v l. ‘the Guardian. Three cents. lllderning Dally Founded i007. i I i? Dental Corps Testing New Filling UITAWA, Aug. kiwi-Need a booth filled? Just use some of the paste invented by Dr. ft. I. flted. man of the National Research Council end in s. couple of months Coming Events "Dance in Mermaid School, August 9th. , "Klnkora Hell chicken supper - Jvednesdey, August 10. l’ - "mil Films to Garnhtlm knots Stu o. climottstowa. "Dance Moreii Monday night, Rollie Mackenzie’: Orchestra. _._-_-_-. -- .- "Come to the regular dance in Bonehaw every Tuesday night. it. "Ice Cream, Dance. Orwell Hall, , rAugust 0th. Mlllview Orchestra. I "Dance in Watervale School, ‘ August 8th. Good music. "Dance. Cardigan Head School, Monday, August 0th. 1949. l, "Ice cream end dance is Imy- ‘vale school Tuesday, Augrith. .' "Dance, Morell nut School. “Monday, August 8th. Oped music. ‘ "Ice cream and dance Harte- hviile School Monday, August 8. lSood music, a , ., ‘ m? Erect-restarts: Blnder Twine now stock. Lowest prices. Dillon d: lwlllett. ' "Dance Graham's Road Tuesday night. Rollie Maclfenzieu 0r- chestra. "Marie United Church Supper. Thursday. August 11th. Supper served 5——9.30. "Ice Cream Festival and Dance. Iiead of Hiilsboro School, Wednes- day, August l0th. to St. John's "Come Church Picnic, Crapaud, Wednesday, August 10th. "Dance. Sale oi Lunches and ice Cream in Sea yiew Hail on . ,Mbnday, August lith. i "lcc cream festival, bingo,,etc.. lSt. James Church. Georgetown. ‘llldonday, August 8th. Picnic , Dance 7 Wednesday. August 10th. '. Melody Boys Orchestra. , QSDance and Drawing in St. .:' atrlclfs School, Lot 22. Monday. ‘V ugust 8th. Orchestral music.’ , Ft-"Corran Ban Parish " i-u/t... your friends at the South ll ilton Institute Festival. Hamilton. ~- form's field, Tuesday. August ma. "Come to the Open Air Dance. l wer Newtown, Monday night, ~ ligust 0th. Good music. Canteen we» - i ' i ".Come to ham supper at River- .. ale Wednesday. Aug. l0th. Sup- t} served from 5 p.m. Dance " tgr‘... P 453m at ca. Outside fan. Wednesday. Aug. l0, on property U lack Worth. Pownal-Millvlew Qrcpeatra. , "Festival and dance Ebenezer ' We’ ‘ , Aug. l0. Ice -.. and cake served, also sand- lgee and tea. ‘Ice cream social at French r halt-Monday evening, Aug. n aid of redecoratlng Geddie rial Church. =~:- l; It rgare e Avenue Angel" a thriilinl ior younfend old. mill uie own A" Hunter liver Rink "d?! night. Drafinolfll from 0 tlil ae William ‘L; O. L Gun-ch es and Parades Iflingstill: A t 7th. ervoe a QmlQWmu-s invited to et- ’ his! c ‘tlaalie oeream mndiioeinfracadi and Iohool, Mend Y. Alllllet Ith- ln two molds. Two Orch- ....... j Ratios l a. Claimed To Eliminate Tooth Cavities the cavity will disappear. Anyway. that's what f-he doctor says. The Canadian Army Dental Corps is giving Dr. Stedmanu dis- covery "exhaustive tests." Ono Dental Corps officer says if found ‘lit will beons of the great discoveries of the day. Dr. Btedmen who came to Can- ada. from England and graduated from the University of British Co- lumbia makes a habit of finding ways of doing the helm-impossible. He's the same physical chemistry expert who recently discovered for N. R. C. a waxiike rain-repellent substance for use ilry aircraft dur- ing relnstorms. Dr. Stedman tried hie cavity- stopplng discovery on himself seven years ego. The paste. he says. closely resembles the com- position of the tooth itself. He inserted the paste into a ea- vity about four times s. day. Most of it later ls washed away by sal- iva. but apparently some of it re- mains in the cavity and helps na- ture rebuild the tooth. After thres months’ time, m, Btedman stopped using the paste and lo and behold, the cavity is no longer there. The Army Dental Corps wouldn't Ill’ what means it was taking to test Dr. Stedrnarfs discovery, Telepathy Show Hes Britain Agog