MAXIMS OIL I MERE MAN the mind. The true any 0o render age v|;. oroua is to prolong the youth of j - The Guardian. Three Cents. uprising Daily loaded use. i=5 Covers Prince E-dward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2e, 1948 16 Never any man was yet so old. but hoped hie life one avinter more would hold. MAXI MS OIA MERE MAN PAGES Subscriptions Delivered 86.00. Mali $5.00; other Provinces} 0.5. $1.00. Rissll VETOES NEUTRALS PLAN T0 END BER LIN Sovernment To ‘Subsidize Training 0f Air Pilots Liberals Retain Two Seats In Commons I (By The Canadian Press) 111a ulseralPaa-ty captured two fall lay-elections yesterday-one of wiliclrgave a. Cabinet member a seat in t-he House of Commons. Newly-appointed External A1- falrs Minister L. B. Pearson won out. by a solid margin ln a. eon- test with two other candidates in the Ontario constituency od Al- goms East. and a. second Liberal standard-bearer, W. A. Boueher, was victorious in the Saskatch- Wlflfl riding of Rosthern. In both lay-elections the stand- ings slowed the Liberals on top by a good margin, the 0.0.11‘. sec- ond, and the Social Crediters tblrd and last. The final for the night in Al- goma East with B6 of 105 polls leported gave Pearson tL) 4.453: borne Callahan (CUP) 2.079; and John J. Fitzgerald (S01 1.051. in Rosthem with 105 of 13s polls reported Boucher 1L» had 5,535: PUG. Makaroff 100w 2.- R85,‘ and George W. Bellhal-tz lSiCl 1,963. The Liberals maintained their‘ voting strength in the Commons yesterday by returning supporters in two by-elections, Both seats formerly were Liberal. The new House standing is as, follows: Liberals 125; Progressive Con- servatives 66: 6.0.1". 32; Social Credit l3: others eight vacan‘. Coming Events "Hope River bazaar and chick- en supper, Oct. 26 and 27. "Sea Breeze Victoria. each Wed- nesday. Dancing 8-1. "Hear Clyde River Play. Cove- head. Wednesday, October 27th. "Cornwall Wednesday. October 27. Play and basket social. Pro- ceeds rink. "Masquerade dancmWinsloe Sfa- tree export trade to the tlml Nail Tuesday, Oct. 26th. East- ern Rhythm Boys Orchestra. "Masquerade Dance. Montague i C118: f Quebec , Niountaills. ‘ion as to when the scfl.’ lister Si. Laurent alllloilllced .External Affairs Mllllswr Pearson » ,nn hour. higher in gusts Heavy Stormillong . llew England Boast BOSTON. Oct. 25—-(AP)—-New Englands first noreaster of the seasonwentering its third day—to- night continued to bring heavy rain and roaring surf to the entire New England coast. Eastern Massachusetts. Rhoda is- land, Connecticut and the Maine coast were hardest hil. Weather forecasters said the slorm——alm0sl. stationary 100 miles southeast of Cape Cod—probabiy will continue tomorrow. Power lines and trees were felled by winds ranging up to 60 miles along Cape Lind. The Boston Coast Guard reported tonight it had cleared up its list of craft which had called for all‘. be- cause of the storm. HALIFAX, Oct. M — (C?) ~A storm off New England brought min and strong gales to the "on, .\l|'. Pcrlrson _ _ l 1H3 ‘ vacwllca exvws 1n he‘ c-f Ijl\ a‘. ~ Tzvn is no indlczv- wli‘. be to! a1 The lone lldzn: There llllcd. in Ottawa, Mln- that Acllllg Prlnle will leave for Paris Prldnv to lake gnvcr the lcadcrshlp of the Found- llau rlclcgatlou tn the Ullitrd Nat- ions meeting of the Gellcrzll As- sembly. He made this annuunceulezrt in a statement concrallllatlng bolhMr, Pearson and Mr. Bout-her. Mr, Pcarsnll rcplace Trans- purl Minister fillcvrler uhn will l l l l ll return lo Canada immediately nn Mr. Pearson's arrival. ll. S. Prepares For Big Christmas Tree Trade HALIFAX. Oct. 25 -—IC'PI Nova Scotia is preparing for an- other big year in the Christmas Ullllcd Slates. Eighty licensed buyers today be- an spotting and cutting firs and spruces that will decorate homes mllllni! milk» Timid“)? 0mm" ‘HS far south as Florida during the 26th. Don Messefs Orchcstrzl. ' "Ham Supper and Dance in lYiltshire Hall. Wednesday. Ocl- “m” ma“ 20001100 evergreens Rm dug [he “mug;- 27th. "Reserve Thursday, 28th, Ladies Aid Hot Chicken Supper, Pownal ‘lull. Supper 5-43. "Annual mcclillg of Rllrlll Mnil Tourlcrs, City Tall, Thursd:l_\', Uci. 2?. 