I MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN youtblafnllolplemiremlu fnllofoaral. in R's: r. 1ao'w'uuy. om? Provhau no .. ml. and u. a.'a.s1:.oo per In Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7. 1951 I ful Beauty is but a vnin and doubt- MAXIMS OFA. Ml-IRE MAN good. 14 PAGES The Guardian, Five Canto. Morning Dally Founded 1881. PRELIMINARY MOVES IN . HUGE RED OFFENSIVE SUSPECTED German Scientist Has Plan For Flight To Mars Official Ottawa Program Of Royal Visit Announced Transfers And Appointments Of Catholic Clergy Several important changes in- xulvlng appointments and trans- frrs of members of the Roman Catholic clergy have been announc- ed by Rev, P. F. MacDonald. Chancellor of the Diocese. Rev. .l. P. E. O'Hanley. Ph.D.. of St. Dunstnn'a University staff. IS leaving following his appoint- ment as an R. C. A. F. chaplain. Rev, William Simpson. Bursar at the University has been named head of the Extension Depart- ment at St. Dunstan's. and Rev. F. P. Aylward. Administrator of Brae Parish, has been rgrned to succeed him. Rev. Louis B. Dooley. Curate of Tignlsh, was appointed Adminis- trator of Brae Parish, and Rev. Denis Gallant, who was ordained this year, is replacing him at Tignlsh. Appointments involving nthor recently ordained priests in- :lude Rev. Francis Bolger, ap- pointed to the staff at St. Dun- :Ian's Basilica: Rev. Claude Shea, n be Curate at Seven Mile Bay: Rev. Reginald Phclan to be CLI- "ntc at Trncndie. Rev. James Kelly. of the staff If St, Dunstan's Basilica. has been tppointerl to the teaching staff at -'t. Dunstan's University and is leaving later this month for Tor. into for a two-year post-graduate study course. Rev. Allan MacDon- ald and Rev. Thomas McLellan. who were doing post-graduate ztudies last year, will now be on he staff at the University. Dies Ar Sydney SYDNEY. N. 5.. Sept. s-(cP)- lira. Ed-Ith Riley. 56, a native of 11- mce Ed'W4'il'd Island. died to- nizht. following a brief illness. We is survived by a brother, irthur. of Montreal. Coming Events "Dance in Fannlngbrook School, llonday. Sept. 10th. "Chicken supper. Kelly's cross. Wednesday. October 3rd. 'iDanca in loan School. Cardi- zan, Monday, September 10th. "Dance, Vernon River 1-tall. September .l0tih. in aid of C. W. L. "Dance. Glenroy School, Friday. September 7th. Lunches. Burke's Jrchestra. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Prldny night. Music.by Robichaud Dancing 9 to l. , "Dance in St. Andrews school. V0"dBy. September 10th. Refresh- ments. Good music. "Raffle and Dance. Souris Dine llontl North School. Monday. Sept. 10111. Macoormaoirs orchestra. g .'Dance at. South Rustlco Hall, Friday. September 7th. Charlotte- mnians Orchestra. Canteen scr- l'iCt'.'. "For Snapshots that will not fade mail your Film: and Nego- t.vcs to Garnbuln Photo studios. Charlottetown. W "All interested in repairs in ..ornwall I-fall. please attend meet- nz in Cornwall Hall. Tuudly, Sentembor 11th. "'Reaerve Wednesday, October Wrl, for Chicken and Ham Sup- lrr. Winaloe Station Hall. Aun- ures I-Ilghficld Women's institute. "Elimlnationa for fiddling and 2191':-dancing Championships at mufll. Friday, Sept. 7th. Entries rcelved St. Mary's Hall, night of rnnteet. ."Dance. last Royalty Rink Hall; "idly. Sept. 7th. oeom Chap- Jelle and his Merry islanders. liar fitting 1. ll. 'r. 9.90 and 10 P :4. idmlulon 50 cents. canteen urvlce. ifee check room. "Buying Live Fowl and Chicken WWII! to Friday noon. every Welt. we weigh and pay at your Md. Get our price before selling. ”hnne collect for pick up service. 5- J. Mcnougall.-Vernal. "Ihow. Iloratl community Hall. "017 Tuesday. Friday and Satur- gly. I III. Outing this work g-Ifv Grant and Ann lioridan in I Wu a mic War nrlae." min. is l 30th century not show and a UITAWA, Sept. 6 --(ClP) - Princess Elizabeth will make an address, to be broadcast to all Canada. while she is in the capital next. month, it was disclosed today with release of the official Ottawa program. The address will be made at a state dinner the evening at Wed- nesday, oct. 3-the day they or- rive here for a. t-wo-day stay-and will be in reply to a toast by V15. count Alexander. the Governor- General. 