MAXIMS OI A of great achievement; with sources. MERE MAN One of the standing miracles of the Christian religion is its record Charlottetown uurllllu, Two Cents, Morning Guordlun, Founded i051 ‘ti. The P00 MTWVBNPTMCB Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, caufoa, FltWIDAY, oclroiiciz‘ a, 1941 ple’s Paper i‘. _.___._ __. - UVIETS DRIVE Defence secrets Too hot for ll. S. Court Ears lIW YORK. Oct. 2 -—(AP) —D€- fence secrets, some of them too hot for the eyes and ears of a. Federal court jury and all of them alts-g"!- lv snatched from German 5019s. were introduced in evidence today at the trial of 16 men charged with ggplflnflge conspiracy. They included:— A comprehensive survey of scores of shipyards on the east. west and gulf coasts and a list of hundreds of naval craft under construction- from 35.000-ton battleships and an aircraft carrier to fast torpedo mot- orbcats and surf landing craft; An unexplained diagram, Dre- sumably of the wiring 0f B ‘WV!’ en or sperry bcmbsighi; and A highly confidential booklet, “Protection cf industrial facilities?‘ issued for a. few officials o! the federal bureau of investigation. Judge Mortimer W. Byers direct- ed that none of the contents of the confidential a. B. r. book be introduced into the record. Also censored from the court rec- ord was a lenethv account of what were claimed to he observations of Rqchard n. Kleiss, a defendant on, a tour cf Newport News, Va. ship- building facilities. The report, dated Sept. 17. 1940. said that‘. a. fleet or (kW-tee "ghost" ships had been recondit- ioned and were about to sou f0!‘ Britain and told of a flflurc to or- ganza shipyard workers of Ger- mnn origin “who own their own homes and will not commit them- selves lo anything." ’ Find mail lost By T.0.A. plane TORONTO. Oct. 2—(CPl—Of- ficial: or Trans-Canada Air Lines said here today a wide search by civilians and soldiers has resulted in the recnvs of several bags of mail lost Fm ay from a. Trans- Canada plane en r0010 $0 Win01‘ peg from Toronto. T.C.A. officials said all the mail has been found, Three bags were found fleeing in Sasaginawa Lake ‘ s, GI‘. Cross. The bags are believed to have fallen near Kap- uslrusing when the m-ail compart- ment hatch. was shaken loose. n Hangman, Queens County Conservatives Hold ' Meeting President P. W. Turner re- elected. Rousing speeches stressing need of greater war effort at “Not only Conservatives but citizens all over Canada are giv. ing thought. to the rebuilding of the National Conservative Party as an absolute necessity to the more effective prosecution of our war effort and to the solution of post-war problems,” declared Mr. Gordon Graydon, M.P.. national chairman of the Party, in the course of a rousing address at last night's annual meeting of the Queen's County Conservative As- sociaticn. The meeting, which was large. representative and enthusiastic, was held in the Oddfeilows Hail. with President P. W. Turner pre- riding. seated with him on the platform were Mr. Graydon, Hon. Dr. W. J. P. lvlacMillan, provincial Conservative leader. Mr. W. Ches- ter s. MCLUYG and Mr. John O. Hyndman, Queens County Con. servative candidates in the last federal election. In a. brief address Mr. McLure commented on the splendid atten- dance at this busy season and stressed the responsibility of in- dividual deegates in strengthening party leadership and organization. Hon. Dr. MacMillan. speaking at greater length. reviewed federal and provincial affairs in the light. of the crisis facing Canada and the Empire at the present "time: He strongly denounced the ‘vote- courting" policies cf Kin Government. the incompetency 0 some of its members. and the per- sisi-ently partisan course it has folowed during the war. A fuller report of his remarks will appear u e r. - A meeting of the executive held after the general meeting resulted in the reappointment of Mr. P. W Turner as President and Mr Gecrtze MacKay as Vice President. Mr. P. J. Rosslter was appointed secretary. The executive was elected Rs fol- lows: (Continued on page ‘l. Col 3) Firing Squad Hold Sway _ Nazis stamp at “internal front" of revolt stretching from Prague to Paris. i ' . (By The Canadian Press) Hangman and firing squad held sway in the