8 pan. "Dance every ‘Pllcsdav. St. Pet~ era Leglon Hall. Clifford's Orch- eslra. "Chicken Salad Supper. Trinity Church W. I. October 28th. Tickets Inailable at the door. "Dundus United Church Allllulll 5ul>ller in Bridgetown Hall, Wed- nesday, October 27th. "Masquerade Dance in Gra- lmmk Road Hail. Tuesday. NWO"!- ler 2nd. "Masquerade ‘Dance. W005i M lll, Thursday. October 88th. Prizes. "Canadian 1:50.. Dance in Rustim Hall, Ruatico, Wednesday. October 21th. "Chicken Supper in Legion Hall. Murray River, Wednesday. October 77th. 5.00 o'clock to 9 P. M. Spml- l lvrtd by United Church L Ji- "llot Chicken Supper. Bins!!- lale of Cakes and other amuse- ments. Morell Hall. October 27th. red by c. W. h. Supper “Chicken in French River Hall. Wednesday. October "m. starting s r. M. In lid of awry to Geddie Memorial "Don't miss cm. o'er-ml in "l" Inst. western show "Painted " playing at MacDonald he. ‘lbeatre. toll-light. "Dance. Ellis Bros. new Ware- bwle. Central Royalty, Iihuraday. Q-‘lnber lib. Downtownes-s and Mile Ieelenaei Orchestra. "Ifllwtede Dance. Grend- ‘iew. Oetobee ma. Prim. Mac- lllvvaCrcheatra. If not fine fol- ‘Wins night. Yulleilde season. About l5 iirlns. from the United many nf them Slates, harvest finally with an estimated value nf $200<C00. OFFERS RYSSIAXS ICEBR BAKERS 10mm, Oct. 25 --_ <APl — Gcn. Douglas hiacArlhllr has of- [ffcfl usr‘ nl American ice-breaker: in V, Japanese lf‘]l‘lll".lllll[.‘. . 1191's rlgzll» this \\‘.illi"l' Last. “ma, H". Ru=>lrllh2 smppcrl ff‘- pnfrltifivnl Doc l 41d did Wt rt‘- gunyp uuill Mm Tllcx cwvc lili- flcull. ciuuall~ ccvlvlltlcll= a= iht‘ vegsnn A: lTdsl wycuu arr‘ silli in Rllsslcll hands. l'l slop the ilusslnlw lil flit‘ lllll‘? lllFl“ Southern Maritirnes tonight. The Weather Bureau said the gales were likely to extend over most of the marine areas of the Canadian Atlantic seaboard t0- lllnFlYNW. Gale warnings were hoisted in Illllil. mastal areas as winds gust- crl to 56 miles an hour. “Revolutionary” S t e e1 M a k i n g Process Claimed Shortage 0f Grain Gargoes At Montreal MONTREAL. Oct. 26 —(C7.P) - Port officials said there were tramp ships from many lands in Montreal today searching for grain cargoes but harbor facilities held little more than enough to fill two of them. During the week-end port wheat stocks dropped to 450.000 bushels, whereas the harbors capacity is 15-000000 bushels. One shipping official. who slid the lack of grain here was due to lack of transportation to bring it from the west, added that unless more grain reaches Montreal soon the sailings of some vessels may be delayed. Or the ships may go to other ports for cargoes. ‘ Three Youths Lost For 24 Hours In Council Discusses llew Business Tax At a special»... mtieigilg of the Cltv Council last. evening, the new ‘flhuslness tax“ by-law was given ‘lsecond reading, by a quorum of the Council presided over by His Worship the Mayor. The proposed by-law would lax all businesses lll Charlottetown RFCOlTllllZ to the value of the lpremlses. The word "business" ln- cludes all professlons and trades. The personal property tax. paid by Abe same businesses. will probably‘ new tax,‘ . business ‘be deducted from the ;ll=:lving many n! U1! ‘houses unaffected. A new departure for Charlotte- ltown. an amendment lcorporatlon Act made at the lfli session oi’ the Legislature KW" ‘the Council power l0 19W such l tax and Councillors are allllfilach‘ with interest and Ecnutlon. The classifications of ‘businesses are simillal" i0 U105! used at Fredericton. NB. The City Recorder. KM. Marlin was lu attendance. A hy-lalv to amend the by-iaw respecting Truckmen and Truck- hoc permitting an increasedcharge of l0 rents per load “'85 81"" third reading and passed- TEACHING RUSSIAN BERLIN, Oct. Z5 -— (A?) -—Th€ United Slates army has started "rm- instruction in Russian for all Americans here, The (‘M5598 l" ‘held twice a week. » v Political Campaign In. ‘U. S. Enters Final Week i l l l Nmv YORK, Oct.2:'1 tat" vic- [Qry claims crime today from hnth the ilcnlocrais and Republicans. with (he presidential clcclion com- ing up Nov. 2--jusl about a week awlny. "We are sweeping toward vic- lorv," Prrsitielll Truman said in n Dr-nlncrnlll-‘cnnlpnllln Slwfwh l" Chicago. "Evcrylvllcre l i". I h"? news and are fuvcs lllnl make mo know lhc lirle is rolllng for us.