'llhe dinner will be held at Gov- ernment House. home of Viscount and Vlscountess Alexander and the residence of the Princess and the Duke of Edinburgh while they are in the ca tal. It. will be fol- lowed by an of lc1al.recaptlon. The state dinner and the broad- cast will be the highlights of an action-packed itinerary. The Princess and the Duke. who land at Quebec. Oct. 2, will arrive in the capital at 10 a. m. Oct. 3. To the boom of a royal salute of 21 guns, their royal train will halt where the railway tracks bisect Ottawa's picturesque island park driveway. On hand to greet them official- ly will be the Governor-General and Visoountess Alexander, Prime Minister and Mrs. St. Laurent and Acting Mayor Charlotte Whicton of Ottawa. From there, a spilt.-second 15- minute itinerary will take them to something new virtually every quarter-hour off the day. They will be driven through the Dominion Experimental Farm and then along the Rldcau Canal to Lansdowne Park, There, thousands of Ottawa school children will be assembled for the presentation of a bouquet. of flowers to the Prih-I coas. A half-hour later they will be at the country's national war memorial. a stone's throw from the Parliament buildings, to place tccntlnued on Page 5 Col. 4) Dangerousw Hurricane MIAMI, Fla., Sept. 5 - (AP)-. Winds exceeding 140 miles an hour developed today in hurrl-1 Cine "easy" and the great: tropical storm still was growing in sizel and power about 1,200 miles southeast of Florida. "This is now a large and dang- erous hurricane." said the Miami Weather Bureau in its 6 pm. (EDT) advisory. It still was too far at sea. though, to threaten? any land areas. A navy hurricane hunter planci flew into the heart.- of the storm and the pilot estimated the cen- tral wlnd velocity at greater than 140 miles an hour. Winds of hurricane force (75 miles an hour or better) extended 50 miles south of the centre and 80 to loo miles to the north. At 6 p.m.. it was 400 miles northeast of San Juan. Puerto Rico. and moving on a west- northwest course at 14 to 15 miles an hour. , Following hurricane ”Easy" 1,000 miles back was hurricane "Foxi, the sixth of the season. The Wra- ther Bureau gives the storms al- phabetical names as they occur- a for Able. b for Baker, etc. The "Fox" was estimated -at about 1,100 miles east-north-east of Antigua in the British West Indies and 2,110 miles from Flo- rida. It. was moving west-north- west at about 15 miles an hour. Could B: Made With I Present fuels LONDON, Sept. 6 - (Reuters) - Scientists meeting here today heard a plan to land a 50-man ex- pedlilon on Mars, using artificial satellite bases revolving around both Earth and' Mars as stepping stones. The plan was outlined in a. pa- per by the German rocket expert, Werner Von Braun, the man who designed Hitler's destructive V-2's. It was read at the second Inter- national Congress of Astronautics (navigation among the stars) by Lt. Cmdr. Frederick Durant of the U. S. Navy's New Jersey air rock- et test station. Von Braun said it would be possible to send an expedition to Mars in space ships burning chemical fuels already in exist- once. Space Station First Step First. step would be to estab- lish an artificial satellite space station. revolving round the earth as the moon does. To it 46 rock- ets - making 950 flights - would take parts for 10 spaceships which would make the actual interplan- etnry hop. Workmen on the satel- lite would assemble the 3,720-ton spaceships. In these, 70 men would fly through outer space to set up a second satellite circling Mara. From this base 50-the other 20 would stay behind to man the space station-would actually land on Mars in three 200-ton rockets. The splice pioneers would return to Earth in the bigger ships left on the Mars satellite. Von Brnun estimated the whole operation would last two years. 