(A1=) -A two-engined British airliner hit s hillside near here in misty weather today. Brit- ish Europesn Airways. Own“ °i the plane, said in London 111M 23 persons were killed outright and two others died later‘- The company said the dead in- cluded 11 women Pwtmimm 1°“ children, six men 1x15801186" BM three of the crew. The company, which is govern- ment-c/wned, said eight survivors are being treated at Oldham 1n- firznary, near the wreck. 13 miles northeast of Manchester. First reports said counted 26 dead. IncludinB two who died later. this would make 28 who iosttheir lives. BEA. said all aboard the plane were Britons except two frOmi Northern Ireland. The airliner, a Dakota. WIS en route from Belfast to Manchester. a struck 1o feet from the top of B 1,300-foot hill. Communist Leaders "a Arrested in Finland HELSINKI, Finland, Auiz- 19 - (AP) — Communist lenders W610 arrested today in a speedy 6°“ ernment crack-down on a 00:1- u-yqyyde strike offensive t at flared into violence yesterday- A Government spokeman has declared the wave of strikes is o plflmQfi Communist manoeuvre to seize power and establish a Rod Government in Helsinki. FOUND RESPONSIBLE _,____ . MONTREAL. Aug. l9 -— (CPi --, Christopher Nurse today was found criminally responsible by a cm- oner's jury for the death of Aureie Bertin, 25-year-old plastic work“, who died in downtown Charlotte Lane Wednesday night. Dr. Jciln-i, Marie Roussel testified he hadi conducted the autollfiy 0" ‘he dead man's body and found a out $200,000. A similar investigation in the early 1090's had cost $0M». By JACK ADAMS WASHINGTON, Aug. 10 —(AP) - The Federal Communications Commission today moved to throw most of radio's prize give-way pro- grams off the sir waves. Broad- casting interosts p .3‘. announ- for growing sardines. or young herring. When the plan was broached about 20 years ago his firm had favored it because of the potentialities of cheap power, but since then he could find no evid- ence that power produced at the proposed site would be cheap. The fishing industry had been haunted by fur since the_ first promotion of the tidal power ides, continued Senator McLean. The industry had increased 500 to 000 per cent in the last I0 years but further pension had been hindered by uncertainty of the future. Senator A. O. Stanley, Hender- son, 117.. theCommission chair- man, commented that “if we took the position that no industry YEP???- . should be effected by hydro-elec- ced a fight. The commission “ M!- option of new rules, to be effect- ive Oct. i. designed to end most o! the big money and merchandise offers, currently runninl t0 .1110" than 03,500,000 s yen- It. acted under the anti-lottery statutes, forbidding use of radio to promote glmm of chance. American Broadcasting Comp- any, whose Sunday night "Stop The Music" broadcast runs into big money weekly, reforted it will take the matter to court. challeng- ing F.C.C.‘s right to sot sgsinst the programs. FCC. regulations," asyerted. Give-Away Radio Showsy "No chlnges will be made in the ABC programs s: s result of tbs the network use plans to ask an injunction 1 If‘ inches wide and five inches| deep in tho man's chest. U. S. Makes Move To Haltf against the rules. Justin Miller, president of the National Association of Broadcast- ers, said the NAB. felt the com- mission had overstepped its auth- ority in view of the law Dwhibii- ing the commission from censor- ing program content. Similar comment. came from oth- er sources in the industry- Freltla l-Iennock, only woman member of the commission, an- nounced a dissent to the rules. She "id the jackpot situation was one with which Congress or the Just- ice Department. not the 1“.C.C., should deal. The FCC. said it would refuse renewal oi licence to stations if they follow a policy of broadcast- ing programs which it