MAXIMS , 01 A VMERE MAN .-....m- "m, 0... iinss to do In. The less one has logo, the less C tfniown. E,(.lI;,rleslxs9(lVl)lI.frSo0thar Provinces ALL Issssmer-aide IILM pu- snsium. lllaewlsaro and U. S. A. 318.00 per annnsss. CHARI1)TTE'POWN, CANADA. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 12, 1952' ES BLAST RED POSITIONS Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew WP; Appeals Tojoyd To Give Himself Up lilue Of P.E.l. Fisheries Up Despite Droplplotal Catch arrows. sent. 11-Alllhoush yqjgltt of the catch for the first men months of the current year M5 ;. mzillon pounds less than for rho corresponding period of 1951. pally of fish and ,crustacea.ns uught in Prince Edward Island waters from January to July 1962 no s200,o00 higher than the pre- sedlng year. Ths comparison of catches and vaiws was divulged today in the laws: lane of fisheries statistics pfpparcd by ihe Department of Trade and Commerce. Big cash returns for the seven- mnnili period of both years came from lobsters. In 1951, P. E. I. lob- Coming Events Killer for potato tops Dillon & Spillett. Wgi "1-ilnkorii. Hall. 10:9 Yankee", Friday night, L... , "Dhnra 1-lowe's l, Brackley Bcarli every Pride , - "ilrl lid)" in pork. ' '5out.heril "show Borden, Friday. Starring Robert Ta'y1or. "Abegweit E. B. P. Kingston, lrridny, September 12th. "imm-r.Millvlew I-lnll, Friday. Srpiriniwr 12th. "Dance. sinnott's Road school. Friday, September 12th. "Dance, Ions East school every Friday night. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for f-crling your bags and poul- try. Tlliizin and Splllett. l "Sandy's Drive-In Theatre. shows Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays at D P. M. "Cold chicken and Ham supper. Rose Volley Ball, " ptember ldthi Proceeds in aid of church. "Dance every Friday night, Sn-luii Rustico hull. Music by the Chnrlcliclonisns. "Dance to 13 do B Ftamblera. Mrrznrilrl school. September 16th. 9.30 in 12.30. Refreshments served. "United Church Chicken. Ham and Salad supper. Cornwall Hail. September 16th. Supper 5 1". M. "See the Royal Tour of Canada. North Rustlco. Saturday. Septem- ber lilth, 8.30 P. M. Admission on rents. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every lcrid.-iy night. Music by Roblchaud. sponsored by trustees of st. Pat- rlck's school. . "if interested in livestock feed- ing molasses. in ninety gallon puncbeons, forty-five gallon drums or rive gallon pails. contact Dillon rind spillett. "Semi Final Contests are being lirrlmged now for the ublio Speak- ing Competition. nter immod- imly. Box 9. Dept. of Agriculture. Charlottetown, "Chicken supper. French River Iil-ii. Tuesday, Sept. 16, commen- Fins: to serve at five o'clock. Sponsored by Gcddle Memorial Church. r "Flddling and Siepdanclng Cin- toll. in st. Mary's Hall, Souris. Fri- Iiar. September lath. Winners will "ilrcsent Eastern Kings at the Provincial Contest. commencing st 030. out of town judges. Admis- sion 50 cents. "Your swift Egg Grading Sta- lien on Fitzroy street have excel- lent fscilltler for handling your in-sh eggs it will pay you to try them with your next. shipment. Correct Grading. Quick service sud llnvment in cash. "Buying live and dressed poul- iltv Monday to Thursday noon at our plant on Pitsrcy street. next to the telephone office. Phone ioii 10? prices. swift csnadlsn co Limited. "Swift 'cansdlan Co. Limited. PEVO Just received a csrlosd of hols concentrate, dairy concentrate. Nuiiry concentrate also has grow- er. Swifts Laying Mash and Dairy Riiii0ll.Plck up, your requirements It our warehouse on Pitsroy street. Charlottetown. - u.-4 "Get our prl on straight IndIor eluted of bulk or gill? liver; wh..!0Hlh o.uss.i'.:s: 9 0 rli ll "Ilium. We oiso nonsio mill reeds. line all one meal in straight car "'4 only. can-nspomisnoo invited. ""9 M-in Groin ooniiatnr. I00 at Pemmem semi. atoms: 1. stezrmen landed 0.872.000 pounds of lobster valued at 31,332,om, -rm. year, the lobster catch for the per- l0d W53 7.013.000 pounds with I value of 31,619,000. Catch of clams and qulihaugs for the first seven months of 1962 was 1,344,000 pounds valued at 030.000. This is in contrast in memo pounds harvested last year and valued at 86.000. No explanation is given why the 1952 clam harvest was six times that of the previous year. Amount of cod landed.