LONDON. Alli. Slflleutcrsl-A demonstration of mental telepathy by an Australian couple cver ~ihe BBC network has setBritein agog. The "thought reading" act was put on by Sydney P. Fd-‘ington and his wile. Piddington set in a BBC studio while his wife waited six miles away in the Tower of London. He road a line from e book, and a minute later, his wife repeated what he had said almost word for word. Great care was taken by BBC authorities to prevent collusion. Piddington said he found he could "thought-read" after reading an article in a digest in the lib- rary oi a Japanese prison camp. Asked how it affects their mar- ried life, Plddington said: "We don't practise thought-reading in our private llgcs. lt would make marriage unbearable." Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Evylloily . ' CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. SATURDAY, AUGUST o, 1949 Erasers: Eeotd “Exercise Eagle" Locale bro toes-i", \ Gan-act Peale! ye. Bees I10. o-KH"? P.- ers- Ai Leasl 80 a Reported Dead: lleavy. Qtimage (By The Associated Press) QUITO, Ecuador, Aug. 5 -—— A series of rocking earthquakes struck East Central Ecuador to- day and at least B0 persons were reported killed. At Ambato. 55 miles south of Quito, 80 bodies were recovered from the ruins of buildings top- pled in the city's industrial dis- trict. Reports from Latacunga. about 35 miles south of Quito, in- dicetecl most of that city was de- stroyed and many persons killed. Other towns stricken included Salcedo. Pujili and Saquisill, ln the Provinces of Cotopaxi and Tungurahua. Panic and disorders were reported to be general. Pr " ‘ Galo Plaza Lasso took The above sketch outlines the in conjunction with the R.C.A:I". will hold ‘Exercise Eagle" beginn- district where the Canadian Army ing today. ‘By Doug How) GRANDE PRAIRIE, All!" A112. 5 ——(CP)—The bars are down tonight . and Canada's miniature mock war known as Exercise Eaitle swings into 1 1-2 days of calculated and elaborately-scrutinized activity. R. C. A. F. Mustangs and Hor- vards tangle lete todeyfin the air between here and Fort. St. John. BL C., a space ofiome 100 miles, in a duel for the air supremacy that must be settled before army puru- tr , can land at Fort St. John's Airport at dawn tomorrow. lf e attackers from here don't lick e planes protecting ths alr- borne "enemy" force that has seiz- ed the fort‘: strategic base, then the umpires will say they have anyway. That will open the way for the assault by parachute, trans- port plane and glider of some 600 men of the airborne Princess Pat- ricia‘: Canadian Light Infantry led by LL-Col. Donald Cameron, D.S.O., of Cornwall, Ont. The core of the exercise, involv- ing more than 1,100 army and air force troops, is a check on the abil- ities oi the air-ground forces Cori- ada is training to cope with any diversionary enemy raid. TORONTO. Aug. b — (CP) -—- Douglas Graham was shot and killed today-the sixth victim in "Reserve Wednesday. September 14th for Pownnl Ladies Aid Chicken Supper. "Matinee Races at Sunny Green Acres, August 13th, starting 2 o'clock sharp. Transportation will be paid on all horses from a. dis- tance. Suitable prises for each class. "Notice — All taxes in arrears of Village Green ‘School District, must be paid by August 15th, after that data will be handed to the Court for collection. By order of Trustees. "Garden Party in aid of the Stewart Memorial Nursing Home will be held at H. It, llbundi. Bide- foid, Tuesday evenllll. Alllllll- 9"‘- neii-esliments. aames, movies and an oyster bar. "Fireman's Bali it Matthew do MaoLearrs Warehouse. Souris, Wednesday. August 10th. Two orch- estras. Modern and old time danc- ing. In aid o! Souris Fire Depart- ment. Admission 00 cents. "Show lioreii every ‘fueeday. Friday. Saturday. 