“ Herbal-l Browncll, Jr. campaign manage;- (m- Linn-run!‘ Thomas Dewey. inid a prcss conference in New Ynrk that prcsldcnilal nom- inee Dewrgv wlll win a "smashlrll!" victory for the Republicans. Mcanwhllc reports of $l.0fl0.000- plus spending for lhc candidates were. filed in Waahlrlgiflfl- Presldcnt. Truman sounded his victory claim in a sywcl-ll in which he lold Chicagoans thnir “Tn preserve frccdnnl and de- mncrary in this cnunilgv. we must put control of the Congress back in the hands of the American P!"- ple. This means wc must have ll Democratic (Tougrr-ss." in speaking of illrcals to demo- cracy, Truman said that forces sim- liar to those which backed Hitler. Mussolini and Tojo are “working through the Republican Party." Truman's Chlcngn speech was _______._._._.___-_-__-- the kick-off for the last, intensive round of campaigning. Tomorrow he will speak in Cleveland. Dewey‘: turn at a Chicago aud- ience comes tomorrow nlght. Then he will speak in Cleveland Wednes- day night. Albany dispatches told of reports that Dewey is already studying possible cabinet appointments, aa- auming he will be elected Presi- dent next Tuesday. Another Al- bany story quoted estimates by New York Republican leaders that Dewey will carry the state (47 elec- loral votes) by a margin of from 400,000 to 7001!“ Democratic spokesmen disputed this, saying that Truman is clos- ing strong and will carry New York. President Roosevelt won the stale in 1944 by 316,000 votes. This year Henry A. Wallace and his Progressive Party are carrying the banner of the American Labor Party. Neutral observers think Wallace may poll around 5C0.00f) New York votes. Currently. Wal- lace is campaigning in New Jersey. In other political development-z President William Green of the American Federation of Labor aald at Cincinnati that "labor will suo- ceed in a large way in defeating many of the Oongresernen and Sen- ators who voted for the Tait-Hart- ley (labor) ACL" to the lrl- 1 Woods (By The Canadian Press) RESERVE IVHNES. N. 8., Oct. B6 —Three youths rnissingflirl deep woods near this Cape Breton mini‘ ling town for 24 hours were found today by five volunteer searchers. , Ill the excitement that followed the discovery the entire group lost tits bearings and it was another Lcouple of hours before all eight men got out of the woods. l Hours after the three, Jim Mac- |l\'eii, 16, Merlin MacNcil, 14, and lJohn Cameron, l6. had returned hcme other parties still tramped ‘the woods about 12 miles from Jlere- Tonight all searchers, most of them miners. were back home. The missing trio travelled more than 20 miles through bog. ‘r-bo boys were on a cranberry-picking outing when they lost their way. They walked until darkness last flight and built a fire. The three .iool< turns climbing trees in an Fllemllt to spot the sweeping brrlccn of Reserve Airport caught the flash once but mist blotted ll. out after that. At dawn they started walking again. Hours later they heard a -.l‘tii»nlilf’tallrea with other promo..- l I iBy The Canadian Press) MONTREAL. Oct. 25—Reports of a "revolutionary" new process for making steel today brought dozens o! queries from North Arn- erican steel makers but its finan- cial backers said they were keep- ing their method and its invent- or's identity secret for the time being. The process was first disclosed Saturday night when Premier Du- plessls told a Chamber of Ccm- merce banquet at nearby Iber- ville that he had just comr- from St. Johns, Qua, where he rad seen raw material converted into steel in a half hour. He said lt usually takes 24 hours to produce steel. A Government official at Moni- real, who would not. allow himself to be identified, said he too knew of the process. He said it still was in the pilot-plant stage but it would "revolutionize the industry" l iTO Train Under the administered by the Transport if it could be made to work on a large scale. Although the official said the iron ore used in the process ls