writhing new Europe fhursday night, as Germany stamped at an acknowledged "internal front" of revolt that stretched from Prague to Paris. In fonncr Czechosiovakll, in the angry remnants of xugoslavla, In Greece, in France, and even in Bulgaria and Hunt!!!» the IWIY W" u" some, differing only as to scope and detail. dmlttl ern loyment of the A ggssiblep measures, Ger- man sources asserted:- "With Germany herself dee in a. fight for life it is understan able thattwe cfljnsrtrot tplerate an internal ron ego us. But Czech sources in b01100“ i suggested the blood bath in old , Czechoslovakia had a far more sin- later meaning than mere suppres- sion of revolt. They said it was a deliberate process of extermination of all intellectual Czech elements iibale in offer opposition, prepar- atory to mass transfer of heavy German industries to comparative- (Continued on pose 3, col. 3.) ________Z. Coming Events —Q- Nntlou in this I cents per word , It l nrlllbrii £3‘;- °““r.'5%‘r‘»-1-»’.‘~'r "Modem Doyel. Readings. 112 nos, L~83-10-8.2l. "St, Columbia's Chicken Burp". October ‘It-h and Dance. L-il-lb-S-i-O.‘ u“ u Fridamd Sibd" mnmdl , r . x33... Oreheystrs. l..-38-l0-2-2i "Chicken Supper. in 13"." Pl. Pr‘: are. 'c c o 0c L-006-l0- Isle for column “Chick flu Bin o. s. ‘t; “a 1.312%. Erie r ‘A m , b-u-ro-a-af "Supper and dance C.M.B.A. Hail. Vernon River, mesdcy even- litt. 0c r ‘l. lupper served from Q voice . Drake and inns orches- n-fliH-zi. and‘ Interpreting The War News] (By Kirke L. Simpson. - tsted Press Raff Writer) Another great German-Run. sian battle is raging somewhere east of the Dnieper river which may decide the fate of the Donets basin. according to reports from both Moscow and Berlin. Just where the front lies is undisclosed as this is written: but there are indications that owerful Nazi forces, with at east token he? from Italy. are being thrown orward from the Dnieper crossing at Dniepero- petrcvsk in an effort to turn he southern flank of the Khar- kov defence line alcns the Vorskla river east‘ of Kiev. It is in that region that both Ber-Bin and Rome have claim- ed the smashing of marsh. trapped Red divisions will: the lut day cr two. Dniepero trovsk is 100 miles south o the indicated left flank cf the Russian Vorskls would obviously undermine the who's Russian front to the u rth. , oMcooow claims repulse of the foe iu two days‘ terrific mtg: ing. German reports any e Donetfbosin ls th cb. tin of the drive. The most ordeal pace for it is from the Dnie- percpetrtfllk crossing. (Continued on Pill l. O01 l) "nausred of its sugar content, is Qftawa lie-elected President Mr. P. W. Turner re-elected Pres] dent f th ' ' serval?“ Atsfsfigfcns County Con. Island Women 0n Presbyterian ‘W.M.S. Executive NEW GLASGOW . (CP1—Mrs. .1. a. Tulle?’ gentile; gjlilsgw was re-elected resident uf 9 ‘stern Division o the Worn- ens M r " i ~ o] the PM‘? b terian Church lfl Canada at the c osing session of the Society's an- nual convention here today. Mllifrs. A. D. Falconer of Halifax, Mrs. J. H. Thompson of Toronto, s. A. B. Gurm cf Westville, N, s, and Miss Geddie of Australia were named honorary presidents Elected vice presidents were M155 Annie Murray. New Glasgow. Mrs. A. Thompson, Brookfield P. I,‘ Mrs. Alex MacDonald, Sydney, If. S: and Mrs. J. A. Kennedy. ' Other officers included Mrs. F‘. A. Mulch. Charlottetown, correspond. lng secretary. Gasoline new From molasses? BATON ROUGE, 1.0., Oct. 2 -- (AP) — Gasoline produced from blackstrop molasses, an abundant and cheap lay-product of the 81.1311‘ industry. was claimed today 0y chemists working with a new pro- cess at. Louisiana State University laboratories. . W. b. Owen, bactericlogist who worked with the Louisiana ue- partment of Conservation on a demonstration explained that first the blackstrap, or cane residue ex- ro- cesaed into butyl alcohol and ien, in the newly-discovered process, changed into a high octane gasoline. e m- velcped by Dr. J. adena, Calif., with whom DrjOwen la associated. "in Cuba where gasoline sells fur 8b cents a gallon and in Jamaica where large part cf the blockstrap is wasted and where motor fuel brings 50 cents a gallon, there are tremendous opportunities for devel- opment," he said, explaining mat many rich