MAXIM! OIL MERE MAN i1 -er ‘I'm doomed ls 110mm. whereas rnlm‘. I still shall soy-that homo to {EIGIIIHHIIL Three Centn. Morning Daily Founded ll". = = ‘ . I . . Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Daft not till tomorrow to be who; tunorrofl sun to thee may novel- rho. MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN .___ __ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1948 1 4 Paces u, Z-__--q Subscriptions Delivered $6.00, 85.00; other Produces I 0.8. fl-IO. lNDIANLFORCES 111111011 INVASION or HYDERABAD Claim Date rSe-t For Reds To Take Over Berlin Republicans Roll Up Big Victory In Maine Freight Rates I Issue Stressed By Diefenhaker HALIFAX, Sept. 13 — (OP)- Johl: Dieicnbaker, Progressive Conservative member of Parlia menl. for Lake Centre. said today Curadals freight rates structure nlllrl be rebuilt to remove llldJS~ trial cliscrinllnatlon against v.1- lolls provinces. Opening a Maritime tour with Itll address before the Halifax Klnilnls Club, he said geographi~ ral barriers "which deny to (Mn. ndilnls everywhere equality of op- porlunlty" must be eliminated, Ml. Diefenbaker commended ‘rude unions that had undertaken 1o "clear their ranks ~0f COLD- wrllnlsts", who, he said. were “on Lhe march in Canada." During his address the 55-yar- aki Ian-yer made no reference w fepilllfi he would seek the v3.31“ Progressive Conservative party lradership. Earlier. he had said n: Tcililtlllllfll on Page 5 Col, 1) Coming Events "Sea llrcezo Victoria. each Wed- flttday. Dancing 9-1. "Eldon — Movies "Landrusn." Friday. Thrilling Comedy, "inlnce in Cardigan Had School, Friday. September 17th. I"Dance every Tuesday, st. peg. Legion Hall. Clifford's Orch. .4 a. "hillliilfa Ciicken Supper, 5gp. le-nrucl- 21st and 22nd. Supper $€l\\?Cl 1.0.11 5 o'clock. luClllckdn ‘Supper gnd Dance’ "m HM- Fllftfidfll’. September “'41- Slippers served from a p, M_ "AIlll-‘llldfllt? -_ Movies - Thurs- "Landrush". Thrilling Coin- TDIWCG. Alberry Plains Hall, “Piluvlev- September 15th. lum- "WW ilchestra. I "B"? SUDDEr aild Dance. Allis- i-lall. Thursday- September 16. .»\.is1on Women's institute. "lll $106K. l-lrnn. Shorts. Wheat, Ho; ui-ou-cr, Barley Meal. W. I. Bwllllflll. lluntcr River. “xllanre in Watervale School “lll- 1.\‘ nilzht- September 15th. Good music. "llflllre. Colraville Tllll‘~lfii'- September Ind Relrcshlnenls. School. 16th. Drinks "Dance. Winsloe Station Hall lmllfilil. (‘aniecn service. Eastern Rllillllu Boys Orchestra. _"Sce Errol Flvnn. Barbara Stali- “Kl l" (Irv Wolf at. MacDonald 5W. Theatre. tonight. "Hospital Dance. ‘McLean's wllllfllilllse- Sourls. Wednesday. s9lll"illb0r 15th. Modezn and Old Tim". Bus leaves Holy Name Hall at T30, "Bil Dance. Moi-ell ‘new Co-op- lrntlve Warehouse. 5.,‘ “ 16. Al Blanchard! Orchestra. Lunches. Refreshments. ' "Don't fol-get the big Dance. Ooveheari canteen. Wednesday night. Modern and old time. “We by Rollie Macllenaifs Or- Chests-p, "R ' Dancing. Modern and Old Time, Islanders. Country "lllb- Travellers Rest. avory Thurs- day night“ rwellhlnl party and Orokin- g! Tolmlnment. Bale of lunches. Wnwall Hall. Sept. 90th. In lid °l WYflWI-ll v. w. o. "DOM- forg-st-Tha bk dance gmtbend on ‘rhuradav nlqht. in- Rslti of Wednesday. Rollie Mac- mxlts Orchestra. Admiuion l0 ‘l s,‘ Plvvlnc Match and Rona mo! at Dundal. September find. m: "WM in prises. All clams l" "fiwinea. Wit-ta for mice M" Al Mom. Secretary cllkggq‘ --- ~---» -- PORTLAND. Me, (AP)— Rolling toward Vlcwll’. Maine Republicans gave Representative Maggy-Qt ch“, 5mm! "elfly l. five-to-one margin over her Democratic opponent for a. Ilnltcd States Senate seat