MAXIMS ’ OIL MERE MAN s-—--— m gcqulrers, and (8) Hope to Three ends of government-Cl) sgfluflw to posseuorl; (2) Facility all. 1 Covers Prince Edward‘ Island Like the Dew Y it should go and when you lronld» MAXIMS ,5 i OI A MERE MAN Treiuupyourflgtroeinilsowny‘ oumsysltinthsslsaslodlfl 2'.'.‘.i.‘.'.."."3'.'.l§ elfllfiilll. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER, s, 194s 1o PAGES _m3;";;;;;,§'g M n“ l’. E. l FFARMERS MAKE SWEEP lN POTATOES, SWINE Boswelllind Stewart Share Swine Honors Fznal results show a clean swBBP 1n mp honours for Prince Edward lfland swine at the Maritime Win- ter Pair at Amherst last Saturday. Aimoii BQSWBllS two-ycar-old par, Cornwall Empress 1A. was declared senior and Grand Cham- pzcn Sow. She has been Grand Cliampzon at. Charlottetown for the past two years and has quali- frd 1n advanced registry with a slaughter test score of 9i. ‘rile. announcement that s young sow iunnamedi of S. G. Stewart As Son, uas Junior Champion sow, (Qmplrirfl a full slate of champ- ionships for the Island. with S. C. stsiiari d: Son's Woodstock Duke 14A as Senior and Grand Champ- ion Boar and the same owner's Stewart 000 Junior Champion Boar. the latter two results hav- ing been published last Saturday. Wniiiziig lWElVE out of the four- tsen classes between them, these two prominent fsland breeders aLao shared the reserve champion- ship honours. In a box score of class winnings they tied with six TOEtEMrT/PEETFEIBS‘ Corning Events "Lot. 65 Hall, Monday. Novem- ber 8th .Hot Chicken Supper. "Come to the Dance at Bonshaw fnn. Tuesday. "Hear Clyde River Play at Canoe Cove Tuesday, November 9th. "l-lot Chicken Supper and Dance, ‘frecarlie Hall, Wednesday, November 10th. "Dance. Lorne Valley Hail. riiesdav, November 0th. Webster's Orchestra. "Pictures at Morell every Tues- day. Friday and Saturday. Show I30 P. M "Unloading ca: cement Book- lng orders now. Clark Bros. Vion- taguo. "i.. f". B. A. Chicken Supper. llarlsville, November 9th. Serving’, from R to l0. i "Danes every ‘hiesday. St. Pet- er's Legion Hall. Clifford's Orch- sstrs. "Binso and Dance. Vernon River Hall, Wednesday, November 10th. Millview Orchestra. Auspices C.W.l.. "Masquerade Dance. Montague Curling Rink. ‘Tuesday, November 9th. Don Messefls Orchestra. "Ray Fortune United Church Vhicken Supper and Bazaar in Fort-tine l-lall, Wvdnesday night, November 10th. "Buying live chickens. Capons. lowldTuesday, 10 a. m. until 2 p. "l; ltlliltiest market price. R. L. Dic- lueson. “The Animal Meeting of the Bummorfleld Credit Union will be llrld in the Hail. Monday: Noveni- bei 8th. Refreshments served. "(lid time fiddlcrs and step “llwlm: contest, Kelly's Cross Hall, Mllllllfli’ night. November 8th. Good 911m. Dance after. Sale oi lunches. “"110: is said... Rev. Alan "file will be in St, Mark's (‘hurch.1(onslngton, at 8.00 P. M. All welcome. ___1_. "ilntll further notice our stores Gilli close at 6 o'clock on ltfondsya. "llltmlfly and Friday. Peters d: Gallant Ltd. and The People's Co- fverstlve Store, "Plot Chicken Supper and Sar- a" lllsa School Hall. ‘Ihui-sdsv. flveirnber 11th. Supper served 8.30. ‘Weeds for school. If weather un- favourable. next night. BW-fear Rev. Blair B. Cofburnn. n; A» Freaking in the interests of “l! C- 0. F. over C. I‘. C. Y. on mmlflly cycling. November 8th. st P- M. Be sure to hear this ini- Mrtsnt address. "Bllfllll pigs. fowl. and also “uflllwr of Government - approved pullsts gre wanted Monday at a Mei-felon; ‘niesday. 0 A. M. Ymllkflel I ‘l0. Milton: l P. M. ‘Mk; 2, Redford: ft. Mt. Stewart: R- Wsterviile; S, Vernon River: "N-m. Pownal. W dnerdsy. 9 A. M. ‘f’ Glasgow: io. Wbeatley rum; 1i. Holmes’ Comer. 1 P. M. New H"! 2 2, Bonshsw; S. Kelly? 