239 days. Preliminary supply op- erations would take eight months. Five Million Tona Fuel He said the 5.320.000 tons of uopellunts -- hydrazine as fuel and nitric acid as oxidizer-would be needed for supply operations and 36,600 tons for the actual in- terplanetary flight. "According to official statis- tics, the Berlin airlift consumed about U10 of this amount in high-octane gasoline." said Von Brnun. "And all this because of a little misunderstanding between diplomats. Compared with fuel consumption of wars. the require- ments for an interplanetary ex- pedition would indeed pale into insignlflcance." U. S.. Portugal Sign Agreement WAS!-IZINGTON, Sept. 6 -(AP) -The United States and Portugal signed a new agreement today linking the Azorc Islands into the chain of North Atlantic defences. Portugal's Foreign Minister, Paulo Cumha, and U. S. Ambassa- dor Lincoln Mucveagh signed the agreement in Lisbon. The accord was announced by the State Dc- partmcnt here. It gives the United States new rights to bases on the strategic islands. a State Deparilment spokesman said. Eventually the facilities may be extended to other members of the North Atlantic Treaty Orlzanlzatlon -'for the pur- poses of the common defence and the preservation of peace and sec- urity." Both the United states and Portulzal are members of the Treaty Organization. IDNDON, Sept. 5 - (AP)-The Forelln Office warned today that Britain might take steps to in- sure that Egypt obeys the United Nations Security Council request to end her blockade of the Suez Canal for Israel-bound ships.- Seven Die In Flaming Home; Cigaret Blamed SEPT 1115. Que. Sept. 6-(CF) -A 9-year-old mother was burn- ed to death today in I vain at.- iampt to save her sleeping hus- band and five children from their flaming home. - Mr. and Mn. lager Lapicrre. their chilt-ken. Gerard. 11; W11- liam. 8; Raymond, B; Jean-Yvon. I: and Nicole. 1. perished in their flaming two-storey frame home on the euiern outlklria of this town. 330 miles northeast of Que- bec City. I One of the Lapleru children and a. cousin in d to safety from a top-storey window after the woman cried out to warn the household. and I son who went downstairs to locate the fire was loved by Ioynoone who smashed in the front door. Two other Luplorrc children did not live at home. They arrived here today to identify the char- redremaina dug out in the ruins. "51 comedy. non) rain it. An inquelt. ll scheduled. The Lapierre home was located on the unpaved main street of Sept lies near the newly-built section of the town. hub of A 3200.000,000 iron ore development. in Ungava 300 miles to the north. Parish church bells rang out. news of the fire at about 3 am. nor; residents gathered and a fire brigade was organized on the spot. . Newly-dlocted Mayor Jack Lay- den rushed to the scene and a municipal electric pump was brought up. It proved useless when there was an interruption in the electricity service. Galo- line-poworcd pumps jammed up with and sucked in with the water from the sandy north shore of the St. Lawrenco River. Voluntocro were reduced to throwing buckets of water on the blazing homo. . Dr. Gerard Beaullcu. who in- voltlgnted cause of the fire, lllfi a burning. eigaret in apparently rolnonelb g , ada's sea -going Agricultural Mr. W. R. Shaw, Deputy Min- ister of Agriculture, returned yes- terday from the second annual Conference of Ministers and Dop- uty Ministers of Agriculture held in Victoria. B. C.. with news that the next Conference is to be held in Prince Edward Island in 1952. This year's meetings occupied two days and covered a. wide range of subjects of common in- tercst. to the different Provincesi Considerable attention was given to the problem of land use and con- servatlon. and it was unanimously conceded that if agriculture is to be maintained on a strong and permanent basis a. policy associat- ed with long range baslo farm management is an urgent neces- slty. Marketing legislation also came under close scrutiny and a strong recommendation was endorsed fav- ouring