in to". dfllls Maine election. Dr. Adrian Scolten. the Demo. ci-at. had only 15°“ 3° Der cent of the vote in an unofficial tabulat- ion of returns from 151 of 521 precincts. The figures: Mrs. Smith 15114 Scolten 3,356. ' ' ln the same precincts. the Re- publican candidate for goveznor of the state. Frederick G. Payne, had almost as big a margin over Lou}; B. Lausler, Democrat. Their totals: Payne 14,249, Lous- ier 3,971. The Smith-Payne vote repl-e- sented the whole state. including city wards. but did not contain re- turns from heavily Democratic in- dustrial centres. The vote in these industrial centres is expected to cut into the Republican margin. Excellent weather heavy turnout of voters. Trim, stylish Mrs. Smith. 49. is serving her fifth House term, hav- ing succeeded her late husband. Clyde. She sits on the important armed selvices committee. Dr. Scolten, 55. is a skin specialist who never public office before. Sept. 13 - apparent zought a Portland sought Expect Board 0f Trade To Discuss Potato Floor Price The opening fail meeting of the Council of the Charlottetown Board of Trade was held ‘asz. evening at the home of the Pre- sident, F. W. Curtis. North R..ver Road, with the majority of the council members present. Matters were discussed whlcn will be oil the agenda of the Rit- nual meetings of the Merits-he Board of Trade and the Maritime Transportation Commission which are to be helzl at; the same time lii Kentville. N. S., on Thursday and Friday of this week. President F. W. Curtis and sce- rctary A. Walihcn Gaudet were named as delegates to the Mari- lime Board of Trade ani..l meeting. Mr. b. Li..i..-.ii Rogers and Mr. R. E. Mutcli will amend the corresponding meeting of one Maritime Transportation Comma- sion as the representatives of this Province on that. body. Among other members of the Board W11.) plan to attend the Kentvlllc meetings are Carl F. Burke anti F‘. Walter Hyildnlan. During last evening's Counti. meeting, the members cllscmsetl the matter of l1 floor price for po- tatoes. It is expected that a reso- lution. prepared by one of the Boards of Trade on the island, for submission to Ottawa. will be dealt with by the Maritime BJJlj at the forthcoming annual meet 111g. ' The 3t. Inl. C. D. Iowc. lad- eral Minister of Trade and O0!!- marce. has been invited by the Charlottetown Board of ‘Prado w be their guest at the opening “all meeting of the Board. Upon re- ceipt. of Mr. l-Iowes reply to tne invitation, the Board will an- nounce the date of this meeting. l Lightning-set Fire Destroys Two Race Horses WOODSTOCK. N. 8.. Bent. 13- (OP)—-A mectaculu tire appar- ently sat by lightning tonight de- stroyed a large stable and two valuable race horses at Island Park here. The building was used by Dari B. Avery and the horses lost were Bona Beau, owned by Avery. and Hollyrood Chacaw, owned by In Scott, Saint Jonn. N B. ' The blaze started during a vlo lent thunder storm accompanied by heavy rain and despite the rain gained great headway below firemen arrived. Avery was re- ported to be in Foxboro, Mass.. a! tending races. Scott was believes! to be visiting Fredericton. Adding to the difficulty of fighting the blaze was the black- out of all power in the Woodstock area due to trouble at the Brtlge- water and ElSlDn sub station 1r. Maine, which supplies the tolvn. The alarm had to be sounded or the old manually-operated bell in front of the fire station as ‘ale siren system was useless. Power was cut off early in the evening as a result of the storm, and sti- vice was not. resumed until late tonight. The rain broke drought in this area. Tonight's