0.00 P. M. Ad- mission 15c-30c. comma Prise! and Saturday. "Jungle night" starring, Robert Lowery, Ann Sav- age. lie dared death-for a woman he new nothing about. A Para- mount picture. You'll like it. "Buying pigs, all kinda and siaes. and gouitry. Mo"!!! l! nederloion. "vine wane rill Tuesday 0 can. at Brookfleid; 10. Milton; 1 .m., York; 2. Bedford; 3, Mount tewart; 4, Watervela: S, Vernon River: 5M. - ' fllldli 0 a.m., New Gleeeowi 101 wile-do; mm . H» ma‘ 1 p.m., _ew Haven: i. lone w; e eraid; ll, Clifton: 0N. KIIIIIIIIM- Youth Charged Following Sixth Slaying In Toronto nine days ‘in an unprecedented run of slayings in the Toronto district. I-lls lo-year-old son was charged with manslaughter. The 36-year-old uncmployedtruck driver died under a tree near his suburban Etobicoke Township home. Graham's son. Gordon. was re- manded to Aug. 0 when he appear- ed in court on the manslaughter charge. Meantime two Canadian Arm)’ officers and a squad oi hand- picked investigators were aent to scour a heavy bush area near Bradford, 30 miles north of here, where residents reported hearing gunfire and seeing Robll K Olerla McKay e night or se before they were found iain. Police are combing roadside grass in a 1 1-1 mile area near a Brsdfofd restaurant. The propriet- or. Joseph Winterkorn, identified pictures of the McKeys es the couple he had served Monday night with another man. He said he heard gun shots when they left. McKay's body. shot three times. was found in suburban North York ‘Tuesday. and his wife's body. with two ballet wounds, was discovered by police Wednesday in a Toronto parking lot. Meanwhile. a wealthy Toronto resident has offered 01.000 to eta-rt a $100,000 citizens‘ fund for the capture and eenvlotlon oi the Mc- Kay slayer and the gunman who shot and killed Alfred Ialflllflfilfl an lleaiCents-al I100 ‘ l- last Sat- urday. Rewards totalling 00.000 have already been offered M ap- prehension of the elayere. 1n the latest homicide. in Toron- to's western suburbs early lode!- police of Itobicoke ‘fcwnahlfl lid that yeuns Graham abet hie father with a M rifle he had received from his parents at Christmas. ‘file boy's mother told police Gordon n»: his father In will“! unaware the gila was loaded. She said her husband. "a very difficult man when he drank wine. watt home about a asn. today and switched on the radio. wakind l!" """2..'."s‘$°i€' .32.? i?!“ '33 ill.‘ v flaiiereeealaad-lolllllll-Illfli" an molested alida family seen _ lCanadefs Mock War Is Scheduled To Begin Today Sliif Training Al Peiawawa For P. E. I. Regiment PETAWAWA, Aug. l5—Mcmbers of the Prince, Edward Island Reg- lmcnt- (17th Reece Regt.) from Charlottetown, P.E.l.. who arrived here Sunday are finding it out the hard way and liking it. The old idea of Reserve Force regiments training as individual units under their own officers while at summer camp has been junked in favor of a ncwcr, more modern method. Here, officers and men alike, regardless of what unit they belong to. are singled out for specialized training under crack Active Force instructors. Determ- ining factors es to what: typo of training each soldier will get are the amount of experience he has had, the corps he belongs to, and his own particular lob in his regi- merit. Recruits. for instance. are sent to the general military training wing of the camp where they are taught the fundamentals of sold- ierlng. More experienced‘ soldiers are sent to artillery, infantry sup- port, armoured or engineering wings. depending on their corps. and even here they are broken up into smaller groups for advanced training in their own jobs. wheth- er it's that of e driver. radio op- erator. gunner, mechanic or just plain out-and-eutsolclier and fight- inil man. The new Army influence is ev- erywhere. All ranks sleep between crisp, white sheets and the same food is served in all messes. Younger soldiers are taught to do things the new army way. not bullied into it as once was the case. But what really gets them lathe wealth of equipment and ammunition at their disposal. and the lavish use of it in the Thurs- day night fire power demonstrat- ion labelled by Major-General Chris Vokes as "the greatest shew on earth," P. I. f. legt. Members Members of the Prince Edward island Regiment (17th Reece Regt.) now in camp: Lt.