4- Fuinersld: 5. Clifton; 5.7V), lion. Pa lug 021.00 psir for "W viss over so lba. each. wiii ' My also: lhosnfs and stag: as laud Jorgsnssn. {DeGaulle Wins In French Electjpnskzarieton lSuceessor To lliifflilllfllllfiil WINNIPEG, Nov. 7- fCFl-A cunt-us of coalition members of the Manitoba Legislature early today ‘chose Douglas Lloyd Campbell, 58- 'year-old farmer and Provincial Min- gister of Agriculture since 1956, as ihcir next premier. Tile caucus also announced that Works Minister E. P. \Villis—pro- .vincial leader of the Progressive Conservative Part_v—will be desig- lnated deputy premier. and ‘that a lCablnet consisting of eight Liberal 'Progressive and four Progressive Conservatives will be formed. I Mr. Campbell will he sworn in as premier when retiring Premier .,Stuart. Garson, who is entering the .l~‘cdcral political field, resigns to ‘contest a by-elcctlon in the Federal constituency of Marquette Dcc. 20. lt is expected that Mr. Garson will resign within a few days. Winnlgfi Years Old Today WXNNIPEG. Nov. 7—(CP)-Win- nlpeg-Cansdafs fourth largest city —will be 75 years old Monday. But present plans call for a gala anni- versary spectacle with the turn nf the new year, to coincide with the inaugural meeting of the city's first council. Now covering 25 square miles, the gateway between Eastern and \\"csfern Canada was once a lusty Wcslcru frnniicr town. Greater Winnipcg now has a population of 3151M) and is the commerce centre of the west. After deciding on the name Win nipeg in preference to Assinibolne, Garry and Selkirk. early citizens wore fired with the idea of incor- poralioii. The year 1873 was a red letter one, not only for lncorporalion. but. for more immediate improvements. [Winnipeg got its first. street lamp. lScottish lNar jBriiie Convicted LINDSAY, Ont.. Nov. ‘i — 1GP) — Jean ltfcAlllster, 2b, was con- victed Saturday of manslaughter in the pistol-slaying last Sept. l year-old John McAllister of Hamilton. An assize court jury ac- qultted her of a muurder charge. The jury submitted a strong re- commendation of mercy. Mr. Justice R. W. Treleaven agreed virith the jury's verdict. that McAllister offer- cd strong provocation. He manded her to Nov. i0 for ence. The red-haired Scottish war- bride ha,‘ testified McAllister beat her until she was bruised about her legs and hips and that he had called her "an old hag" and other ebuslvc names, taunting her that, because of a recent operation, she could never bear children. She testified he told he was going to "rim around" with other women. Jean's mother flew to Canada from Scotland to be at. her daugh- ter's side during the trial for her life. The people of Lindsay, since the day she was charged’ with murder, made an effort to comfort Jean and her mother. collecting money to help meet lQl I- penses. lBritons Turn Out In Raini ‘TQRemember War Dead LONDON. NOV. 'f - (OP) -.- On the wettest Remem‘ lllH-II Day within memory,. solemn Britons ss- iiembied in flag-draped Whitehall today to observe two minutes of silence commemorating the dead of two world wars. The crowd, reduced by driving rsln and a strong. cold wind, wn estimatedeat less than 5.000 - the smallest in msny years. The King, in the uniform of an admiral of the fleet, and wssrlnl s greatcoat, placed a wreath of Flanders poppies st the foot of the cenotapli. All around him stood Guardsmen in grey great/costs and bees-skins. detachments of the Royal Navy, the Royal Marines, the 1i. A. l". the women's branches of the arm- ed forces, the merchant navy and Britain's fishing fleets. One psoe behind the King stood his son-in-lsw, the Duke of Edin- burgh in a naval uniform, and Ml brother. the Duke_ of Gloucester, a stolid soldierly figure in khaki. Illsssbg were Prism umism Attlee of her naval veteran husband, 29-- Problems At Prime Minister King Returns To Ottawa By George Kitchen OTTAWA, Nov. 7 -tCP)— A wan but smiling Prime Minister Mackenzie King returned home today and said he hadn't felt bet- ter since he went overseas in mid- September. Still visibly suffering from the