The Pet's Paper Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1950 ALLIED SHIPS POUND 130 MILES OF NORTH KOREAN COAST 1 Read b vrybotiy pot... o....... 5...: U. S. Announces Temporary ”Freeze” On Passport Visas WASHINGTON. Oct. 12 - (CF) ,.. The Government today an- nounced a temporary world-wide "freeze" on passport visas to aliens seeking to enter the United States. it even affects Canada. the coun- trvis friendliest neighbor. However, officials here said only I relative handful of persons are nt'lllBii)' affected in Canada, most- Ly those preparing to reside ucr- manently in the U. 5- Thc sudden crackdown was the latest move in carrying out pro- visions of the Communist Control Bill. The order threw a "paper our- tain" around the country pending ciarifictrlion of the statute which Congress passed recently over the veto of President Truman. The State Department issued the suspension order as scores of aliens -chiefly Germans and Italians- were detained at Ellis Island, New York. and hundreds of others were at sea en route to American ports. The State Department cabled U. S. embassies and consulates all over the world to hold up visas-entry permits-until they can recheck the background of aliens planning to come to the United States. The suspension order specifies that aliens now holding visas can get them re-stamped as valid only by satisfying American consuls abroad that they are not banned from the United States under the 1950 Security Act. In Ottawa. officials of the U. S. Embassy and the Canadian De- partment of External Affairs said the suspension order does not ap- ply to Canada. spokesmen said the Embassy there was the one Coming. -Events -......L:-.......A.....- exception to the world-wide mall- ing list. 3 ' But officials in Washington said it applies to Canadians coming as immigrants. since they must have visas as well as passports. Visitors lxempted The order does not apply to Canadians coming to the U. S. on visits of six months or less. They do not need visas. Canadians coming for longer do need a visa. Nor does it apply to official rep- resentatives of foreign govern- ments. American officials abroad were instructed to notify transportation compa ' of the suspension order and warn them of possible liability for damage if they transport aliens to this country who lack valid per- mits. Displaced persons. being brought to the United States for resettle- ment under provisions of other legislation, are exempt. The so-called anti-subversives law bars entry of aliens who have ever been members of the Com- munist "or other totalitarian" par- ties or affiliated organizations. It thus applies not only to form- er Nazi and Fascist Party mem- bers, but also to countless Ger- mans and Italians who were mem- bers of some sort of state organ- -izations during the Hitler and Mus- solini regimes. State Department officials esti- mated 90 per cent of all Germans would be ineligible under a strict interpretation of the law. Italy and Germany have both protested vigorously against the detention of their nationals. and thelstate Department has prom- ised prompt action to clear up the confusion. lt:'."..:it "Mail your Films to Gsrniiuin Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Double Feature Show at Hun- terls River tonight at 8.00. "Abegweit R. B. P. Kingston, 1'-riday. October lath. "Long Creek Chicken Supper. Friday. October 13th. "liailowebn Dance. Hall. Wednesday. C ' "Hot hicken Supper. Corran Bann Hall, Wednesday. November 8th. Millvlew asth. "Regular Dance Holy Name Hall, St. Peters Bay. Fridly. 13i-h Chaissonk orchestra. "Rummage sale and it table of fancy work in Massey Harris. Sat- urday. Oct. 14. 6,30. "Regular Dance. East Royalty Rink flail. Friday. Bus leaving BL" rerminll 9.30 Ind 10.00. "Kitisora Hall, Moving Picture. "The l'lshemtsn's wharf". Friday at 3.00 and H30. . "Purina Hog and cow concen trstes. .See Henry st Carter's Warehouse. "Pantry Sale at Holmans, Oct. 14th. at 2.30 by Kingston Baptist W. M. S. "Rummage Sale. Trinity social Hall. Saturday. October 14th. 3.30 P. M. "Chicken Supper and Dance. Vernon River Hall, October nth. supper served It 5 P. M. "atrathalbyri scarlet chapter. wig! meet in Bradalbanc. October II , "nrmars! Get your lime now. Phone order for immediate g:livory.