-Col. A. Rogers. Malor J. A. MacDonald. Capts l}. R. Burke, S.L. Caselcy. M.C., G. R. Foster, R. J. Maher. V. L. MacDonald. M. C.. l‘. J. Mac- Nelil, A.I.. Vlckersonfl‘. C. White. l/Lt. D. T. MacNelli. Officer Cadet JJ-l. G. Bernard. W0. ‘ll C. L. MacDonald. (Continued on Page 0 Col. I) Message from Queen fllzilbelh His Honour Lieutenant Governor Bernard yesterday received the following personal message from Her Mdeaty Queen llleebeth at Bucklngha Palace: "I send you my sincere grati- tude ior your kind message oi‘ birthday greetings. Elisabeth it." The telegram was in reply to a message sent on Thursday by the Lieutenant Governor on the occas- londoi l-ler Majesty's birthday. It rea : " ffeetienate wishes on your birt day. Royal salute fired _et noon today." ‘ ' one coach of a passenger personal charge of arrangements for first aid and relief. He left for Ambato to supervise rescue work. after - dispatching several army air force planes with medic- ine and doctors. The Red Cross mobilized forces. and two relief trains were enruute south. An official bulletin said troops were directed to re-establlsh cr- der and safeguard property in the stricken zones and along the Latacunga-Ambato highway. Reports from other cities said train was overturned, church towers toppled and walls of houses crack- ed An undetermined number of casualties was reported from Rio- bamba where some houses were destroyed. Whether any passeng- ers were killed or injured when the train coach overturned near Luisa was not immediately learn- e . The towers of two churches were knocked ovcr and several houses wire cracked at Latacunga. 35 miles south of Quito. GOLDFISH JAILED KING WILLIAMS TOWN. South Africa —- (C?) —-A severe drought has forced the removal of goldfish from a memorial pond in front of the town h-all. Some arc boarding out, but the majority are swimming happily in a l0,000-gallon reservoir in the local jail. Veteran Commons ilierk Retires OTTAWA, Aug. 5—(CP) — Dr. Arthur Beauchesne, the country's greatest authority on parliamen- tary procedure, hes stepped out of the parliamentary picture. His retirement at 73, after n quarter-century of service as clerk of the House of Commons. was announced today in a. brief statement by Prime Minister St. Laurent. Leon J. Raymond of Meniwakl, Que., 48-year-old Lib- eral Commons member for Gatin- eau, has been appointed to succeed him. . Mr. Raymond's appointment to the third-ranking position in hier- archy of Canada's Federal Civil Service means that he will vacate his seat, reducing the Liberals rep- gesentation in the Commons ‘o 92. Former P. E. l. Man Killed CHESTER. N S., Aug. ti- "Deaih by an accident" was the verdict returned by a coroners jury here today after an inquest had been called to investigate the cir- cumstances surrounding the death in a highway accident of Eric Bruce Butler, 22. of 414 Con- naught Avenue, Halifax, early yesterday morning. (Butler's for- mer home was said to be Murray River, P.E.I.) Butler met almost immediate death when a car in which he was a passenger swerved off the road and crashed into a huge elm tree in front of the Graveside Hotel in Chester Basin. _ Others in the car at the time of the accident were Glenwood Lan- giile of Indian Point and Halifax; Peter Whiddey and Viola Yeates of Halifax. They escaped without serious injury. A coroner's inquest was held at the Chester courthouse with acting Coroner R..C. Levy of Chester making the