effect of the illness which sent him to bed for nearly four weeks in London, he arrived at 12:45 p.m. EST in his private car at the rear of the morning Montreal-Ottawa train and was greeted by a scatter- ing of applauding well-yishers. With him was Acting Prime Min- ister St. Laurent, expected to take the prime minlstership over offic- ially within the next week or i0 days. As Mr. King stepped out on the rear platform of the car, there was s. burst of handclapplng from the crowd. which included some gov- ernment officials and members of parliament. He broke into a wide, cheerful grin and doffed his black Hom- burg. "I'm so glad to see you all here," he said. "I haven't. felt better since I left Canada." he added. Thnilflli the Prime Minister ap- ipearcd somewhat unsteady on his feet. he required no assistance in going down the steps to his car. He carried his black, gold-ringed cane and used ll to steady himself while standing on the platform. Observers ‘who had seen Mr. King wiben he landed in New York Saturday aboard the liner Queen ,Eliza.beth said l-ie looked "much better“ today. l He had expressed It desire not. to be interviewed by reporters on his arrival here. A half-dozen turned up at the station accompanied by l (Continued on Page 5 Col, it Juvenile Delinquency Declines Iii Montreal re- i aent- ‘ llfONTRl-ZAL. Nov. T lice came up with figures today to Eshoiv that. Montreal's Juvenile de- ilinquency has dropper] 50 per cent jin three scars and they attribute ‘much of tho drop lo a campaign‘ lstarfed nearly two years ago by lCaptnln Detcclivc Oviiii Pclleller. lhead of the juvenile delinquency l squad. l An estimated 10.000 youngsters have become momhers nf a club founded in promote "heifer under lsfandiiig bciwocn the police, chllcl» ren and their parents," Pellellcr said. Aii a result nf this setup, hun- dreds oi‘ youngsters who had been headed toward a ilfo of crime were corrected in time to sinrt them On n road to good citizenship. and Winston Churchill. bare-heed- ed, with ._war medals adorning their greatcoats. The first stroke of Big Ben at 11 s.m. was followed immediately by the firing of a single gun on the nearby horas guards parade. This heralded the start of the two- minutes silence. Then, as trtimpelers of the H. A. P. sounded the "Last. Post," the King stepped forward, placing his wreath, saluted and turned bsck. The ceremony was repeated by the Duke of Edinburgh, tbs Duke of Gloucester- snd Lord Claude Hamilton, representing Queen Mary. From a balcony n-f the Home Office, Queen Mary, in black, and Princess Margaret, in light blue, looked down on the solemn scans with the Ducheu of Kent and her 11-year-old daughter Princess Alexandre. Once or twice during the service Queen Mary was seen tn be crying. The Queen was absent from the remembrance sea-vice for the first urns duo to cold. Says Conservative iCPl ~Pov , First Hand Leader ' "I have come to the Maritime Provinces to learn at first hand the problems of this important port of the country, to meet the Dee-pie personally and to seek sug- Bwflclis on the solution of their difficulties," declared Colonel the llvll- George A. Drew, new ria- tlonal leader cif the Progressive Conservative Party, on arrival in Charlottetown last evening on the first lap of his tour of the Muri- times. A large welcoming party await- ed Colonel and Mrs, Drew at the airport at 6 p.m., including Hon. Dr, W.J.P lvlacMillan, Provincial party leader and “firs. Mac-Milieu, Mr, W. Chester S. McLure, MP, and Mrs. McLure, Maj, D.L. Math. ieson and Mrs, Mathieson; Mrs. RE. Sutherland, president c-f the Association. and executive mctn-bers of the Provincial and County party organizations. “A thousand welcomes to the. Island" was ‘tendered Mrs. Drevwl by Mrs. McLure who was one orl the first to greet the distinguish-l ed visitors as they stepped from, the romp of the plane. "Thanifl