- 1.. I. acaman. Bratisl- ne. "Paylns moo per pair for good pigs. thirty pounds and over. Phone or writs Willlrd Prowse. imoklay. - "Don't miss Chas d Lot-nan with their Country ualna at Cape 'l'I-avsi-so 1-fall tonight. Show time, 0 o'clock. sponsored by Capo Ts-avarsa Women's Institute. "Old time -fiddling . and sin? dancing . contest. Klnliora hall. Oi: bar Ith. Good cash 0''"!- ln Ca oicso October mat. send entries to lira. sablnus John- ,It9I)0. Kinlma or phone 0001. 7-i--and I . of th an ugpa,r.,nlngo an o or ' ' uugwmu Nortituumutlig Friday. octeltar nth. lunar at I "outline ct: mumm- gnonoorsd wthp wmngis tr. 7, lull. Ne "wsi nBii'e?i"l NEW DELHI. Oct. 12 -(CPl- Responsible sources today would give no confirmation of news- paper reports that Chineso Com- munists have invaded Tibet. OTTAWA, Oct. 12 --(GP) - A Government source said today that more United states gun orders are in prospect for Canada if the cur- rent e1o.ooo,coo order placed at sorel, Que, works out. satisfactor- ily. ST. LOUIS. Oct. 12-(AP)-Pre- sldent Truman resumed tonight his journey to the Pacific for a conference with Gen. MacArt.hur-- probably at Wake Island-on how to prevent the threat of Commun- ism In the Far East from flaming into another war. OTTAWA. Oct. ize (CF)-The armed forces now have more titan 60.000 men in uniform. Defence Headquarters announced today that the three regular forces have taken in LON men since they launched a Korea-inspired recruit- ing drive July 20. SAIGDN. Indo-China. Oct. 12 -- (AP)-Prench forces gave up an- other outpost today north of Hanoi. and-serious consideration was being given to bolstering Hanoi itself against the danger of a Vietminh attack in the wake of I series of sharp French reversals. lPi?opos No Indication Price Support Will Emetgeup OTTAWA. Oct, 12 -- (GP) .. Canadian potato growers today placed their case for price support squarely before Agriculture Minis- ter Gardiner, but there were no indications that their request would be granted, A delegation of potato-grower representatives met with Mr, Gar- diner in a wind-up meeting of is two-day conference called to deal with a deteriorating market. for the Ikricultural product. especially in the Maritime area. Mr. Gardiner. officials said, re- ceived the delegation, heard the case. but gave the group no en- couragement. other than that he would consider its request. it was indicated, however. that although he may bring the request before the Cabinet. there was little likelihood of the Govemment changing its mind about not granting support to the potato market. Earlier today. W.R. Shaw. who headed the delegation. said the market future for Canadian potato growers "is not very hopeful." The Deputy Minister of Agricui. turn for Prince Edward Island has- ed his view on the fact there was a heavy production of potatoes in Canada and in the United States. the biggest international market for Canadian tubers, Discussed Acresge Control He said there was some discus- sion at the conference about the possibility of reducing potato acre- Conference At Ottawa Liefs U. N. Term MayBe Extended Despite Red Veto, Margarine Output Continues climb OTTAWA, Oct. 12 - (CP) Butter - substitute manufacturers produced 7,962,000 pounds of mar- garine in September, compared with 0.710.000 pounds in August and 7,035,000 in September. last Year, the Bureau of Statistics re- ported today. Nine-month output for 1950 tot. alled 69,601,000 pounds. 