fire was the "second major blaze at Island Park with in three years. ln March. is-it). the large exhibition building and a month-long Tax Arrears Discussed By Gity Souneil At the regular monthly meeurig of the City Council yeslerdav afternoon much discussion was given to the issue raised by Coun- cillor Farmer concerning the coi- lecting the arrears in poll and property taxes. Councillor Fainicr stated that it wasn't. fair to tilcsc who pay their taxes regularly. when many others who are lu arrears are allowed to delay paj- ment. Councillor Johnston agreed and said that they should deal more severely with these deiaulters. he suggested that notices be sent in. that l! payment ls not made wtih- iil a. specified time. these IlOUcLb should be followed up by the serving of a garnishee. Mayor 1-3. Earle MacDonald and Council agreed that. such action should .13 taken immediately. Upon the reading by City uleJi James A. Fullerton of a petiuoit put. forward by city truckmen {or an increase in trucking rates, an increase of ten cents per load was a stable were destroyed. —“(Continuedmkorl—l>a‘ge ' {£51. 3) Hurricane Causes Damage HAMILTON, Bermuda, Sept. 13‘ ~10?) — Strong gales lashed the island of Bermuda. again tonight after the hurricane winds which pound-ed it for more than five hours today had ‘slaokened off toward late afternoon. The new night winds were veering southward and the At- lantic hurricane was moving slow- ly auey. ‘Ire return of the galcs was believed to be a parting blow, for after an hour's pounding they appeared to be lessening. The new gale brought down more overhead wires just. when power- authorities were about to turn on tl-c island's electricity. ‘Icclrys stun. caused no loss of life or extensive property dani- ege although vrinds hit upwards of 100 mdlrs an hour. Trees were dcvncd, some slates were ripped frrm rccftc-ps and several win- dcw panes were smashed. some insecure shutters were torn from store window's. But the island appeared to hate weathered the high winds well. ‘ ‘Ibo centre of the storm. pass- ing off the coast. had winds of 140 miles per hour. Damage was possibly kept to minimum because of advance warning. All United States Air Force. naval and civil airline planes except a weather squadron tell- lng the hurricane were evacuated r/esterday. Ten American warships and the 1U. S. aircraft carrier Mindoro, in the eras on exercises; put to sea. yesterday in an attempt to avoid the 8101111. ‘Intensive Search For Missing WINNIPDG. Sept. 18- (CP)-— Search planes swept the bleak Northern Manitoba bushland Lo- day for trace of a United States navy aircraft missing since yea- terday with fiva aboard. The missing craft. was equipped with wheels instead of pontoona and an air force spokesman said this would maka any forced laid- ing attempt. in the lake-studded ates extremely hanrdoua. The missing aircraft. a twin- ongined Beecher-aft. carried aevan parachutes when it left Churchill. Man, on a M-mtle flight to The Pal. Kan. Two Jungle kits, cap- able of keeping one man alive for two week. also were aboard. Those aboard: Capt. Sir Robert Stirling-Hamil- ton, R11, naval cdvlaor to tho U. S. ‘Plane Bi-ittsh High Commissioner at Ottawa; Capt. Bsndamin Scott Custer, naval attache at the U. S. Embassy in Ottawa: Lleut. Gnar- les Wilcox. U. B. navy. pilot of the plane; a staff sergeant named Scalite. and Chief Petty Ottlcar Jack M. Inter. a U. l. naval air pilot. The British ahd American naval attaches were rapoiitnd to be re- turning from Churchill an route tn Ottawa. They landed at Churchill Saturday from Halifax aboard the Canadian destroyers Nootka and Haida. The R.C.A.I. out eight plaiill into the sou-ch today. The Riv are, Man. and Winnipeg stations provided time each, nd North West Al: Command impolite: two. Arlotho! acute. lane is w’ In Bermuda N. B. Fire Loss llp This Year FREDERICTON. seet- Ill-WP‘ —N$»\v UTUllSWlC-i fire losses ll'\ the first six months o! this year amounted to $l-Sl0.249 or almos" $1,000,000 more responding period of 1947. PfOvlfi- cial Fire Marshal H. M. Arm- strong reported tonight. He 1-".