uniform grading of farm Predicts Higher Potato Prices REDICKVILLE, Ont.. Sept. 6 -iCP)- Dr. J. D. Mat-l..augh1ln. president of Ontario Agricultural College. Guelph. said today that because potato plantings had dropped throughout Canada this year. prices will be "considerably higher." "An address opening the annual potato field day and machinery demonstration here, Dr. Mac- Laughlln predicted "better mar- keting and higher prices" for this year's crop both to growers and to customers. Dominion plantings this year had fallen off, he said. Ontario plantings were down 23,000 acres from last year and the important Prince Edward Island harvest would be down 35 per cent. Fisheries Report OTTAWA. sept. a -tCP)-Can- fishermen are hauling in fewer fish. but their catch is bringing more cash. The Bureau of Statistics today reported that 122,745,000 pounds were landed in July, down 15.2 per cent. from 144,793,000 on the cor- responding month last year. The value jumped 28.3 per cent to S10,- 978.000 from 58,693,000. A similar trend apparently had shown in previous months. Total landings for the seven months of 1951 dropped to 561,271,000 from 676,376,000 last year but the value increased to 035,801,000 from 532,- W'i.000. Atlantic coast landings in July of all species fell to N.872.0'.)0 pounds from 110,042,000 and the value to s.'l,160,000 from 33,188,000. A sharp decline ln,the catch of sardines in New Brunswick was the main factor in the over-all de- crease. In the revin-month period the total catch dropped to 421.155,- ooo pounds from 430.I5tZ.000: value increased to 319,783,000 from 519,- 471,000. On the Pacific coast. both the catch and landed value advanced in July; the former rising to 39,- 074,000 pounds from 33,751,000. and the latter to 57.809000 from 85,- 507,000. coins were mainly due to sockeye salmon. Landings amount- ed to 19,201,000 pounds compared with 17,000,000. and the value 05,- 102,030 against 53.368000. in the January-July period. however. the catch fell to 230.l10,000 Pitunds from 246,004,000, while the value increased to 516,016,000 from 813,- . Nova ScotialBTaby Burned Toileath BAXTWUS HARBOR. N. 8., Sept. 0 -(CP)- Fire todly took the life of I five-months old baby after her sister tried to light. A fire with gasoline. Alberta schofield, 9, was left in charge of the house while her parents went shopping at nearby canning. While fattarnptlng to light the fire to prepare dinner, the gasoline can exploded. Three other children who were in the home rushed out to nun- mon aid. They forgot the baby in the carriage. The house was de- BCIOYOQ. , Mr. W;R. Shaw Reports On Conference pu ”ucts under Federal Govern- ment regulations. It was felt that consumers were entitled to this protection and should always know, and have confidence in the quality and grade of the product purchased. In this connection the British Columbia Marketing Legis- lation was considered a splendid pattern for uniform marketing leg- islation in provinces desiring leg- islative action. The Conference deplored the falling off in dairy production and responsibility was placed on pres- ent high production costs, the competition of industry in the lab- our market, and relatively low re- turns to the producer. It was felt. that improved public relations were necessary so that. the con- suming public might be fully ac- quainted with the true picture re- garding the conditions surround- (Continued on Page 5 C313; Britain” Refuses Further Oil. Talks With Iran LONDON, Sept. 6 -- (CF) - Britain slammed the door tonight on the prospect of renewing ne- gotiations with Iran on the oil- nationallzation issue while Premier Mohammed Mossadegh remains in power. Reacting sharply to Mossadeghis proposal to oust 350 British tech- nicians of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company from the shut-down rc- fincry centre of Abadun unless Britain agrees to resume talks. a Foreign Office spokesman said: "The recent speech by'the Per- sian Prime Minister in the Sen- ate shows conclusively that