regards as Cal- police had I the riptlons Delivered 80.00 Mail $5.00; other Provinces d: U. B. $100 Panamanian i Freighter Sends S._0l S. HALIFAX. Aug. l0 —($) ‘- Rescue ships plunged through high- running seas tonight toward ves- sels crippled by s. vicious Atlantic storm. The 4.200401: Panamanian freighter Ffvgenia flashed an SOS from iicr P05111011 80 miles south- east of Halifax late today. I-Icr steering and emergency gear were gone and she txas drifting help- lessly in heavy seas. The rescue tug Foundation Jos- ephine raced out of Sydney, N,S.. at the same time as the Canadian destroyer Iroquois steamed from Halifax. The Iroquois was expected to reach the Evgenia. about 7 p.m. ADfI‘. She would stand by until the Josephine arrived on the scene i some 10 hours later. The Josephine radioed that she could not make full spoml because of terrific winds. Squails of rain lashed both the distressed and rescue ships. The Evgenla, bound for Halifax out of New York, is carrying s. crcw of about 50. She kept. tapping out hcr SOS on the internatlorsal distress frequency and called for ____________ (Continued on Page 6 Col. 2) WHY is n’ fair (n; MAN Wifi-i far. Sourakiac, Lawn Mowca Must‘ use" \‘I WHEN You WANT 4o stiarP? TORONTO, Aug. 19 —- (CPI-q Minimum and maximum tempers: atures: Vancouver 51, 7'1: Edmun-t tun 47. 75; Regina 58, 85; Winnis D03 61, 80; Toronto 53, 71; Ottawa 5°. 65; Montreal 52. 66; Quebec - - —; Saint John 59, 62; Mone- ton 5s, o0; Halifax e2, 69; Char- lottetown 63, —-; Sydney 63, 66; Yarmouth 61, 63; St. John's —, 72, HALIFAX, Aug. ]9—tCPt—0ffi. cial inland forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Office at. Halifax: Synopsis: A severe storm which swepti across the Maritimcs Friday now is located in the Gulf of Si. Law- rence. Unusually high rainfall amounts were reported, with Livcrponls 4.15 inches topping the list. Halifax. Sydney and Char- lottetown had approximately 2 1-2 inchcs and hlnncton 1 1-3 inches. However, Saint John reccivcd less titan half an inch and negligible amounts were reported from Nor- thern New Brunswick and East. crn Quebec. Winds reached gale force in parts nf Nova Scciia and Prince litlxvartl Island, with gusts at Sydney ns high ns 55. The gates arr: spreading across Newfound- land now, with winds slowly dim- inishing across the Maritimes. Stcarly rain will continue in the caster-n luiii of the north shore region uttlil noon, hilt elsewhere there will be a few sunny inter- vals with scattered afternoon showers, Regional forecasts, valid until midnight Saturday, with an out- lonk for Sunday. Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with a few clear intervals to- night. Saturday‘ cloudy with show- crs. Warmer Saturday. Northwest winds 15 tonight, Saturday west, 25 with gusts to 35. Low earl," Saturday mnrnini: and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 54 and BR - Outlook for showers. Sunday-Afternoon High tide today at 5.40 A. M. and 8.31 P. M. Sun rises this morning st son and sets at. 7.02. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. BURDEN - TORMENTINE IIIBY, WEEK DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cspa Tonnentinq 9.10 A.M. 10.85 A.M. 1.00 RM. 2.40 EM. 4J0 EM. 7.80 EM. 9.00 PJI. 10.80 P-M. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo 1 Intent-hi 8.10 A.M. 10.85 A.M. ' 1.00 RM. 3.00 P-M- 635 12M. 8.00 P.M. violating the lottery prohibition. A 'radio lottery. the FCC. en- nouncement. said. is generally one sult- of lot or chance, where the contestant contributes something over a rcccivor. involving s prize awarded as a re-* of value, or is required to be llst-= ening to or viewing the program‘, WOOD ISLANDS-CARIBOU DAILY FERRY Lesve Wood Islands ,3 P.‘.V1.-, is ma. have Caribou '1 AM; a A.M.; u AM; 1 Lil-l is ram s PM. . 1 an. l» an; n an. 1 no: "