5-harply up from last year's 53,078,000. Stocks on Oct. 1 totalled 1.470.000 pounds, compared with 1,800,000 Sept. 1. ' Creamery butter production dur- ing September totalled 28,081,000 pounds. compared with 30,686,000 last year. Output for the nine months totalled 217,271,000. against 226,431,000. Butter stocks on Oct. 1 totalled 69,900,000 pounds. slightly up from 33.224300 on Sept. 1 but sharply down from the 76,910,000 on Oct, 1 last year. George Bernard Shaw Returns To Garden AYO'IT ST. LAWRENCE. Eng- land. Oct. 12 -(AP) -George Bernard Shaw was back today in his garden, where he fell and fractured his thigh a month ago. The 94-year-old Irish wit took advantage of autumn sunshine to (Continued on Page 15 Col. at tour his flower beds in 3, wheel chair. -soiatt5a -roll Valley Apple Problem KENTVILLE. N. S., Oct, 12- (CP)-Two vetcrnn leaders of the Annapolis Valley apple business Hid tonight that complete tran- sition is the answer to the indus- try's problems in Nova Scotizt. Fred M. Nash. president of Ihe United Fruit Companies Ltd.. and R. D. Sutton. president of the Nova Scotia Marketing Board. said in a joint statement that con- tinued Federal aid for tree re- moval is necessary it this tran- sition is to take place. (The program of tree removal was started when the United Kingdom's financial difficulties and other problems resulted in loss of Nova Scotia”s important overseas markets, (Trees which produced export- typa apples were replaced with varieties more suited to the do- mestlc market). "Only by growing those varieties desired by the Canadian and Un- ited States consumers can we hope to market the entire Valley crop." said Mr. Sutton (Of the 1.000.000-barrel crop ex- pected this year. markets have been found for only 600.000 bar- rein.) Other officials of the Marketing Board estimated that half of the trees still standing have to he pulled or grafted. More than 500,- tReutera correspondent John Collcss sent from a Japanese hos- pital the following description of liberated Woman. former Com- muniat base on the east coast of North Korea. Colless was injur- ed Wednesday night when an air- craft hit a sea wall and crashed on landing. Two were killed and four rassen era including Collesa were nluie ). (By John Callus) Asl-i1YA, Japan. Oct. 11 -- (Reu- ters) - Towns people in Wonsan claim that Communists four days ago beheaded B00 Konan prison- ai-s including women and children. They say the victims had been imprisoned because they "did not live like Communists." When the city's fall seemed-in- evitatbla the Communists executed them and buried the bodies in the sands of the river. The report has not been official- ly confirmed. Communist arilller . mortar and machine-gun flra sill was falling into;-Tlttantly in parts of the town ll .3, . Ioutli, Korean artillery batteries. tom ostttcnts ithin. the guy,. our the bands at" , the streets IVHQCIA who ware only new Imam um. - woman 0 a U of ruins. Mm ,ef the-residential am are flat- Report Massacre By North Koreans In Wonsan tened, smoking ashes. Big factories are gaunt hollow skeletons or piles of rubble. A large oil refinery was wrecked by air bombing and the oil reservoirs are a tangled mass of steel sheeting. North Korean soldiers. of whom there are many in Won- asn. have given Americnn inter- rogators ii strong impression that the Communist army is at its limits of manpower reserve and that the troops' will to fight has slumped. Most prisoners have been sol- diers only a few weeks and ltrnw little about even elementary sol- dtering. Of a large batch takan yesterday the one with the longest service had been in the army six months. Several had been in only six days. A captured 19-year-old lieuten- ant who commanded a machine- gun detachment had threa months' service. He had "stripped" a ma- chine-gun only three times dur- ing that time and he knew nothing about other arms. A captain said that ona defend- ing battalion was commanded by a lieutenant because of a shortage of offi , The youngest prison- er was a boy of 16. Prisoners said the Communists initially had conscripted all males between 10 and I1 but recently ax- tended the age limit to M. 000 trees have already been re- movcd with Federal assistance. MT. Sutton said Nova Scolia would have no trouble selling her Rpples