- nounced mt. 3 to 9 as the claws in’ Fire Prevention Week in the dro- vlnce. Fatalities caused by fires doling the six months numbered 2-1 a‘ compared with 21 for_all o! 1047. "1 consider that it requires the immediate and energetic amu- lion of not. only the public but all governing bodies to check Liils crippling waste." said Mr. Alm- strong. Heating and electrical equp ‘meflt caused most of the loss from 1,010 fires in the Jx-month DB1.’ .1 Among cities and towns, Saint John suffered the heaviest dam- a\-e-$3"ll,088. Ne Decision In Telephone Base HALIFAX. Sept. 13- (CP)--l\’o decision was reached by the Boar"! of Public Utilities as it concluded hearings here today into spilled- tion of Maritime Telegraph and Telephone Limited for permission to sell 148,020 more shares of cap- ital stock. The company wants to sell the shares at. I10 par each to raise ii,- 600000 it. says it needs for ex- penditures already made. It ivotild increase the company's capital to I7-b00.000. In adjournlng its decision hi- definitely, the Board did not slig- |e|t~ an alternative method for raising tha money. 1 i wit." l .-.~l ~11» -i FLOUR pasted trons later. a I than in the can‘ USS iii CANADA New School And Convent Milli-Russian At Lennox island Opened Yesterday was a red letter day in the history o1 LennOx Island when, at. z pm., Lieutenant-- Governor J. A. Bernard officially opened the new combined school and convent before a gathering which comprised not only all the Indians on the island but several hundred white persons frcm all parts of the Province. The Hon. A. E. Arsenoult, re- tired Justice of the Supreme Court of the Province, who has for more than a quarter of a century been a persistent advocate c-f better treatment for the Indians of LEHYWX Island, presided at the opening ceremonies. In his opening remarks he paid a warm tribute to the Department of Mines and Resources. Ottawa for ‘having made available the money necessary to erect the splendid buildings which, he said. would mean so much education- ally, sccially, and economically to the Indian boys and girls now living on Lennox Island. It was the great intrrest taken by His Efxeellency Bishop Boyle in the Indian_parish of Lennon; Island, Judge Arsenault said, which had resulted in fiis Excellencys appointment of Rein E- W. Mclnnis as resident pastor o-n the island, as well as the establishment there or five sis. tors of the Order of st. Martha. Father Melnnis and Sister Car- nlelita would have the use two of the finest class-rooms the Province in which to teach the childremand with the assist- ancc of the other Sisters, the people of Lennox Island were now in a mlleh mOrg fortunate pogjl- ion than they hud gvcr been, Far Reaching Results said he lvas proud to have the opportunity of officiatilifl at such an important leremony. There interest being taken in the Indians men's of Indian Affairs would have far reaching results. lie thought It possible for the Indians to raise enough vegetables on Lennox Island for their own use with some left c-ver to sell. There was a general impression that the soil on Lennox Island was a inspector of Indian