enquiry, f". E. L. Fowke, barrister of Bridgewater, the crown prosmutor, was present. The body was identified as that of lmc Bruce Butler, who lived at 414 Connaught Avenue, Halifax, with her mother and sister Ethel. PLASTER ROCK. N. B.. Aug. 6 -—<CP)—A coroner's Jury tonight found that lO-ycar-old Marlon Marstcn met death by “strangula- tion or suffocation or both. between 11 p.ni. July 20 and 1 a.nz. July 29. at the hands of a person or per-- sons unknown." ‘ The case is under further invest- igation by R. C. M. P., who are a- waiting results of an examination of fingernail filings. The child was found dead last Friday morning in her bed at near- by Siason Ridge. Her mother, a pa- tient in the Provincial Hospital for mental cases on two previous oc- casions again was committed to the institution after the girl's death. Dr. RAH. Mackeen, provincial pathologist reported that marks on the chlld’s throat could have been caused by the nails oi "fingers en- circling the neck" He said there was no evidence of disease cdusing the death. Dr. illv- erett Reed. who performed an au- topsy. agreed with this and testi- fied thet results of his examina- tion were as follows: Bluencss about lips. face and neck; scars and scratches on ncck and mouth; evi- dence cf pressure indicated by smell hemorrhages over whites of the eyes. Frank Marsten, father of Mar- ion. said that he and his wile went to bed before l0 p.m. July 28. Awakened by a scream about l1 room. He started for Marion's room and met his wife, who said, "Mar- ion had a headache and night- mare..'i‘here‘a no need for you to go ln." Marsten said he did enter and found the girl sobbing. She said, "I had a nightmare." Her eyes ap- peared terrified. The father stayed until she stopped crying and then retired again with his wlie. He was asleep 30 minutes later. in the morning. Meraten con- tinued. he said good-bye to his wife and baby son. glanced at Marion, apparently sleeping. and as everything seemed normal he went to work. Later that morning. he had learned, Mrs. Msrsten not- ified nehhboring relatives that Marion had died and this was soon confirmed by s doctor. _ Merstensaid his wlie first show- p. m.. he found his wife had left the - ed nervous symptoms in 1044, eight- Coroner’s Jury Hears Details Of Child’s Death years after marriage. She was taken to the Provincial Hospital for observation in June, i944. and re- turned the following month. In May. 1948. she had threaten- ed him and their young son with a razor. saying "Get that child out of here before I cut her throat and yours, too." I-Ie took away the rator and had to hold his wife until help arrived. _-. At; the suggestion of a doctorshe visited her parents at Saint John but in June of last year she wail committed to the ProvinclalHos- pltai. where she remained until last. April. After her return home April 25 she appeared in good health, said Marstcn. _ . fflf- Wiadons is notanstrong and fleeteenevertoliaveknown d0- " MAXIMS '_ l A or a. ‘ MERE MAN . Jnu-a-i 16 Three Children Dead. 19 Homeless After Fire GANANOQUE, Ont.. Aug. S—- (CH-Firs swept throqh a fillet family frame house here today klfl- ing three .small children and leav- ing 19 persons homeless. Garlan- oque is 20 miles east of Kingston. Parents oi’ the dead children, Mr. and _Mrs. Orange Running, were taken to a Kingston hospital in a. critical condition from burns suffered when they attempted to rescue all of their 12 children. Dead are: Gloria. three; Agar. four: and Wilma, 10. The fire broke out while several of the younger children still slept in the two-storey house. Firemen said they think it originated in the kitchen and quickly spread to other sections of the house. One of the Runing children spot- ted the fire and raised the alarm. George See, who lived in an ad- joining part of the house. led his four