if the preferred varieties were available. Water transpoi'ln,- tion to New Englnnri put the Province in an enviable position insofar as competition from Bri- tish Columbia and Ontario was concerned. , As late as last year. he said. 85 per cent of the Valley crop was comprised of varieties not wanted on local markets. Briiisli Experts lie-examine Arms Program LONDON. Oct, 12 - (AP) Government experts have started re-examining Britain's iS3.400.000.000 rearmament program in the light of United States inability to help it. with free dollars. Quallfiod informants stressed the new st.u:ly.is designed not to cut the three-year program but to modify the methods by which it is to be financed. The British program, announced last Aug, 3, called for Amerlcati help in cash and in kind to the tune cf about 31.500.000.000 during three years. The United states has since made it clear it will be dif- ficult if not impossible to give any of the Atlantic Allies free dollars for spending anywhere in the world - as Britain had asked. As a result. Britain exi-acts to get help only in the form of act- ual military equipment, machine tools for producing arms, and raw rnaterisis. Britain stressed in August her program could be carried out with- out revsrting to a full war econ- omy only with American help in free dollars and materials. The informants said the main factors which have arisen since to enable the country to csrw out the full program. without the Ameri- can help ln cash. Ire the extra dollars being earned by Common- wealth producers of scarce raw materials like wool. rubber, tin and various non-ferrous metals. The United states and Canada have been buying that kind of commodity in increasing quantities ever since the Korean war began. As a result commodity prices have soared: And Britain, as bank- er for the sterling area has ben- afttad a lot. hl)N'rRIAL. Oct. 12 -(AP) - Albert Edward wabts. who design- ed the special equipment for can- sdlan oorvattoa in the second World War died last night. in was 0. l- " makes ”ifd . the Council i By Frsncls W. Carpenter LAKE SUCCESS. N. Y.. Oct. 12 A (AP) -- Russia today used its veto power in an effort to block the re-election of United ,Nations secretary-General Trygvo Lie but legal experts at the U. N. said the Assembly might be able to extend his term, possibly for three years These experts argued that. in cases where the Security Council is not able to make a recommend- ation the General Assembly could extend the tcim of the secretary- generai. Russia is expected to challenge this position but major- lly delegates said Lie could be re-? tallied against Soviet: opposition. i Jakob A. Malik, Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister. cast Russia's 46th veto, at ll closed meeting of the security Council. against I.ie's appointment to a new five-year term beginning ii-ext Feb. '1, Nine votes were in favor of Lie. The soviet Union opposed. and Nationalist China abstained. Russia Proposes Pole Malik then proposed Zygniunt. Modzelewski. Foreign Minister of Poland, but Modzelewski got Rus- sia's vote only. China, Cuba, Ecuador and Yugoslavia opposed him. The United states, Britain, France. Norway, India and Egypt abstained. Lie declined comment. but as- sociates said it could be assumed he would continue if the Assembly extended his term. American delegate Warren E. Austin, this month's council pres- ident. said afterwards: "We have been for Lie from the hcginiiiiii:..altliough he has taken stands on some questions with wl'li('l1 we, gotild .,not. agree, that, idiffei7ence." Under the U. N. charter, the Council must recommend a sec- rel.ai'.v-genernl. with the five big powers-Russia. the United States. France, China and Brit.nin-voting unanimously for him. The General Assembly then must approve the rccrrnmendation and fix the term. With this stalemate. the Coun- cil drafted 11 letter to the As- sembly statim: that it. was not able to make it recommendation. Might-den Prelude To New banding my hill Rosa) TOKYO. Oct, 13- (Friday)- IAP)-The United States battle- ship Missouri led a naval force of 37 5MP-1 Thuriday into searing attack on nearly 130 miles of North Korea's cast coast--almost to the Siberian-Manchurian border. The I118 iron and steel port of Chfiniziin was set. aflanie as the 15-inch guns of the mighty Mo mum” 900000 Pounds of hot shciis "110 til? City in less than an hour the Ii. -S; Navy said, The fiert.