no further negotiations with the pre- sent Perslan Government can pro- duce any results. His Majesty's Government therefore new con- siders that the negotiations begun by the Lord Privy Seal (Richard R. Stokes) are no longer in sus- pense. but broken off.” The statement came a few hours after Mossadegh ran into parliamentary trouble in Tehran. Many deputies of the economical- ly-pinched country demonstrated their opposition to his proposal for a,new- ultimatum to Britain by boycotting a session of the Majlls, the lower house. called to give him a vote of confidence. Only 62 of the deputies showed up while 67 were required for the quorum. Lack of a. quorum finally led Mossadegh to postpone the session until Sunday. The boycott was the most serious expression of Iranian opposition to Mossodegh since he rode to pow- er last spring on a wave of no- tionalist. anti-British sentiment. The Foreign Office appeared to be pinning its short-term hopes on the possibility Mossadczll will not get. Mnjlls backing. But the oil law remains popular in Iron and Mossadegh can put pressure on the rebels during the week-end. Huge Oil Fire in Avonmouth. Eng. AVONMOUTH. England, Sept. 6 (CF)-Fire still roared late to- night. hours after exploding giant Oil tanks rocked this Western England port. Flame and smoke cut off the waterfront storage yards and, within four hourl, 16 of 30 tanks had ex-ploded. Firemen from all over the west country were called in and buses brought reinforcements to fight the blaze. the biggest oil fire in British peacetime history. Cause of the blasts is not known. Two men were reported miss- ing after the blast. Another, re- ported misting. turned up later unharmed. A spokesman for the Shell, Cleveland and Regent Oil Com- panies. owners of the tanks. raid they probably would be left to burn out. "rhere is nothing we can do to ltop than now."ihe said. The tanks contained an estim- ated 7.500.000 gallons of oil. Toronto Plans Gift To Royal Couple TORONTO, Sept. 6-(CP)-Tm ronto's personal gift to Princess Elizabeth and. the Duke of Edin- burgh will be I diamond-encrus: ed maple leaf pin and I pair of d-iunond-inlet gold cunllnlts, civic official! announced today. At. the some time! an oil paint- ing of a typical Canadian Icena will be prelented to the royll eouplo Enemy Troops Move Forward on West Front By JOHN RANDOLPH 17.8. E161-ITH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS, Sept. 7 - (Friday) -- (AP) - Communist troops. blow- lng bugles and whistles, surround- ed an Allied patrol base before down today northwest of Chorwon in Western Korea. Contact also was broken with another assaulted Allied patrol base. But its members were he- lleved to be withdrawing safely. Today's encirclement was the' second in two days in Western Korea -- heightening speculation that a huge Communist offensive, using thousands of fresh1y-import- crl Caucasian Soviet puppet troops. might be brewing. Chinese and North Korean Reds moved forward Thursday across the whole western half of Korea, attacking Allied outposts and po- trols. Prelude To Offensive? Their movement was not yet in I the proportions of a general of- fensive. But it had all the ear- marks of a prelude to one. An American company Thursday Premier Urges Need Of Winter ' Pictou Service PICTOU. N. S.. Sept. 6 -tCVPl- A proposal that a Winter ferry service be inaugurated betweent Plctou and Prince Edward Island was made last night by Premier' J. Walter Jones of P. E. I. as he opened the Pictou-North Colchcst- er exhibition. Premier Jones referred to the success of the summer service op- erated bet-ween Caribou. N. S..and Wood Islands. P. E. I.. and said it. could be extended to a year-round service with Ptctou as the winter terminal. He suggested a pier be built at Plciou to replace the wharf de- stroyed by fire in 1946 and that one of the large ice-breaking fer- rics used on the Cape Tormcntinc, N. B.