childreh to Safety. trim called the Fire Department. Although firemen arrived with. in a few minutes, flames raced through the old house and spread to another part occupied by Mr, and Mrs. Jack Bishop. An 9Y9"Wll.I'lE§. Mrs, C.J. Robe- 5011. said: “i heard terrible screams and then saw Mrs Running sliding down the kitchen roof. her bed clothing ablaze. I rushed ova»;- to her. Her back was a mass of my; and burns." Hospital authorities described Mrs Runningb condtion as "very grave." Condition of Mr. Running was not critical. News in Brief CHICAGO. Aug. b —(AP) _ Common acne, an unsightly skin affliction. can be cleared upswift- l! by dry ice applications, two doctors reported today. The blem- ishes usually are obliterated with one or two applications and leave little or no scarring, they said, wnvmrao, Aug. s —(OP) _ General rainfall over the Prairie Provinces last week has improved the feed situation in Western Saskatchewan and Alberta, the Agriculture Departments of the Canadian Pacific and (hnadian National Railways said today in their crop reports. ‘TORONTO. Aug. ll —-(CP) - Oniarids poliomyelltis count stood today at 277 cases, 1B0 more than at this time last year, Provincial Public Health Department officials reported. Deaths now stand at l0. three times the number reported in the corresponding period of i940. Blighi Condition The showers of recent days nave provided more favorable conditions for potato late blight. report Messrs. 112M. Cannon, Dominion Entomological Laboratory and LC. Cailbeck, Dominion Laboratory of Plant Pathology at Charlottetown. If local infections occur develop- ment of the disease will depend on the weather during the next few days. Inlectlonsin coastal areas are likely to develop first. and the growers in such regions as ‘Pi-yon and Augustine cove in Prince Ed- ward Island. and the Fundy area of Nova Scotia should be particu- larly watchful. Spraying in all re- gions is recommended. Fish Landings, Value Declinga- On Both Coasts orrrawa, Aug. ,a‘_-<crl - Perhnps you've never Eitasted one, but it's a good year 16f. clams. This was shown ‘today in the liaif year figures -of sea-fisheries landings in Canada, ‘which totalled 469,403,009 pounds iagainat 545.- 740.0130 in the flrt. ix months of 1940. a lo-per-ce t/dlop despite the efforts of the tasty shellfish. Decreases in the landing quant- ity and‘ value warp _reoorded for both coasts in almost every species, but clams were hauled up in great- er numbers. - In British _luir|bia., landings were pnly 174,10 .000 pounds for all species compare with 216.574.0110 in the same period of last year. but clam landings for the six months totalled. 2.402.000 pounds against 504.000'in the first hall of 194a. i‘, \ On the eqsttcoast, landings of all fish products’: amounted to 290.- 2811000 pounds against 329,100,000 last year. s. IOJ-per-cent drop. But clams and queheugs showed a neat increase to 738,000 pounds. com- pared with- sumo in the first six months lot ma. This _ nt that Canadian gourmets lild find more clams on the J“ l! of grocery stores this year. r Olamslfdtolliht tea-loco to Can- adian fishermen in the first half of the year, or $153,000 more than last year. The over-all picture wasn't so rosy. The Atlantic catch for the hall-year was worth only $13,700,- 000. compared with $15,082,000 and the Pacific lake was worth 06,251,- 000 against $6,644,000 in the same period of last year. ‘The decreased catch meant $1.