tropical sugar producing areas including Brazil, Hawaii and Australian lack petroleum. The sugar gasoline costs about i5 cents a gallon to produce, Owen said, threq times the cost of the natural product, so that large scale raroduction at present is economical- War-ZS Years Ago Today (By The Canadian Press) OCT. S, Nib-Greek cabinet of M. Ksloser ‘l: resigned. Allied troops in Balkans reached point. i0 miles from Mcuastir. Bul- grrlans making rapid withdrawal. envy rains held up Allied offen- sive on the Cosmic front. C _ withdrawal of aircraft and war- ‘utzrs BACK Nerve-shaking Blasts in Kiev BERLIN, Oct. 2—(AP)—The captured Ukraine capital of Kiev is being shaken by ex lo- sions of delayed action mnes which have destroyed whole guiidlngu, it was reported to- ay. German war reporter Eber- lrurd Mueller sent word of the nerve-snapping blasts In the r-lty which fell into German hands Sept. 19. The Russians, he sold, mined certain s eclal buildings before withdraw g. At intervals now the mines arc being exploded, he reported. "Yesterday it was the Kiev Citadel, once the cit ’s umiu landmark," Moeller sad. "To- day It was a hotel on the main business street." lie did not enumerate other "special" structures but indicat- ed they were mined because of their strategic importance. l-ie described the explosions as ' “mighty? Ilain, Snow impede Prairie harvesting in Manitoba and rain and snow m [Alberta have impeded harvesting | during the last two weeks. liccord- ing to the Bank 0f Montreal crop report issued today. In Saskatchew- an, however, progress been made on the harvest because of more favorable weather. In the Maritrrnes average Yitild? are generally indicated. Apple pick- ing of late varieties is in progrrss with a little below-average yierri. anticipated both as to quality and quant ty. Goebbels does Bit of hedging LONDON, Oct. Z —(CP) --Pro- pagnnda. Minister Joseph Goebbels indulged in a bit of hedging today when questioned about German casualties in the Russian campaign. The British Broadcasting Corpor- ation said that wlicn he was asked whether an estimate of 3.000.000 German losses Wus exaggerated. Goebbels replied: "We Gimmi- answer as we have no exact fig- tires." But. the BBC said, only a few days ago Goebbels said figures of casualties in the Russian campflllln MONTREAL. Oct, 2—- ( CP ) —Ralnl Hanson pays Tribute to British people ly Harold hi- Canadian Press Staff Writer LONDON, Oct. 2 -(GP Cable) — Hon. R. B. Hanson, Canadian Con- servative House leader who is winding up his visit to llnndon, de- clared today that "the thing that struck me moot is the wonderful character and temperament of the British people." "They just go along as usual and are determined to see this thing through to victory." Mr. Hanson said after a day of paying farewell calls. The Conservative leader. who is motoring to Scot-land with his col- leagues to spend a few days be- fore returning to Canada, recalled Prime Minister Churchill's declara- tion “better to die than be con- quered," and added:- ‘Tireywe no idea. of being con- quered. They do not. think the danger has passed but are much readier to meet it than last year." Reviewing his trip of nearly three teen “thrilled" to see the Canad- ian Corps, wth which he spent two days, and Royal Canadian Air Pbrce squadrons, which he saw twice. He was pleased with the physical condition of the troops and the extent of the training re- ceived here, addingzfllts only limit is their equipment." Among other highlights he listed his visit to Mr. Churchill and the tour of Dover, where he got an idea of the hot reception awaiting any invasion attempt. Of facts gathered, his only com- ment wu.s: “We have some ideas to present to the Canadian people when the opportunity offers." Plan Maritime Iii-Y Conference SAINT JOHN, N.B.. Oct. 2- (OPi-The first Maritime Hi-Y conference will be held here Oct. l1, l2 and 13, Chief speaker will be Nelson Mclilwen, Toronto, Y.M.C.A. National Boys‘ Work secreta . Others on the speaking list incl e Ralph Young, Halifax, Hubert had been "most accurately com- puted." Morris, Charlottetown and Samuel Lipin, Monoton. By Eddie Gilmore Associated Press Staff Writer A BRITISH PORT. Oct. 2 —(A- P)- This port on the southeast coast