Affairs for the Maritimes, had told him the sc-il on Lennox Island was goodfas that on the mainland i properly worked and supplied with z r-nn Indians on the progress tiley were making toward their economic in- dependence and told them that henceforth their boys and girls “To... TfiFoiifllfieiFcolfaf iilhertafllilaaded For Record 0N Dutput EDMONTON, Sept. 13- ICE‘)- Alberta reported today that the Province is headed toward winds may be its greatest oil-prodilttiol. year for both revenue and qlhlfl tity. The Economic Affairs De- partment's semi-annual oil review said revenue for the first. !'..\ months this your was 311533.111 compared with $18,078.90‘! 1047. when ta Tacord was set. TEXTILE MANUFACTURER. DIE S WIRRAL. Cheshire. England. Sept. 13—(A.P)—_-Sir John Shute. ‘f3 a loading textile manufacturtl. ‘died today. He was a partner in the Liverpool iii-m of Reynolds and Gibson. chairman of the Com- bined Egyptian Mills, Ltd. and a leader in the Empire and British Cotton Growing Associations. Ha was a. Conservative member of Parliament. from i903 to 1946. 0 of’ in‘ Lieutenant - Governor Bernard‘ was no doubt that the increasing, of Lerlncx Island by the Depart‘ barren one, but Mr. J. E. Morris.‘ the necessary fertilizing ingr6dl~ ents. His Honour congratulated the 1n , fiierman Press l Says Plans Made Suggests Date Will Be After November Elections In The ilnited States. BERLIN- Sept-JB -—(APJ-'I‘he anti-Russian German press re- P°Fl°d Willy that the Russians 118d fixed “X-day" for achlevinc Communist rule in Berlin. a 1 United States goveznment of- ‘flClfll said he had nothing to Con. lfirm the report, but. he did not discount it. The Gennan newspaper Montags‘ Ecrio._a Liberal Democrat (Con- fservatlve) party organ. said “X- lday” was set for sometime alter ,t.he November presidential elect- ‘IOIIS in the United States. l Meanwhile. it. added. the Rus- plans had given the Communists ‘orders t0 Step up demonstrations bechuse Moscow wanted no four. power settlement of the blockade _t:risis. v Moutags‘ Echo said the date for the Communist seizure was fixed at a meeting of leaders of the iCommunlst. - dominated Socialist illlllty lS.E.D.1 who had instnlct- ,1ons from the Russian occupation lchiefs. The newspaper said also that ’lhe Russians promised to “inter- ifere with the air supply shuttle by Pncreasing their own plane man- oeuvres over Bezlili.“ Record Air Lift i The United States Air Force lsent a record for the air lift. today ,by flying 1603.8 tons of supplies in 46B flights. l Tile Russian war memorial was qnrojcctcd into the battle for Ber- ilin again today by a shot fired b)’ lan unknown sniper Sunday mid- I night. The memorial. built. by the Rus- isilm army to lmmortalize the con- quest of Bezhn, lies just outside the British s e c tor. Russian authorities told British authorities the shot apparently came from across the street. and a Russian ,seiitry fired two ansvvedng bullets ‘at a shadow lurking there. The incident occllrrcd only a day after an anti-Russian German ‘newspaper advised the Russians ithat if they don't tear down the ‘monument the. Germans some day [would do it 1o.- them. i r savanna. Que, Sept. 13 - tCPi A parked freight. train which diverted a motorists at- tention from a speeding expressl today was blamed for a crossing ‘crush which took six lives ill this iMatnpedia County town Sunday - night. , Killed in the crash were J. Lucien Lcbel, as-ysar-old Monti lJoli trninman. his 26~,vear-oldi wife Monique, their lilrce-month- old dauohter Louise, Anita Lebel. 