- 755000 less to the Canadian fish- ing industry, so far this year. But the Bureau of statistics report on landings had a hopeful tone. For one thing, the B.C. salmon in- dusuy was lust getting into sea- son when the report waa compiled. In addition. despite mailer herring and sari-line catches in the Meritimes. the report spoke of "in- dications that larger quantities of Atlantic cod, poiiock and hake are being‘ sailed and dried than a year ago". Regarding other fish, the report said the total of all species in cold storage at July i, in all forms, smoked frozen and fresh. totalled 41,000,000 pounds against 15.749,- 000 a year ago. There was an "into-storage" movement during June of 5,800,000 pounds. Wholesale prices of fishery pro- ducts dropped 7.5 points in May. while the index for all foods rose by 0.4 ‘ Subscriptions Delivered S0.00_ Mail $5.00; other Provinces A U. l. $100 HOPE 0F SAVING CHINA FROM REDS Series i OFF Earthqufinltes Blame Chiang _ And Associates For Defeat (By John M. Hlghllflvfi) _ WASHINGTON, Aug. 5—(AP)-— The Truman administration today publicly abandoned all hope of saving China from the Commun- lsts In an unprecedented blast, it labelled the Nationalist Govern- ment es a dismal failure in the war against Communism. The administration laid down a policy oi encouraging the Chinese people to throw off the "foreign yoke" of a Red regime which. State Secretary Dean Acheson charged, serves Russian imperial- ism. The new turn in United States policy was announced in a letter from Acheson to President Tru- man, presentlng him with the long- awalted white paper on American relations with China. It was am- plified in a statement which Acheson made to a press confer- ence an hour after the white pn- per was made public. In the statement, Acheson laid down five "basic principles" for. United States relations with Chine. with empsaais on rebuilding “e11 independent" Chinese nation. Truman ‘had endorsed the Ache cson letter at his own press con- ference yesterday" and there wal no doubt that it represented the. considered views of the adminis- tration. lt accepted the Communist! conquest of China as an accomp- lished fnct. Acheson argued that the Nationalists are militarily in- capable of blocking the forward mnrch of the Red armies. But Acheson said he does no! at all share in “the defentlst atti- tude" of some. Rather he sees thu (Continued on page 5. Col. l) I BEFORE A MAN CAN WAN’. 0P min FIND HIMSELF FAMous lie MUST Fliwr vunte: ill’ AND flND HiMSELF TORONTO, Aug. 5—(CP)—Mlni4 mum and maximum temperatureetfl Vancouver 57, 64; Edmonton 59, 77;] Regina 61, 99; Winnipeg 58, 883 Toronto 61, 87; Ottawa 62, 86:! Montreal 66 , S3; Quebec 59. 84:4 Saint John 5R, 84: Moncton 55, 84;} Halifax 62, 85; Charlottetown 59, ‘T5; Sydney 58, 79; ~Yarmouth 60. 81; St. John's, 50, 59. HALIFAX, Aug. 5—-(CP)~—Om4’ clal inland forecasts issued tonight‘ hi’ the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax: Synopsis: Skies were mostly clear in the Maritime forecast district Friday. Temperatures rose over 80 in many regions but the air was consider- ably drlcr than it hrirl been the previous few days. An area of hllzh pressure centred over the Great Lakes is moving vcry slowly east- ward and the fine yvarm weather is expected to continue during the week-end. Illlflfitil forecasts, valid until midnight Saturday, with an out- look for Sunday: Prince Edward Island: A few clouds during the night and Saf- urdny. Continuing warm. Light: northwcstcrly winds. Low early Saturday morning and high in the afternoon nt Charlottetown 59 and 7. Outlook for Sunday: Sunny and warm. —l High tide today at '1.4l A. M. and 9.55 P. M. sun rises this morning at 0.03 and sets at 7.34. ' Summerslde tide eighteen mine utes later than Charlottetown. BORDEN-TORMENTINE mall WEEK DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cape formentine 9:10 A.M. 10:85 A.“- 1:00 EM. 2:00 EM. 0:30 RM. 7:30 EM. 0.00 EM. 10.80 PM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Tormenilne 9:10 A.M. 10:1! A.“- l.00 RM. 3:00 I'M. I240 PM. 0:00 PM WOOD ISLANDR - 0.01.1801!’ v DAILY FERRY Leave’ Wood Islands ‘I A.M.: D 11.01.: ll ALL: l. PMJ ll IKM-l I EM. Leave Caribou ‘l A.M.: I AM; l1 All i PI-l I PM: l PM.