re- fined electrically. neither he nor Charles Prefontaine. one of the promoters. would say how ii. was done. Preifontaine, an executive of a Montreal auto parts firm. refused even to name the inven r _untll ers, one of whom is Alexandre Grelloire, St. Johns business marl. The promoter, who reported m» was receiving telegrams and tele- phone calls from steel-making firms in Canada and the United States. said he might have some- lhln! l0 say Wednesday. Federal steel control officials at Ottawa. said they had no knou- (Contifindedwon Page 5 News In Brief GENEVA. Switzerland. Oct. 25— (APJ-There are about 2.000.000 workers available for immigration in Europe for whom there is no demand on the continent, vey of the international Office disclosar. Labor WITH THE ISRLAELI ARMY IN UPPER GALJLEE. Oct. 25 -—iAP\ shot and eventually the five-man seal-ch party found them. ‘ TF1? bflrs did not see or hear a ‘ffiltltfih Diane that was in the nls. ,.. .. lthjfiidugllijrerlflxamell: "I had all - -~ - I will ever want." iBoliy or Missing ;0ntario Woman Found ‘xrrcrmlvrla. Ont. Oct. 25 _ 'CP)—A body identified by Chief Constable Cecil Pickett of nearby AyT as that of Mrs. Emma Pen], 3'1, missing since Sept. l3, tonight was found in a bush on the road to Piattsville. five miles southwest of here. Chief Pickett declared there could be no mistake in the identifi. cation of the body of the woman for whom search parties have scoured the surrounding country- side for weeks. , A party of pOIlCQ, and citizens. acting on a tip wliich came about 6 p.m.. found the body. Police said Mrs. Pohl vanished after leaving her home at nearby Bunnyside to collect a e600 debt from William Stuart. Stuart is held without. bail on a charge of public mischief af- ter poliea questioned his story. y-United Nations observers said ‘ltoday that Arab forces ml the lnorihern front have withdrawn ‘to their proper truce-line positions ‘and the entire area is quiet aifer ‘three days of fighting. DONDON, Oct. 25 -—iCPI ——Tile ‘King tomorrow formally opens a ‘new sexton of Pariiamen; which, Governnlents iron twill consider the ‘plan to nationalize Britain's and steel industry. PARTS, Oct. M lAPl . For- eign Ministers of Britain, France and the Benelux countries to- day to discuss how their alliance could be linked in a naiiitary treaty relationship with the United States and Canada. maomo. drifts — to?» __ Defence Minister Claxton said io- night a Nrvrth-Atlantic security pact including Canada and the United States would help “reduce the chance of Soviet success" if Russia waged all aggressive war. VANCOUVER. Oct. 26 fCPl — Lord Beaverbrook predicted in an interview today that Winston Churchill again will head the British Government “as soon as the people get a chance to vote him back." The Canadian-born British publisher is window idiop- ping here - his first visit to the wear, coast since i909. l CAN 03,30 ADA l “lllli ' l-v l» ll» ii FLOUR R Sllf- ‘ Expect 1,500 Plan In 1949 ter Howe, in his capacity as Acting Transport Minister, tonight announced a $300-a-pllot Govern- ment subsidy plan for the produc- tion of a grcaler flo\v of trained; pilots in. 1049. The measure, he said in a state- ment, will be brought up for ap- proval at the next session cf Par- liament. The pilot-producing program, to Department. will provide n straight grant of $100 to all approved flying clubs or schools for each qualified pilot turned ollt. Another $100 will go to the piiot_ himself when he completes train-l lng and qualifies for a Transport Department private pilot's licence. 1n addition. if the pilot is accept- ed and joins the R. C. A. F. reserve or auxiliary. he'll get. another gift‘ of $100. , Mr. Howe said the Deparfmentl anticipates that some 1,500 persons will take advantage of the new scheme in 1949 at a cost to the Government of about $450,000. He added: "Training of a large number of pilots will do more to foster and develop interest in civil aviation in Canada than any other comparable measure." It would result in: l. Greater use of Govern- ment airports and aerodromes by the public. 