of England and its counter- part somewhere on the French coast of the English Channel will get a glimpse of peace this week- end when Britain ancl Germany call a brief truce in a Wstrififéd zone and exchange 1,500 prisoners web. It will be the first Anglo-Ger- man exchange of the war. The 3.000 prisoners who had not expected to see their home- lands until the end of hostilities will cross the Channel in two Brit- lsh hospital ships under a safe- passage agreement providing for (Continued on page 3, Col 8i ________. N. B. PARALYSIS CASES REACH 322 FREDERICTON. N. 13., Oct. 2 — (C?) -'1‘he total number cl lu- fantile paralysis cnses in New Brunswick soared to 322 today when six more were reported-two in the Saint John district, two st Black- ville, Northumberland County, one at Zionviile, York County and an Grand Brief Truce:- Prisoner Exchange i For This Week-end Establishment of ll.A.F. Schools 0n wider scale OTTAWA, Oct, 2 — (GP) —- Be- tween 30 and 40 Royal Air Force flying schools will be established in Canada. by the time Britain omn- pletes the westward movement of student fliers and training person- nel which began about a year ago, Air Minister Power told The Can- adian Press today. “These schools are not actually a part. of the British Commonweallh air LfttlfllllB plan but they are ad- ministered by us in conjunction with the plan," said Maj. Power. “The sites for all of them have been selected." It was to these schools the min- ister was mainly referring when re said in his Montreal speech Tues- dly night that the scope of the air training plan would be extended by construct on of almost as many more schools and airdromes as have been built so far. It Ls understood the future status of the R. A. F. training schools will otiations for a renewal of the tish Commonwealth air training plan agreement which, in the nor- mal course cf events. would expire be ne Br ill-rim tactical grcfigt ‘iirlrccuna old case at North Head. —-———-—- EV S I an nmkprl“ 1mm? M mom ‘ugh’ Msnan. (Conthrued on page I. Col l) LU550 CANADA Smooth Soilinq For llll your Bciklnq When you use Mum weeks, Mr. Hanson said he had- *EFOR Red Position Improved At Besiegei City Germans reported rushing up reinforcements to stem Russian counter-offensive. (BY Henry C. Cassidy, Associzrt d i'~-"" Slrff W1. _ MOSCOW, Oct. Z-(Alj-Geremanubh l H u‘) driven foot by foot from their trenches on the Leningrad one cf the matters considered indllem approaches in broad Russian patches reported tonight. districts. South of the city. in the region 0f Staraya Russo, the government organ izvestia announced four settlements and a hilltop had been YQCEDWYBG by Soviet forces and that four German companies had = seen routed in a single action, The Germans, front-line reports - said. are rushing up reinforce. ments in an effort to stem general Red counter-attacks which already have greatly improved the Russian position all about the city. (The BBC reported also that the Russians had retaken Strelna, 20 miles west of Leningrad, and that 20 miles to the east of the ctiy the Nazis had been tliroivn back to a depth of nearly 30 miles from Kolpino eastward to Lake Ladoga.) On the central front, Russian cuuntenattaclcs were reported roll- ing on, and the_ Communist news- Filler Pravda said that Red planes set fire to the forests in some areas to drive the Germans out at the conclusion of a 11-day battle. The Dniepcr river in the south, dispatches from the Soviet news agency, Toss, asserted, is carrying Everybody s PAGE?“ ELE above the city Red marines have themselves in bitterly contested positions, military dis. Russian ‘guns, it was added, silenced range batteries which had been T __.____: . I onl G When limes are difficult. one can urrshzrken. MAXIMG 01A MERE MAN assert the more do gedly that ‘s purposes are unchanged and B7 llnil lroups are being counter-offensive action and lundcd and entrenched _ German long- shclirng one of Leningradh .-Japan Warns- iluteh Indies Ship Supplies to Russia! TOKYO. Oct. 3—(Frlday)—(APi ~The Japanese :1 iwslnan Wafned todnyi that any shipment. of 5Ui>l_)1I<'s irunr ‘ Netherlands‘ East Indies t. soy itussra would be considered a mm. ration of an trnlriendly ut-rztucle. ' _BATAVl.»