-Port Borden. P. E. I., route Nation after nation took the stand Japan, again before the signing ceremony set for Saturday. pectancy as delegates among the 51 countries attending the peace; conference wondered how and Wednesday to disrupt the confer- C1188 get Red China conference rules of procedure which restricted the Russians and each other dele- gation to one hour of speaking. up his hour late Wednesday in a blisterlm: which an instrument "for the preparation of a new war in the Far East." listening as the treaty he opposes drew smaller nations. the fireworks are expected to come a major Korea. Expect New SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 0 -(AP) today to praise the peace treaty they have come here to sign with but American delegatesf expected Communist fireworks There was an electric air of ex- when the Red be buried again. Russlais Andrei Gromyko failed thuderbolts might proceedings. turned down The delegates Gromyko's bid to admitted to the and quickly adopted The dour Russian delegate"used attack on the treaty. be labelled "a military al- lance with the United States” and Today Gromyko sat quietly, praise from numerous Unless Gromyko dares to try to break the rules and speak agaln,l from Poland or Czechoslovakia, or both. - Western diplomats said Russian- proposed amendments to the treaty draft Wednesday are out of order. There was the possibility. how- ever. that the Russians might act outside the conference or put the words or their next attack in the mouths of Czechoslovak or Polish delegates. There was also a continuing thought among Western diplomats linking the Japanes peace con- ference nnd the Koran war. ”Perhnps the Russians don't consider this the main area at all." one Western diplomat said. He thought there was always the possibility of a "thrust; some- where else." lndicr&ng he meant Red military drive in ILONDON - (OP) .. Thirty sir cadets have arrived from Bunna might be transferred here during, the winter months. for a three-year training course with the Royal Air Force. Govit Moves Civil Defence Training Sept. Health Minister Martin said today Canada will need hundreds of thousands of persons trained in first aid for civil defence and an- nounced that the government is OTTAWA. p going to finance a special trainingt 6 -(OP) -' program to meet the need. It was the first appeal to broad masses of the people to get in and work at civil dc-fence. A week ago Maj.-Gen. F. F. Worthington, C. D. co-ordlnator, said Canada should speed up her civil defence effort or else scrap the whole program. Mr. Martin said the government has authorized the use of an un- disclosed amount of money from the Federal Treasury to enable the St. John Ambulance Associat- ITon to carry out. the special pro- To Speed gram. They will train civil defence workers by the thousands in basic and advanced first aid. This move, said the Minister, "marks a progressive step by the Federal authoritles...it. will help put the Canadian people well in the forefront of civil defence plan- nlng." "Literally hundreds of thous- ands of persons must be trained in this essential service if civil de- fence objectives are to be met. This is in addition to people estim- ated at. 55.000 1: year that the as- sociation trains in its regular pro- grams in first aid. The additional persons to be covered by this new plan will all be volunteers in local civil defence forces." U.K. Unions To Halt Living Costs By Sidney Welland l BLACKPOOL. England, Sept. 6 --(Reuters)- The 7.800.000-mem- ber British Trades Union Congress tonight urged on the government a five-point plan to halt the rising cost of living. only one delegate at the annual conference voted against a resolut- ion demanding: 1. Wider and more effective control of prices of home-("'0' duoed goods. 2. Reconsideration of govern- ment policy that subsidies on food must. be "frozen" at the present ceiling of 2410.000 1 year. 3. An investigation into the method: of costs of distribution. 4. More effective control of profit: and bonus issues in big business. 