33, o: St. octave. Gerard Icbel, 20. also of St. Octlive. and his Fiancee, Dolores Fournien 2S, of Price. Label, driving the family group home in c, little English time car.‘ . . News Briefs OTTAWA, Sept. l3 -(CP) - The Commonwealth Prime Min- isters’ conlelrezica in London will open Oct. 1l..lt was announced simultaneously hero tonight and lzl London. OTTAWA, Sept. l3 -<c1=> Prime Minister Mackenzie Kim today handed over the job of running Canada to Louis St. Lau- rent and left Ottawa on his way to the United Nations Assembly in Paris and the Commonlvealth Prime Ministers‘ conference in London. LONDON, Sept. 1i -(Tuesday) —-(OP) -- Eire will not. be reipre- scrited at the Commonwealth Prime Ministers‘ meeting opening here Oct. 11 and is not. being invited, it was announced just af- ter midnight. WASHINGTON. Sept. l3 — (AP) ~ The Marshall Plan for Asia started rolling under a full head of steam today with the tentative allocation of $70,000,000 for Chinese recovery. MONTREAL. Sept. 13 —(OP) —- A "Diefenibaker for leader move- lment" has been launched in Mon- treal, it was learned lOIllEYll, and 'its sponsors are busy lining up Quebec delegate; to support the Lake Centre member at the Pro- gressive Conservative national convention at Ottawa Sept. 30- Oct. 2. Recover Loot Taken By “Lena Wolf” Burglar MONTREAL, Sept. 13 -—-(CP) - Recoi-defs court today took on the appearance of an exclusive gift shop when loot valued at more than $20000. stolen from stlzlurban hcmcs during the last {year by a “lone wolf" burglar. sires stacked on tables in ‘the courtroom to await identification. One man was detained by pol- ice in connection with the thefts. which ranged from mink coats to vacuum cleaners, and he will ap- pear within two days in crimin- a1 court on charges of their. and receiving. Police withheld his name. The loot was found in a park uelltension private home and gar- age. Four police cars and a patrol wagon vlere required to cart a- way the goods to a police sta- ‘tion. llSlicfikilled In Quebec Level Crossing Crash rolled on to the crossing at 8.50 pm. as Canadian National Rall- lvays‘ Ocean Limited sped up. The Limited, Montreal-bound fi-cm Halifax. makes no refill-H‘ stop at Sayabec and was travell- ing 6O miles-an-hollr at the spot, about. 200 yards from Sayabec station. In a siding nearby stood .1 freight train waiting for the Limiteds passage. i Tile freight train was thought. to have taken the attention of driver Label ns his car lvlis seen to move slowly on to the tracks. Eyre-witnesses said there was a terrible crash and the bodies were strewn along the right-of- way before the Limited calno D a stop. By James McCook LONDON, Sept. 1a -<c1=n The third session of Prime Min- ister Attlees Labor Parliament ended today wdth a. cautious gov- eminent. statement of hope for “an increasing degree of union between all the countries of Western Europe." Tomorrow a new session begins —a session called especially to push ahead wit-h legislation to curb the powers of the l-louae of mrds. and thus ensure that La- bor's public-ownership program call go through before the next election. The statement on western urt- ion was contained in the Speech from t-ho Throne. read for the Kin; by Lord Jowitt, the Lord Chancellor. Before the glided thrones in tho House of lords, _ the royal commissioners. gay in scarlet-and-errnlna robes, were Lihird Session. Of Labor Parliament Prorogued of a drab year. Tomorrow, at the new session cpening. the King and Queen will ccc-upy the thrones 1n person and the King will read the Throne Speech himself. Ministers, pears and common- ers gathered in the Lords Cham- hnr hoard their government's warning that great. difficulties