you so much." Mrs: Drew replied‘ warmly. t She and her husband cliatt-edl for some time with old and new‘ acquaintances before leaving fcvr their hotel. where they were Join- ed by several mimbers of the re- cecllpii iwrtv. Despite unfavicira-bl- bvs-aiiher‘, they foiund the plan trip quite flflrecable and "were in excellent ‘siilrlts as they dlscusstd the de- tails of today's programme. While not on the agenda, a visit to the Confederation Chamber is being planned as their express desire, Recalls Previous Visit On the first. extensive tour he has undertaken since his election to the Party leadership on Oct. 2, Colonel Drew voiced his pleasure at this opportunity of revisiting Prince Edward Island, He recalled his previous visit in i934. when he spoke on Canada's aviation programme at Charlottetown and Summerside. On that occasion he was present. at the inauguration of the Summerside municipal 5,1,. port, and he said it was a matter of satisfaction to note the im- portant cart played by Prince ao- ‘wtird island in the British air TESnIiKEE" zrssnrirosfi F . White iibinélieiiis" ' Closed For Repairs WASHINGTON, Nov. 1 -(AP)—‘ The White House ls being closedl iirritznediatcly to all sightseeing and‘ .social events because "extensive rc-, pairs must be made to assure the ‘safety of the building" it was of- ficially announced. The mansion. labelled a "firctrap." will be closed “until fiirlhcr notice." Meantime the President presumably will oc- cupy Blair House, a nearby bulld- lng where the State Department customarily houses distinguished guests. ll. S. ‘lias Fourth 7 Hunting p, Fatality ANNAPOLIS ROYAL. N5. Nov. Lj-ICP» -- Paul (‘iirrier of Dor- chester. Mass, Saturday was shot and killed by a hunting companion in woods near Milford. NS. Shortly after entering woods, Currier's companion. Howard Slocum of Wakefield. Mass. fired three shots at n. moving object. On investigating, he found Currier . dead. The pair. business partners, had intended leaving for home tomor- lrow. A coroner's jury ‘ “ ‘death ‘Death rode the bus with 36 mer- Here T0 Learn Maritime ll" sitter till ‘To Ba Based liere PRESCOTT. Ont., Nov. LAC?)- Resources Minister MacKinnon Sat~ lifdflfy’ inspected the motor \esscl Cartier. latest addition to his De- partment's fleet of hydrogrophlc service vessels. Mr. MacKinnon and a group of Department officials went through the vessel as she sailed up the St. Lawrence River to Brockvillc, Ont. and return. The Cartier, launched Oct. 27 at. Midland, Ont., will be uscd for hydrogaphic surveying and chart» making in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, based at Charlottetown. She will sail for the Maritime: shortly. The 104-fo0t ship will lie in charge of Norman G. Gray, hydro- grapher. Her captain is W. Thorne of Halifax. The new hydrographlc craft was laid down originally late in the Second World War as a mlnesweep- er for Russia under the mutual aid plan. At the end of the war, only her hull had been completed. She was taken over from War As- sets Corporatlon and remodelled for Atlantic coast charting work Women's Progressive Conservativelslle "(mllllflfi the lfllfiil ill hydrv-l graphic gear and also is eqifipped with radar and automatic gyro pilot. Recommend flut in li.S. Federal Spending NEW YORK. Nov. 7 -- iAPl — The National Association of Manu- facturers recommended today a cut-back in Federal spending _ln 1950 by $300,000,000 to $3.400.- 000.000. The Association in a study gave actual fiscal i948 expenditures at $36.066.000,000. fiscal 104i! probable expenditures at. between $39,261.