5. Removal of sales tax from household necessities. The conference turned down another resolution demanding "pay raises for all" by 5.34.000 votes to 2.109.000. A spokesman for the general council of the congress nld trade union leaders are not opposed to wage demands but. the resolution did not in any way give a lead or guidance in the unions. In another resolution. passed Back Plan unanimously. congress declared one practicable step to cut living costs is state control of the mar- keting and distribution of essent- ial goods. Union spokesmen said they were thinking of things such as meat. milk, vegetables, fruit, boots and shoes. would Eliminate Mlddlemen Micldlcmcn should he cut. out if possible. Congress leaders narrowly stav- ed off a defeat on their accept- Ince of a government decision to levy a 50-per-cent charge on false teeth and spcctules provided un- der the otherwise free National Health service. The resolution was lost by only 3,715,000 to 3.272.000 votes. Though there was nothing in to- day's cost-of-living resolutions to embarrass the labor Government seriously. they did place the sim- mering feeling of the unions about rising costs clearly on record. The chancellor of the nrchequer. ilugh Galtakell. has already said there will be more price controls, more dividend taxation. and more streamlined. state-supervised dist.- ributlon methods. And the congress leadership hls told the unions they can go ahead and Ink for more pug. - 5-. Fireworks Before Japanese Peace Treaty Signed Saturday More Minlt. Fewer Fox Pelts Expected O'1'I'AWA. Sept. 6-(CP)-Pro ductlon of mink pelts in the 1951- 52 season may increase to 53,200. up from 515.500 in the 1950-51 season, the Bureau of Statistics estimated today, Adult mink on farms increased 3.3 per cent to 238,000 from 230,- 300, and kits 1.9 per cent to 583,- 600 from 572.600. However, the bureau anticipat- ed a 19.6-per-cent drop in fox pelts to 41,800 from 52,000. On farms were 22,700 adult foxes. down 18.9 per cent. from 28,000; pups declined to 39,600 from 49,- 500. The figures were on the basis of a sample return from fox and mink farms. IOOTH ATLANTIC VOYAGE ......i SOUTHAMPTON, England. Sepi- tReuters) - The 83,000-ton lluer Queen Elizabeth left today for New York on its 100th round Atlantic voyage since entering passenger service in October. 1946. It has carried about. 200.000 pass- engers during the five years. -fl-is MAN W-to BUYS his FRIENDS HA5 HALIFAX. Sept 6 -03?) -0” flcial forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather (1- flca here and. valid until midnight Friday. Synopsis: A disturbance causing T8111 '4 fall in New England and thunder- storms around the Great Lakes, if moving eastward. As a result ii!!!” will be dull weather and wide- spread rain over the Maritime! 0?- Friday. Regional forecasts: ward Island-Overcast, rain be- ginning in morning. Continuing cool. southerly winds 15. Low and high Friday at Charlottetown 4! and 04. Prince Ed- 1-ligh tide and 2.56 P. M. sun rises today at. 5.411 A. M. and sets at 0.41 P. M. today at 1.46 A. M- M.C.A. AIR SERVICE Dally Except Sunday Leave Charlottetown for Monetoa 5.30 A.M.;'!1.20 A.M.; 4.56 P.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Mpnctoi Leave Charlottetown for New Glugow-I-lnllfu 1.40 AM. New Glasgow 41 Sydney 1.50 PM. New Glasgow & lialifan Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11.00 A.M. from New Glasgow 3: Sydney. 4.20 PM. from New Glasgow and Halifax. Charlottetown - Sydney flights daily ' Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY Lv. Charlottetown for Monoton 11.10 Ar. Charlottetown .ff0lIl Monoton 5.55 P BOIDEN - CAPE TOBMEN'l,'l.'Ni FERRY SERVICE Dlily standard Tinn- uavo Borden have C. I 9.10 A.M. I 0.10 A.M. 10.85 A.M. I035 A.M. 1.00 P.M. 1.00 RM 2.40 P.M. 2.40 EM 410 P.M. H0 RM 1.80 RM. 7.30 PM. 0.00 RM. 0.00 RM. 10.80 P.M. I040 EM. WOOD ISLAND! - UARIBOO FERRY SEBVICI (Standard Tune) benvg Wood lahntla-. Prlnoo Non-'1 A.l.l1A.il 8 ma. Chan. A. Dunning-O AM. 1 PM 8 PM. Leave Caribou- ghu. A. Dunning-'l AM. 11 A.M. I .M. Prince Nova - I A. 1 LI. 6 H! A