\. Ncihr-rlands East. Ln- dles. Oct. 2~iAPJ—Th€ Nether- Rrisnr wlrlr cii, rulilm- and qnflee sercrai “c9145 BEO- it. was disclosed txxlay, under a. pledge by Nerher- ands Premier Pieter S. Géfbffllldy that. ‘the products Q: our empire are at the disposal of the Soviets." away thousands of German dead. Ilflllim fOPCPs had appeared on the west bank of the Dnieper, it was added, and in one of their first actions suffered the loss of a p15,. Continued on page S, Col B) Ottawa Stations Boost gas prices l‘. QTTAWA. 00h 2 —(OP)- Most Ottawa. service stations raised their gasoline prices two or z 1-2 cents today following the order of G. R. Cottrelle, federal oil controller au- thorizing an increase of one cent a. gallon. This was "Ln protest at the failure of the oil companies to permit dealers an increase in their margin of profit." said A. M. Cronsberry, secretary of the Ot- tawa gus dealers association. He said late today that not all stations had fallen in line with the top prime; in Ottavxa. The increase announced by the oil controllers brought. Ottawa prices for the two grades to 32 l~2 and 34 l-2 cents a gallon. some stations today charged 33 1-2 and 35 1-2 and others 34 and 36. An official of the wartime price.» and trade board said the board had not been officially informed of the situation from Mr. Cottrclle. (Later the oil controller said that gasoline station proprietors who persist in charging more for" gasoline than the authorized priccs,. will be "closed up." ("If they refuse to play the zaiue I have no alternative but to close; them up," he declared. i (“If an member of the public is held up e should ask for a re- ceipt. These men have no authorLy to put. the price up. Putting up Linc price in protest doesn't do any good; ‘ we have an act in force.“ i (“Cost of distribution of gas»- line is “entirely too high." he arid- ed. “There ar too mohy gas sa- tions. entirely loo many." (lie would not ask the public, the oil controller said, to my more than it should for the lstribution of gasoline. "If there isn't enough volume, some of them (gasoline stu- ticns) have got to go out of hus- Gontracts awarded OTTAWA, Oct. 2—(CP)—Award- in; of nine construction contracts Ill-s announced tonight by the de. partment of munitions and supply. The contracts. approximate cost. type of construction. approximate ltructicn 60., Fredericton. R.C.A.P‘. station Debert, N, S $6.000. clearing fllghtways, short- ly. Prank Simpson, Debert. R.C.A.i". station. Nova Scotie, $16,000, construction roads. sewers. 1mm"... MONCTON. N. B, Oct. Z-(Cl-‘i- Westmorland, Kent and Albert Counties were in ciarkness for more than half nn hour tonight when the district civilian volunteer" cor 5 held their first three-county; b ackcut test. believed the most extensive blackout ever aiiumpierl in Eastern Canada. Officials in a spotter plane gave a. favorable report and the test was termed “very sticccssful." Annual Subscription Delivered, $0.00 filll 1:111:15 East IHCICF began supplying. -~---4+_ _-- - ~- . _..x i Y- |5~ L. U-Wi Clnmirs and 0.8. “.00 All] C ommo ns To Debate Manpower Vital loTiZsuon To (‘ome Before British House. By Noland Norgaarri Associated Prcss Staff Writer LONDON, Oct. I -(A.Pl — Th0 l-iouso of Commons will debate - probzrbly in sccret- whr-tlir-r Brit- ain can continue to corrscrlpt her own maupouver for an eventual com tinenial offensive and still turn we the armaments which both sire and her allies need, Prime Minister Churchill disclosed today. There are tmooniirnrvd reports that the government will form no more aP-British divisions on home soil; some persons who are well- informed contend the limit already has been reached in pulling men from the ydtai fields of war indus- try, mining and aqricuitruie to serve in the armed forces. Mr. Churchill told the house the problem of distribution of man- Tpower in s. “direct and central per-t of the war effort" and that. the de- lbate, therefore, probably would nob the public lest the informal-ran de- iveioped aid the Germans. | Among the day's political new], Iopments was a meeting of tfhe 00n- servufive party which approved uh»- grninroirsly a vote of confidence m. ‘ithe Churchill government. based on. rthe Prime Aiirrisierb decision “to iwelcome the Russian