2. Development of airports and ac-rodromes by private en- terprise. _ 3. Growth of a healthy aircraft service. 4. Development of a large re- pair and accessory business, l light industry and aircraft Ai-ilee Calls on l Acting prime nlinistcr of Can- ada. LouifSt. Laurent ls shown after he had conferred in London with Clement Attlee, Great Brit- ain's prime minister. They discus- sed Canada's role in the resurgence of the empire as a dominant world economic force. —S.N.S. Photo COSTLY EGG LONDON, Oct. 25 fAPl George Hollis, 4a year old laborer, was fined 40 shillings today for smashing a plate on the head 0d his daugihter Elaine, aged eight, because she dropped and broke an egg. Current egg ration in Britain is less than one a week D6!‘ pfffiflll. ' "W ' ‘Nova Scotia Conservatives l Prepare To Select Leader; l l HALJFAX. Oct. 2e - (C?) ,Rank and file provincial Progres- ‘sive Conservative leadership pop- ‘ulcrity is reported divided between a lawyer, a newspaper rnan and a ‘fish executive but some persons ‘prominent in Party circles say ‘that it may take the persuasive flowers of the new national leader lGenrge Drew to get than to stand. It is ullderstood that Mr. Drew, "lrrivillg here Nov. 0 for a three- lday vislt that will include attend- ;ance at the vital leadership con- lventicn, may he asked to help get some of the more widely-mentioned but. reticent prospects to allow their nalnes to go before the con- vention, 1n all cases WUCQIICG is said to stem from the first the. .mcn are extremely busy executives with no political ambitions. A Progressive Collsetvative ‘source said tonight that he under- didaies to dam were: Robert L. Stanfield, provincial president of the Party, a Halifax barrister and a member of the Tturc, N.S., textile family; RAJ, Rankin, managing editor qf the Halifax Herald and the Hali- fax Mail; Brig. RV. Darrell Laing, C-BIL, whose war record included service as de-puty adjutarlt and quarter- masicr-general of the 2nd Canadian Corps and who now is manager of the Maritime Notional Fish Div- ision of National Sen Products Limited. Previously mentioned as being nnssihles in ilhe rllnlllnz are George NCWVlBfl, K.C., of Wnlfville, NS, a past-president 0f the Provincial Party organization and a member of the Dominion execu- tive, and C. fled Fraser oi’ Bed- ford. NS, director of the Canadian Council for Reconstruction and stood the most sough-after can- former Halifax newspaper mall. ‘Early Resignation Of By JAMES MoCOOK DONDON, Oct. 25 - lCP) Prime Minister Mackenzie King will resign office within a week or two after he returns to Ottawa from London, it was learned on good authority today, The Prime Minister‘, who has spent more than two weeks in bed on account of a blood circulation ailment, has decided to observe strictly the instructions of his doc- tor, Lord Moran. This means that he must take ‘life more easily, a step which de- mands immediate curtailment in the rounds of his duties. There- fore he proposes only a brief de- lay in surrendering his office when he returns to the Canadian Cap- ital. The Prime Minister plans lo leave Lnndc-n Saturday and to rail for New York Sunday from Southampton in the liner Queen Elizabeth. 1n that event he would be home about Nov. 5‘ or 6. He will recommend to the Gov- crnor-General, Viscount Alexander, that fir-ills St. Laurent be his suc- cessor, Si. Laurent last August was chosen to succeed the Prime Liberal Party. first time since Oct. 9 and was up again today. He is reported feel- irlg well but has told friends he is determined to follow medical advice and avoid any strain. iMr. King Forecast Minister nf IIiIJlSCXKY-lll-ETETET; the secr/tld time today and Prime Minister Llaqllat All Khan of Pakistan made his first visli. Later in the day the Unlvcrslty of London conferred upon Mr. King the honorary degree of Doc- tnr of Laws. The rcrccnouy took place in the Prime Nllnisterls suite, with Ml‘. King sitting ill an arm- chair. The scarlet and blue LLD. hood was placed over ills shoulders of the ‘University and wartime Governor-General of Canada. the Prime Minister for the degree people of the Commonwealth. Thanking the officials for hBPPN He also recalled his first