- 000,000 and $40.351.000,000. and proposed maximum spending in fiscal i950 of 836.940.000.000. The N. A. M. recommended Congress give attention to: (ll More efficient and economi- cal operation of departments and agencies. r2) Insistence upon prompt realization of benefits of ths uni- fication of services act. r3) Reasonable modification of expenditures for foreign aid. <4) Development of a policy of stringent restriction of pu-blic works at. present high costs and as I a practical means _of combating ln- I flation. . r5» Reduction of Federal per-I sonnel and elimination of dupli- gating or unnecessary agencies! and activities. i6» intensification of the pro-l gram tn restrict and Fédllfl‘. grants in aid to states and localities. Six Killed 80 injured In Bus Accident i TYIRONTD, Nov. 7 (CF) t rymakers from Hasnilton early Saturday as they travelled home from a reunion party of the Argyil and Sutherland f-llghlanders. i The bus swerved and telescopetl. an incoming steel street car car-g’ rying an passengers, Six personsl were killed and upwards of 50 ln-, Jul-ed, i0 or more severely. Death claimed Prank A. Noble. pipe major wilio proudly piped his [lfilOUl regiment into Berlin in a triumphal Canadian entry after the war. - l-lis wife had her badly mangled that may be necessary: Piper Earl McKie, who had alsol been st Berlin, died too, His wife,l Sally, was so severely in ured that they feared to tell h r Saturday ankles so l amputation 1 was accidental. l t t F u CANADA FLOUR FUR llfillilll olllltii Ffitil? ll‘ (Continued on Page b Col, 4) ll‘. cits lcnmplefely ,,iured. The frnin, a special freight. t lleft Summorsidc for Bnrclcii .11 3.10 ‘p.171. with ‘Takes 40 Per Gent 0i Seats At Stake In Upper House PARIS, Nov. 7 —- tCPi - Gen. Charles de Gaulle won a smashing victory. today in a legislative elec- tion which the General may ex- ploit to hasten his campaign for return to pCHVCl‘. Nearly complete returns in vol.- ing for the Council of the Repub- lic — the Upper House of Parlia- ment -- gave De Gaulle‘s Rassem- blcment du Peuplg IPrancals (R.- P.F.l about 40 per cent of the 269 seats at stake. 'Ilhis is well short of a majority of the Council, but lt is practically impossible for any one parry to win outright control of Parlia- ment because of the number of parties ln the country. This ir-as t.he first. legislative election in which R.P.F. has run. It overwhelmed the opposition, ln- eluding the Communists. A De Gaulle spokesman claimed 121 seats had been won by R.P.F.. but statisticians at the Interior Ministry gave it only 99 so far. The semi-official Agence France- Presse gave it l0'7. Regardless of which figures are accepted, De Gaullists won twice as many seats as their nearest competitor, the middle-of-tho- road Radical-Socialists. The Gen- emf was not s. candidate himself for the Council, "which eventually will have 320 members. Another 51 members will be chosen in the colonies hy mid-December. The Communists dropped from 8.4‘ seats in the previous Council to l6, largely because of a cihansze in the voting system's which per- mil-ted all non-Communist parties to form coalitions against them. RPF. has no clear-cut program, its chief plank is anti- Communism. MOTHER OF EDITOR DIES l HAVERFORT), Pn.. Nov. 154A?) l-Mrs. Elizabeth Root Luce, 7T, mo- lther of Henry R. Luce. editor-in chief of Time, Life and Fortune. died Saturday. She was the ivldow of Dr. Henry Winters Luce. misa- lonary-educationlst and one-time vice-president of Cheeloo lfniver sity. China. who died in 1941. social , Prince Edward Island recaptured the top potato laurels at the Marl- time Winter Fair at Amherst last Saturday, when the Grand Champ- ionship was won by the Green Mountain exhibit of Frank Murphy. Carleton Siding. Winning a total value of $230.00, the top exhibit won its class, the provincial championship, first place Prince Edward island Special and a special insecticide award valued ai $20.00. The Irish Cobbler exhibit of Al ton Raynor, Howlan won first prize. reserve provincial championship, and second prize in the Prince Ed- ward Island Specials, and the entry of E. W. Turner, O‘Leary came first i: the Chippewa, Sebago section, winning also the