nation as an ally in the struggle against aggres- ‘msive barbarism, and to fortify their i resistance by every possible means.” Sir Cuthbcrt Hendlz-im, Conserva- tive, in moi-rind the motion, mid: "We should be very foolish if we ldid not recline that at present our rinterests and those of Ruse-in are ‘ identical." l In connection with the manpow- er problem Mr. Churchill has dis- closed that the question of invnri. ing the continent has been weighed seriously by the government. Only this week the Prime Mini;- ter told the house that. Britain “never will have an army compar- able in numbers to tine armies o! the continent." (About 4,000,000 aim: Continued 1m page S. Col I) , Cernian Raiders mHit 'l‘l1rce ciremy bombers -—Gcl'mdn bombers blasted n: 1W1‘ British towns rind lurked street.» wrh muchliicgulr and aerial Crllllitlil iirc in sirnrp utincks by the light of a harvest moon last high: and early today unlucs in Lilo raids, \\'lllt'll ceirmrl on four touri.» lli ll\7l'illi‘ll>l('l'li Eng- land and our: uli iliv south s‘. coast. Uol'l‘1.‘S])Ull(l(‘lllb in liortlrcargrierh England icuvpiiurit-d liirrt ireavy bombs split apart ililfilllv-Ss buildings iii one lU\\ll. As an" raid wardens and tire lighters uurkvd ill smoke- illlctl sin-bis, low-dying raiders struiod rlir- rrruirs Wlili mnvhirrvpizirs rriiti carillon, Tuo uorrriivr.» were ieporird shot douu on llig northeast coast and one m ihc Finn oi l'\>l"rli erect. ground Ll4‘llll(.‘.~ (luring svveral ‘hours of rlrc lititl Ull the llillllfilhl area. lir the southward. raid Llrc bombers retreated from hot urrLi-uirr-rurlt firs uficr u. first. attack only i0 r1 turn ivliiic rescue workers ur-re (ligygrirg amid debris, ’l‘liis limo iluyv lzvtd lorv, (hopping sulvos of ‘marry bombs in one oi the sirongr-st attacks rue iowrr has CXilllflvllLtti. ’l‘hcn they \\'li(4‘l(‘Ll bnvk u thud time after the some lillQFYrll as had elapsed bvtwccir lia- first and 5v:- ond attacks. Once again they div:- bornbed the towir. The bombers apparent-iv crossxd the coast nrilvs rr\v:r_y' and wheeled inland, screaming down on the town on their wiry out to sea. ‘fire blind- lhr: ornnur- ilusircs were seen miles away as lllL‘ bombs crashed dozvn. It “as feared ihcre was further loss of life in the second and tirrd attacks. The Air Miirlstrv shlfl that Brlii: h fighters shot. down six Gurnrn‘ planes in two srvrwcps over" the cun- tinont. yesterday and said two (‘lu- Coniinued on page 3. Col 8) CHILI) Kl LLED WOODSTOCK, ll. 13., (Pt. 2 ~ fCPl~Gzrelan liieiitm, 5. u“; killed completion dates, and contractors em oyed fcllow:- today when hit by a tru. 1 driven r depot, Scoudouc, N. 8.. by Samuel Brown, Frcrirl‘ .on. A Q17- . SEWER P1500. $17.000.Di1mil- coroner's jury returner! 2i i xrlict of m‘ ‘muoni both Dhmmnd cm‘ occidental dour-h. found iii , HPCWH hurl lwcn granted u rlriv lrvr-rrsr- without. any tcsl or i-xirmri- iorr and recommended that tho rravincial motor vehicle dcpartnrrnt have all applicants exzrnrined before issuing "for lines. October, '1‘. w. Curry mow. n. s. ‘J itheir first license. attacks develop under bright harvest moon. LONDON, Oct. 3—\I"i'idu_\')—iCPi ' rust. reports llldlUdiCd runny curs-l Thole rvzrs t-unimual heavy‘ fire ironr i Five .English Towns shot down as heavy 40a been’ w». 4o BREAK A HABrf \$1'0 0R0? if 4 r w! Q METEOROLOGICAL SERVICE, TOTfilliil, Oct 2—rCPi--\iiuinium and maximum tcilipvraturt ; I)ft\\SOl‘l . .... . 2 Victor-in Edmonton Ronixia tvimripeg 'l‘iir< ill u) Ottawa .. Montreal l3oston Synopsis: The fair today over" the greater‘ part of Ontario. moderately uurrnr in south- ern districts. but comparatively’ v-wl farther north Ir- continues c001 in the Prairie Provinces and liuht scat- ilored showers have occurred in Al- berta and Saskatchewan. High tide this morning at 9.10 and tonight. at 9.53. Sun sets this afternoon at 53R and rises tomorrow morning at 6.01. Frill moon Oct. b. 4.32 a. m. Sumincrsirtc tldc eighteen minuws liner than Charlottetown. BOliDI-IN — (‘APE TORMENTINF SERVICE leave Borden 0.25 .\.‘.\i. 1.00 P.\i. 4.45 PM. 1.30 RM. Leave (‘n e Tormeniino 11.00 A.l\i. 3.20 IHM. 6.1.0 RM. 8.40 P-M. WOOD ISLANDS FERRY Leaves Wood Isiamls 1.00 AM. 1l.00 AM. 3.00 P.M. Leaves Caribou 9.00 A.M. 1.00 PM. 5.00 PM. .