--this year was 900,000 pounds less than in 1951 and the herring catch in the period was 2&-1.000 pounds short of that landed in the previous year Value of the herring catch dropp- ed from 1365.000 to 336,000 and of call from 356.000 to s49,o00. This year's haddock catch topped that of 1051 by a value of 515.fXi0 but that of mackerel dropped by 38,000. The smelt fishery which yielded 040.0(1) in 1961 was worth only sis- 000 this year. l-lake brought Island fishermen 831m in the first seven months of 1952 compared to only 516,000 in that period of 1961. Catch of scallops in P. E. 1. waters this year was so small as not to merit compiling, while last year the scallop fishing accounted for 6,000 pounds valued at 82.000. Meeting Of ReIigiouLOrders ROME, Sept. 11-(AP) -Five hundred mothers superior and de- legates met here today in the first international congress of the heads of all women's religious or- ders in the history of the Roman Catholic Church. More than half of the mothers superior and other delegates crime from Canada. the United States, Britain. France. Germany. Spain, Australia and India. The conference, which! closes Saturday, was opened by Father Arcadia Lnrraonnp secretory of the Vatican congregation for the religious orders. The congress of the mothers superior follows the steps traced by It similar congress of the dir- ectors of religious (male) orders of the Catholic Church held here during the 1950 Holy Year. Among problems on the agenda is the creation in Home of a uni- versity of theological science for women. and the nomination of an international committee of moth- ers superior io rcpresiflit ll” orders in dealings with the sup- erior Catholic hierarchy. ..L.L......M Issues List Of Honoraryjlegrees QUEBEC, Sept. 11 - (OP) - Lavsl University "wed i-Onislll I list of 60 honorary degrees to be conferred Sept. 22 at its centen- ary convocation on distiniili-5h9d leaders from Cansds. the Unllf-id States and Europe. The list includes -i-tesmen. government leaders, university chsncellors and principals. Jurist-5. scientists, writers, physicians. mu- sicians and industrialists. Governor-General Vincent Mas- say will be made a Doctor of the Univgsitty. highest honor Laval can sow. only one woman is in the list. She is Mrs. D. B. Sinclair. execu- tlvc assistant to the Federal Dep- uty Minister of Welfare. she will receive a. Doctorate of social Sci- encs. BERLIN. Sept. 11 -(AP) -Rus- slnn Gen. Vsssily Chuikov today called off a biocksde against movems .t of United States milit- ary police patrols over a strip of soviet sons highway between West Berlin and an.Amerlcsn check- point on its outskirts. The chief of the Soviet Control commission. to'whom U. 8. high commissioner Walter Donnslly pro- tested Wednesday, notified Ameri- can authorities that the restrictions had been lifted. forth would be free to cross the strip-as they had been doing freely since 1943 until Russian muggy-gunners put a stop to it un- expsctedly Monday. ' Dstachroerits of American milit- gry police. along with British sold- ion and West Berlin police. servo eight-hour duty tours on the Autobahn Ohuikov said the patrols hence-' in suburban Dreilinden Police Dml Thai Criminal Will Respond TORONTO. Sept. '11- into circumstances of from the 88-year-old Don son, Jricksou. Polio Sirikesj I Every Child In Family- iii. iicspltal iodsy, unaware the life of the only other child covered only s. five-day Period- Janet, pital Saturday. Eugene, 11. Robert died yesterday as the pa- other six childreniin for polio treatment The children. in addition to Jan- rents were bringing their et, are Alberta. 12; Edwin, months and Francis. 5 months. Trade Unionisls Leave Pot Canada LONDON. Sept. Canadian trade BBC monitoring service. The Canadians spent one mon ers Union. Bus Driver Held Responsible passenger in n two-bus here Aug. 23. The boy, Paul killed when one of the he was playing. 