-c bombardment. rem;tii- scent of those that devastated the coast of Japan late in the Second WWW WET. might be the prelude to a United Nations landing, but this remained a matter of specu- lotion. American and British cruisers, American. Canadian and Ausl:al- iii" d'?SU”0yers and American air- craft carriers worked over an area 1'-Xlfndinlz from Songjin "practical- 1.V to the Very edge of the Man- churian border," (ha navy mid to. day. It is 130 miles from Songjin to that border. British carrier-based pin-ies simultaneously struck the North Korean west coast 65 miles south- West of the Red raplltil of Pyong. )"dl1S. Ground Troops Aiivance United Nations ground troops were advancing relentlessly on the North Korean capital 01 Pyong- yanlz from the south and south- east against weakenin: Communist resistance. The attack on-Chongjin, on the northeast coast. could be the softening-up process for an Al- lied landing. or it could be a div- crsioii to draw attention from a landing clscwhc-re. ltltilso could hr. m9F0ly .1 roulinc bombardment. The Sam. I5 ailicd landings at rinchon. on the Vvcstronst, which llcint-d to smash the Red invasion of South Korea. were preceded by similar strnnfz naval bombardment; Choitzjin, rm iron and steel port of 190.000. is 49 miles southwest of the Korean-Siberia border and 43 miles southeast of the Korean- Manchtiria border. Cnrricr-based planes fired inc- kcls at the city for two days be- fore the wnrships' nli.i('k opened Thursday. The 1.7. S. cruiser Hcicna led the limo strike. shelling from close up (Inn Yntc Extension This left. the way open for tliei Asst-,nbl,v to vote an extension of Lie's term. A. H. Feller, legal ad- viser to the U. N. official. ruled last May that the Assembly could extend the term of a secretary- genernl in the case of failure of to make a recom- mendation nnd ll. N. officials said delegates ;;enci'all.V agreed with that ruling. Lie was Foreign Minister of, Norway when he was elected at the first General Assembly in London lll 1946. The Russians put up a Yugoslnv for sccretai'y-gen- eriil but he was not accepted by the West. The West then advan- ced L. B. Pearson. now Canada's External Affairs Minister, for the post but he was rejected Soviet Uiiioir. The Russians and the West then agreed upon Lie. R.C.A.F. To Get Mustangs Shortly OTTAWA, Oct. 12 (CF) "Y W" cribed by Dr. Willard F. Libby and The first five of 100 Mustang flglit-i er planes bought. in the United States will he delivered to the R.C.A.F. shortly. the Air Forccl C3 25”” ” had be" be”"9d' British Millionaire Lives On Very Modest Budget announced today. The first group will he used to equip a Mustang conversion unit; at Rivers, Maii., where Conadlnii pilots will be made familiar with the aircraft. Machines delivered later will go to form it new fighter squadron of the regular R.C.A.F. tit Uplands Airport. Ottawa. and will be dis- tributed among ituxtliary squad- rons. I. C. Finn Boosts Price of Newsprint VANCOUVER. Oct. 12 -- (CF! - The Powell River Paper Company today notified Canadian and United States customers of a S10-a-ton increase in price of newsprint, ef- fective Oct. lti. This increases the cost from 890 to 3100 it ton. High- er production cost was given as the reason for the boost. Toronto Reports Record ltainstorin TORONTO. Oct. 12 - IGP) - The heaviest four-day rainstorm in 100 years ended today in Tor- onto. The 3.15-inch downpour flooded cellars, snarled ti-affleand was blamed for injuries to 17 persona. l l I Willi hcr eight-incli guns. Then the Missouri began throwing in one- tcciitinued on Page 15 C01. 