remain to be overcome. Britons had made a great of- fort, the Speech said. but "the way before us still is hard and it is only with courage and en- durance and by intensifying our present efforts, that we under God. otlercome our difficul- prosperity and well-being which we all hope." lions among the countries Western Europe maintained ward any concrete steps in presenting i-Iia Majesty's review dktotion. ties and attain to that degree of‘ 101‘ 1 Rapid fish/thee Reported Into Prineely State Demonstration In Dapltal 0f Pakistan calls For War With India." NEW 1321.111. sepc. 1a_(ori_. Indian troops with air and tank support swept into I-lyiorabai from all four ride: today and in one thrust were reported possibly within 60 mllea of t-ha apical n! the rich princely stats. Forces jumping of! Qgm B“. lvada near the southenj border of the predominantly-Titania ma... advanced 40 miles aoi-ou the Iron- lier in a drive toward the capital City 0f Hyderabad and adjoining Secunderbad, site of arm; lngtgii. atlons and ammunition dumps. ‘Madras dispatches said. lThe Hyderabad Government in. sued a communique tonight saying Indlln forces had been checked Atibiiim 4111M. 4111s couuigv News is hour: " ‘annotate 5s v‘ DRNERS Q 7 _ ._. ... _______.___ l TORONTO. Sept. IB~-_IQP) v |Minimum_ and maximum term- lperatures: y. Victoria 50 70: Echronion ~17 68; ‘Rflfllllfl 50 76; Winnipeg 4,0 6a; Toronto 66 85: Ottawa 60 80; Montreal 61 83; saint 591m 53 358; Moncton 49 82; Halifax 53 Z74: Charlottetown 5a '75; Sydney £54 77; Yarmouth 56 '70. , HALIFAX. Sept. 13 —-(OP) Official inland forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Puiblic Weather Office at Halifax and valid until midnight Tuesday, Synopsis: on MQlldfly the weather was nmstly fine over the Maritlmes. Mid afternoon temperature; wgrg in the seventies. However (hm-g Wassome rain ll'l the northern ,scction of tho dlslript cam“; bv 1a disturbance moving eastward 110F055 Qutbec. Cooler air from mg northwest pushed into New Brill-is. . wick and (tillfllli! the evening them were scattered thunclershowers, Fog banks over the Bay of mmdv reached the shore in n-lrgny mam; "ll Plflli F04! Patches over the; Allflnllc bPiIan to drift into shore dull"! the evenini. The hurri- cane that passed Bermuda dur- l-“ll! the dill‘ is (‘Xbectcd to move o“ (Ohllrdfl Neufollndland and ‘not hllve murh effect on the ,Maritimes. Hon-ever ra-ill is ex- Jlenteri to begin in Nova. scutg. ‘(luring the flay and reach Prince Edward Island by ‘Tuesday ev... ning. Regional forecasts: Prince Edlward Island: Clear beecnlillg overcast Tues- Klal/ with rain by evening. Mmh, lcooler. Scuthnvest. winds twenty lbfififlmlns hfllit by morning. “Mndg l ircreaslnl; to east fifteen Tuesday afterlllozl. Low early Tuesday moi-lulu: and high ill tho after- noon .12 Charlottetown 5o “q u; High tilir this morning at 9,34 and tonizht at 0.05. 1 Sun sets this cvcliing at 9.14 and rises tolliorrow morning at: 5.37. Full moon September 18th. 5.48 A M sul-nmerslrle tide etlghteen mtnn uteg later than Charlottetown. Daily Except Sunday CAR. FERRY "ABEGWEIT" Standard Time llieavea Borden. 0.10 a.m., l 1mm. 14.30 p. m. ‘lLeuves Tonnentlne 10.85 l. m., Z40 p m.. 7.30 p. m SUNDAY Leaves Borden 8.45 l". M. CM“ Leaves Tormrntinc 8 P. M’. WOOD ISLANDS - (‘AHIBOU Dally including Sunday Standard Time Leaves Wood Islands. Prince Nova ‘The reference to closel- rela- i1 1,51,, 11 Q.|n.. a p.111. oi lfllarles A. Dunning, o.n..m., l pm.- lht 5 pan. cautious government. attitude to- Leave: Caribou. Charles A. Dram that nth; ‘i um. 11 um, 3 p.111. Prince Nova. t a.m.. l p.ln-. ll pm, ill-l