third place in the Prince Edward Island Specials. The judges in this competition _were Dr. N. M. Park, Central Ex- ,perimenlal Farm, Ottawa and Mr. ‘H. S. MacLeod, Dept. of Agricul- ture, Victoria. B. C. Final official results lows: Irish Cobblers: (2l—1. Alton Ray- nor, Howlan, R.R., P.E.l.; 2. Gerald Trueman, Amherst, RR. 4, N.S.; 3. Gordon MacMillan, Cornwall. P. E. 1.; d. Mary Ellen MacLean, East (Continued on Page B Col, 4) News In Brief ST. JOHN'S, Nfld. Nov. ‘h-(CP) i-- Newfoundlanrfs railway strike ‘ended its fourth week today with- out sign of a break. are as fol- ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. Nov. ‘L-(CP) -An air search over and around lthe Avalon peninsula during the week-end left unsolved tonight the fate of a United States Air Force piano missing with six men aboard. The 13-25 twin-engined bomber was believed to have crashed Friday night in the vicinity of Argeniia. NANKING, Nov. 7—(AP) —Ten- sinn rose steadily today in this ner- vous Chinese capital, where it was felt that "something big" was brewing on both the political and military fronts of the civil was. Un- official reports indicate a battle for the Suchow defence line that guards Nanking is developing slow ly but steadily. Five Freight Derailed Nea A train derailment that put five l track two miles west of Freetoivn. demolishing two of: them, occurred shout. five o'clock Saturday afternoon and held up traffic on the line until twelve noon yesterday. No one was in- twolvr- tars. mostly box ‘ cars and refrigerator cars loadciii ‘with seed potatoes for the llnltctl States. Whcn tho nccidcnf occurred , five cars, twn rccfcrs and litres‘ box-cars. lcft the track. Tun of the cars hllrsi npcii spilling flicii" (‘on- tents alnng the righl-of-vvay, a lhlrfi turned on ils sido hut ro ‘ mainerl intnvt and the other lwol remained upright. ‘Tho locnmofivel was not dcrallctl. i It is licltovorl that the accident was caused by a defective truck tinder one of tlv- refrigerator cars. A wrecking crew was immediately ‘~ sent out anti worked all night and Cars Are r Freetown Sunday morning until traffic was 'cars loaded with potatoes off the ‘TP-‘mrt-"l l" n°°"- The ‘"15’ P55‘ _senger hold-up, as there is no reg- ular service on Sunday, was to the boat train nn Saturday night which was two and one half hours late reaching Summerslde. Passengers uiere forced to walk around the ivreck with their baggage to a spccinl train that had been sent out from Summersidc. During the night. the bags of po- taloes were gathered into piles and covered with tnrpaulins. Fortunate- l_v the temperature wns above freez- llllll and there was very little rain during lllf‘ iilglif. so if is llPllPVPfl that most of the potatoes can he salvaged. ‘ The engineer on the train wnsl Mi". Elmer Cosfain of 'l'igiiish anvil the conductor iii-as Mr. William Gay; of Charlottetown. 1f the accident occurred about three hundred yards to the west tho cnrs would have rolled down n high embankment.- S. Soviets Obse rve 21st Revolution Anniversary MO5CO_\V, Nov. 7—-(Cl"l-~ Mar- shal Semyon Timoshenko called on the Soviet army today to remain in military preparedness but sold the growing forces of peace. “will not allow a new war." The Soviet war hero spoke in Red Square aii the government observ- .ed the 31st anniversary of tho Run. sian revolution by parading its mili- tary might. before foreign diplomats and military observers. Timoshenko was flanked by top Soviet leaders, including Foreign Minister Molotov and Marshal Nik- olai A. Bulganln. Minister of Arni- ,ed forces. n he revioivrd tho par ‘ode of troops. tanks and vehicles. Prime ltiinlster Stalin was absent. presumably on his annual vacation. Mat-Gen. Vassiiy Stalin, his son. led a fly-past of four engined bombers. After the parade. Timo- shenko addressed the army and the Russian people. lie followed close- l_v the line laid doun rcccrvly by Stalin, that the Western Powers _______.