4) 16 PAGES -Maxims 1 I or A. MERE MAN h when missing on canpanlaau gone. we doubly feel ourselves alone. Subseripuons Delivered 00.00; Bull l fl-M other Provhooa I U. 8. 07.00. Eden Warns Rearm With Term Extended I. k. H SAINT JOHN. N. 3., Oct. 12 - (CP) - Extension of Hon. D.L MacLaren's (above) term as Lieut- enant-Governor of New Brunswick for another five years was ari- nounced tonight in an official not- ification from Ottawa. He was ap- pointed in November, 1946. and the present term expires at the end of this month, . An announcement by Labor Min. 5991” GY088. New Brunswick's rep- resentative in the Federal Cabinet. said that hope -had been wimly expressed in New Brunswick that Lieutenant - Governor Macmrcn would containue in office, and the Cabinet had received an expression of his willingness to do so, "I was delighted to learn this from Prime Minister St. Laurent today, and I am sure everyone in pleased," said Mr. Greg. Sydney Hospifa” Contract Awarded SYDNEY. N. S.. Oct. ?12-(CP)-- M. R. Chappell tonight was awarded the contract for construc- tion of Sydney's new 51,706,000 hospital. Work will start tomorrow with officinl sod-turning ceremonies slated for next Wednesday. Cliappcil's bid was for 5984.280. The only other was for 01.01-1.500, Architect for the hospital is H J, Smith of Toronto. Believe Last l America 12,000 Years Ago By IIOWARD W. BLAKESLI-IE Mssociated Press Science Editor) SCHENECTADY. N.Y., Oct. 12 -L tAP) - The age of man in North America was dated in 3 new and accurate way with radio-active car- bon studies reported today to the National Academy of Sciences. This master calendar -was des- Dr. James R. Arnold cf the Univ- ersity of Chicago. Radio-active carbon, ii product of atomic energy, is also made in the air by ccsmic rays. The radio-act- ivity lasts 50,000 years. and can he found in organic objects that old. The carbon dates these on- cts, The radio-activity shows that the last ice ago in North America was about 12,000 years ago. instead Ice Age In The dates came from spruce trees at. Two Creeks. Wis, which grew just. before the ice moved down from t.he north, The ice knocked the trees down and they were priz- served under rubble. This radio-activity clock finds the first humans in Ncrth America in Oregon and Nevada. They were identified in Oregon by woven sati- dals found in ii cave in the east- ern part of the state. The sandals are 12,000 years old. by the carbon clock. since the early Oregonians already could make sandals, it is concluded that men must. have! been there much earlier, The first carbon evidence of man in the eastern part of the contin- ent goes back only 5,000 years. One clue is some fish wire stakes founzt three years ago, when excavations By ANN BUCHANAN LONDON. Oct, 12 - (Reuters) - Sir John Ellerman. the "Garbo" nf Britain's dwindling list of million- aires, is growliig richer in spite of five years of socialist restrictions And in spite of a fortune assess- ed at. i'.40,000,000 (about 3l20.000.000) he still wants to be alone. Not for him the fleshpots. den- ied by taxation to other rich men. but well within the bounds of the Ellerman millions, lle had never had it taste for luxury. in an age of dwindling personal fortunes. the 1-Zllerman capital con- tinues to grow, whue the multi- millionaire himself lives modestly on at budget of 122,000 a year. in June this year the latest re- turns of the Ellerman Lines. main plank of the shipping side of the show that mllermsnts holding of the company's deferred time! had risen by 1100.000 during the last years. bringing his holdings 2020.000 Ellerman empire. were reported to two to The 1-illerman Lines own 03 diips. were made in Boston, :v totalling 540,000 tons, and have another 16 in the course of build- ing. The company's assets are close on 230.000.0110 and for several yeau the dividend on the deferred stock has born in per cent. tree of tax. Investment and property trusts breweries and newspapers are other sources of the gigantic fortune. in financal quarters it is rum- nrcd that the 540,000,000 Ellermitn inherited from his father, the first Sir John Ellerman, in 1933 - of which nearly half went in death duties - has been doubled since by the son. I In private life the man with the Midas touch lives frugally, hiding; away in his Park Lane hotel suite in London. or his 14-bedroomed house at Eestbourne. Sussex. Eilerman likes to study rodent life and has published I three vol- ume work. "The Families and Gen- him 10 years to complau. 