assncia the Passmole Edwards Settiemen ‘in LOYldnn. ‘I took n daliv iraik from til Minister as national leader of the settlement past London Universltyl and never dreamed that one da Ml". King got, up Bundey for the I unuld receive a degree from that ‘ University. "This has rounded out neari 50 years of associat on with and visits to IflTIdOII an I look 0n degree frrm London University a Pundit Jawaharlal Nehru, Prime a great honor." by the Earl of Athione, Chancellor‘ Dr, 3.1m Evans, in presenting praised his long work as a public l figure and said he held a unique place in the appreciation of the the honor, Mr. King said he recalled _vears of association with Lord Athlone as Governor-General. “n” 30mm, 9,10 ;_m,, 1 pm, in 1898 under a Harvard University rpllotx-sllip. He lectured and studied CRiSiS Western Powers Balk At Soviet Counter-Proposal PARIS. Oct. Z5—-iCPJ—-RilS5lB'B Andrel Y. Vlshinsky tonight vet- oed the plan slibmillPd by the six "neutral" members of the United Nations Security Council for set- tling the Berlin dispute. It was the Soviet Union's 28th veto and the second cast by Vish- insky personally. The vote was B to 2, with Russia and the Sovlet Ukralne casting the lone negative votes. Juan Atlllo Oramulgia. Argen- l tlne Foreign Minister and acting lpresidcnt of the Council, told newspaper men: “I will keep on ‘trying to get a peaceful settle- mcnt." He spoke for the five other "netrais"-—Canada, China. Syria, Belgium and Colombia-as well as his own country. The discussion just before the vote disclosed that the major sticking point between Russia. and the Western Powers is: when will the Russian blockade on Berlin be lifted and when will the Russian mark be made the currency for all four sectors in Berlin? Philip Jessup, United States delegate, told the council that re- sponsibility for stopping Council action rested solely upon the Sow let Union. "fihere was no immediate indic- ation what the next move would be. An authoritative British source said the Big Three Western For- eign Ministers had arranged I (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) titular {Allis but All. n’ avg-g Style» ls “ sqri ~-‘~\-oNc-!é/ __. __._f _€_---——+———1j TORONTO. Oct. 25—(CP)—Minh mum and maximum tcmperaturear Edmonton 28, 52; Winnipeg 37, G5;- London 40, 55; Toronto 44. 50; Or. lawn 34, 52,‘ Montreal 36, 51; Que< bec 38. 48; Saint John 29, 49; Mona ion 42, 49: Halifax 46, 58; Char. loiieinwn 41. 5ft; Sydncy 40, 4311 ‘Yarmouiil 47, 52. l HALIFAX, Oct. 25 _ <CP)__Q[. flcini inland forccrlsts issued t0- lnight by the Dominion Public Wen- ;iher Office at Halifax and valid un- lii midnight Tuesday. I Synopsis: Monday evening there ‘were gale-s and rain along the south coast rlf Nova Scoiia and Ncw Brunswick. Tilesc were calls. .cd by a storm off the United States ‘coast, which appears to be almost stationary. The rrlin is expected to “PFP-‘ifl l" (‘apc Rreinn rlnd Prince. ,F.d\vard island flllflflEZ the night. However, prr-ssurc l‘f‘ll‘ifllllS high ‘over Newfoundland and the north- ‘ern Gulf of Si. Lawrence giving Jme weather in the northern reg- ions. No great change i" cxpM-QN] on Tuesday. Regional FOFPEQIIF‘ Prince Edward lsiulld- lrvcrcast with intermittent. min during the ‘night and Tuesday. Little change ‘in temperature. Nnrtilcast winds 20 ‘increasing Tuesday morning to lunrihcllsi 30 gusty. Low early Tues- day morning and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 42 and 40. ‘ High tide this afternoon at 5.46 and tonight at 4,38. l Sun sets this afternoon at L6H and rises tomorrow morning at . 6.31. New moon November 1st, 2.01 ‘A M ' Summereide tide eighteen min- uies later than Charlottetown. Daily Except Sunday CAR FERRY “ABEIHVEIT” Standard Time ' 4.80 p. m. tion with London when he came t0 Leaves Torrnentlne 10.35 a. ln., Lil i- p m., 1.30 p. m SUNDAY Leaves Borden 6.4.5 I‘, W. e Leaves Tormentlne B l‘. M. WOOD ISLANDS - FARIBOU y l Dally including Sunday ' Standard Tlrne y B a.sn., 1 p. m. l . s‘ ning e a.m.. l bu. Prince Nova. l1 a.m.. i p.111 Leases Wood Islands.‘ Prince Nova Charles A. Dunning. ii a.m.. 4pm Leaves Caribou, Charies A. Dun-