____._.__-___-— are trying to unleash n new War |rind that their efforts are doomed .io failure. The same theme was stressed by Bulganln. who said in an order of the day that Russia's "peace-loving policies" are being opposed by cer- tain circles in Britain and the lln iterl States but said this opposition lis "destined to iail." Despite the attacks of both Timo- ,shenko and Bulganln on the West- ern Powers, observerl noted an ab- isencc of banners and slogans ‘against the United States and Brl lain in the line of march of civ llan demonstrators which followe the military parade. in previous years. ihosc banners hacl always had a ‘prominent place. Observers noted the military dis- play was no greater than last year's parade. The. main difference was the greater emphasis on aviation. The Russians showed almost all types of military planes from four- rnglno bombers to modern jet fighters. Siding Grower . WinsGrandChampiQnship ‘In Potato Competition Attempted Revolt Reported in Korea SEOUL. Korea, Nov. 1-(Mon4 day)-—(APJ—Hnme Minister ‘i. Y. Yoon of South Korea said today ha‘ had been informed that thousand! of North Koreans had been killed during the last few days in S21 tempted revolts against the Ctimu muniat regime in the Soviet occupr tion zone. Shius-lifilloyal iiavy To Salute Birth LONDON, Nov. ‘l -(AP)—Ghipl of the Royal Navy, wherever they, may be on the seven sees. will fit-u a royal salute when the news ll flashed of the birth of Princess Elizabeth's baby. Tibe Admiralty, announced that in addition to fir- ing the salute, guards and band! will be paraded and ships will be dressed with masthead flags from the start of the salute until sunsets S lnghlll lint s ligilnst Tavorlis SPRINGHIIL. N.S.. Nov. ‘f (OP) - ‘I110 wets too-k a 1.777- bOQliiflfl at the ballot boxes h Sabin-day as this mining town hsl a plebiscite to see it citizens fave ored sale of beer and wine by is: glass or olpen bottle. Only It c0114; of the town's eligible voter: shoved up at the polls. l‘! "ll orfkn iiouvrar . WHY Monet is calico Doufh-‘causi: Sucks 1'0 dual riuteas 9, TORONTO, Nov. ,'.'-—(CP)—Mlnln mum and maximum temperatures] Vancouver 34, 45; Edmonton 16, 85; Winnipeg 2T 41; London 41, 53;| Toronto 48, 5,3; Ottawa 49, 56; Mon- lreal 52, 5G; Quebec 50. 54; Ssiriii John -, 58; Moncton 44. 07; Hall- fsx 4'7, 62; Charlottetown 43. 62;‘, Sydney 35. 56; Yarmouth 52, ‘ii. HALIFAX, Nov. '7 iCP) —- Official inland forecasts issued to- ‘night by the Dominion Publll Weather Office at Halifax and valid until midnight Monday, Synopsis: Sunday morning fog and rain covered the fviarlilmes, {This was oausod hy n giro“; southerly current. of moist air flowing into the district. During the evening a current. of cooler, drier air spread into the westerru [regions and the weather began rq ,ci.ear there. This fresh air mass ll wsapectcd f0 cover the entire din llflvl. giving clearing QVCKillCI‘ Mon- day. Regional forecasts: Prince Ed- ward Island —- Clear during thd l night. Clear Monday except for.‘ lsome afternoon clouds. Continuing ‘rnild during the day but. turning ‘colder Monday night. West wind: l5. Low early Monday morning and high in the afterriodn st Char- lottetown 54 and 58. High tide this afternoon at 4.40 and tonight at 3.02. Sun sets this afternoon st 4.40 and rises tomorrow morning at 0.49, First quarter moon Novembel 9th. 12.46 P. M. Daily Except Sunday CAR FERRY "ABEGWEIT" Standard Time Leaves Borden, 9.10 AM.- 1 RM’. (.30 P. M. Lava Torrnenilne 10.85 A. M. 2.40 P. M., 7.80 P. M. SUNDAY Len-es Borden 0.45 P. M. Leaves Tormenfim- 8 P .M. worm lsLAivns - (‘Asimov Beginning November 1st Daily including Sunday Standard ‘rims Leaves Wood lslnndl. Prime Nova, 8 A. M., 1 P. M. Charles A. Dunning. 11 A. M2, l P. M. Leaves Caribou, Charles A. Dun- ning B A. M" 1 P. M. Prince Nova, 11 A. M, I P. Ms