1-lis dark-haired wife was Esther dc solti. daughter of the late clar- ence de Sola. Montreal shlppinl New Bzuhewick wili,.be gmtiy. era of Living Rodents.” which tool: g Britain To I All Speed To Discourage Russia (By Glenn Williams) BLACKPOOL. England. Oct. ll - (AP) - Anthony Eden warneri Britain today to rearm with "alt speed and vigor" for fear the Rm- sians may miscaiculate western) strength and launch a war. Addressing the Conservative" Party's annual conference. this foreign secretary and presentf deputy party leader said Britain: Labor Government has been "dan- gerously slow” in rebuilding its arms. Eden forecast that ”l95I must. in- evitably be a very critical year." The danger of war ”iies more in; a miscaiculation than in a wicked calculation" by Russia. "Personally, I do not believe there is any nation in the modern world that will be so rash as to embark tipon a policy of open air- gression once it is convinced OE the strength. readiness and resolu- tion of the forces arrayed against: it," Eden said. To convince any aggressors. the western democracies "have to build up their defensive strength with. all speed and vigor, not to make war, but to negotiate peace from strength." 0 Eden urged expansion of the British army. to which the Gov- ernment plans to add three new divisions next year. Two of those divisions are to be kept in Britain as it reserve force. the other is to be sent to Germany. Eden said dispatch of one mar division to the continent "is no enough." The conference passed a resolu- tioncalling for military co-opera- tion of Britain, the Commonwealth. Western Europe and the United States, approving armed action in. Korea and rapping the Govern- ment for taking over the steel in- dustry in the middle of its anr-a program. The delegates also sought form- ulaa.to-..stcas--Cumin country. to solve the problems of high and rising living costs and to lure trade union votes into the Tory fold, . ' A motion urging new laws to -suppress Communism was with- drawn after several delegates ll'- gued suppression would only make martyrs of persecuted Commun- ists and drive them underground. "We could never approve .1 witch hunt as in some countries.” asserted Lt.-Col. T. R. Rhys-R.o- berts. Atiats WLL NEVER . (tits -tits PLACE d or ABiLl1'1 9 -. l-1ALi1-lA.X', Oct. 12-(CP)-Offic cial forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Weather Office al Halifax. Synopsis: Showers were failing in many, ptirts of the district tonight. At! some communities lightning was seen. This weather extended west: ward to the Great Lakes and WI! caused by a disturbance heart Ottawa. Clearing was very slow. In the west of the disturbance. Cloudy skies will persist toll some time. Temperature will re- main above usual October values. Regional forecasts, valid until midnight Friday: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy. Continuing warm. Southwest, windid is shifting Friday morning Id southwest 15. Low and high Fri- day at Charlottetown '62 and 02. High tide today at. 12.04 A. M. and 11.48 P. M. . sun rises at 0.26 A. M. and seed at 5.3.5 P. M. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. poppgn - CAP! TOIMENTINR FERRY SIIVICI. Daily I-Except lands! Leave Borden have C. '1'. 0.10 AM. 10.86 AM. 1.00 RM. 1.40 EM. L10 EM. 7.00 l'.M. Sand Les 0 Ilordal have C. '5 A.M. 10.85 A.M. LN PJI. ID PM. I an Mil. . no em. woon IILANDI-OAIIIIIU I DAILY VIII! hove Weed Halls IA.lf.11A.I.l' JIJI. magnate A. l&VO uui.ua.u.ir ADJ. unicn-tw to that A