53, died in hospital August 28. Russians Lift Blockade On U.S. Military Police ito check the papers of Allied mot- 100-mlls drive to west crisis making the across the Soviet sons Germany. i Their shortest course from the U. 8. sector is by way of a 11 mils stretch of the detour through the U. S. sector. '! Soviet sentrles halted the morn- ing shift today. But three-dsy aside at noon and again tonight to let military police jeeps pass. Allied use of the area never had been questioned before and only , stopped. Donnelly said the move was a de- th military police were liberate annoyance. A senior American officer suit the Americans declined. public the text of his note. (CP)i - Police waited skepllcally tonight to see if jallbreakcr Edwin Boyd will respond in his wife's appeal to give himself up for her sake and that of the couple's three Assembly opening Oct. 14. children. "Mike" is L. 8. Pearson. Cs.n- Witb no new developments in ada's External Affairs Minister, the hunt for the Boyd gang. Fre- paraticns went forward for the start-possibly next Wcdncsday-- ol the Royal Commission inquiry the break Jail Monday of Boyd. Leonard Jack- Stcve Surhan and William Boyd, who first escaped from the jail last November with the two Jacksons, was awaiting trial on bank robbery charges. Leo- . nard Jackson and Suchan face uot m”nl'f"5r:1hm' t 1 u murder charges in the, shooting Pemsons '3 mm” 9 eec 9" "9 last spring of Det.-Sgt. Edmund Tong. William Jackson, unrelated to Leonard, was brought here as n w'tness from Kingston P9Jil- scorsnnvrrr, Nah. sent. ll-- (AP)- seven children in one fam- ily were under treatment. for polio that the disease already had claimed the family, an 11-year-old brother. The mass attack on the child- ren of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rogers 5, was brought to the has- Tuesdsy night she was joined by her brother, Robert James, '1; Beverly, 3: Helen. 20 10-(CF)-some unionists who have been visiting Russia on the invitation of the All-union Central Trade Union Council, left for Can- ada today, it was reported by the in Russia. Aside from visiting Mos- cow, they made trips to Lenlgrad, Rostov-on-Don, Odessa and Yalin. The group is headed by Bruce Magnussen of Port Arthur. Presi- dent cf Vie Canadian Woodwork- MONTREAL. Sept. ll - rum- Gerard Marcottc. 36-year-old bus is nine-year-old boy and a woman colllslcn Voiselle, was buses crashed into a playground where Mrs. Rosa Cyr, four-lane sutcbshn. Denied use of that. they drove to work by a longer, narrow they stood in west Berlin said. after receipt of the Chuikov note. that the argu- ment seemed to be settled. As a re- out of deference to Ohulkov. to make UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. ept. 11 -(CP)-- "1 Like Mike" appears to be the watchword of the major- ity of delegates to the United Na- tions when they consider elections to the presidency of the General who so far has no opponent for the job of president of the U. N.'s top annual meeting-the U. N.'s high- est prestige post. In former years, candidates have made their bids known by this time so an acclnmatlon appoint- ment of Pearson is posible. How- ever, s. dark horse could come a- long, just as Pearson was 8 so-cal- led dark horse last year in Paris until he made it clear that he was boosted by the fact that he is probably one of the best-known diplomats around the U. N. when the U. N. was being formed, his name was put forward at one point in behind-ihevscenes arrang- ements for appointment of I. see- retary-general-the job now held by Norway's Trygve Lie. But the Russians objected to Pearson and he was passed. Vlrheiher they will put up a word-battle against Pearson's run- ning for the Assembly presidency is known only to the Russians. But in any case they can have no ,veto on the matter as it is a. ma- jority decision. No doubt as president he would have some trouble with the Soviet delegation which has often harried Clanadals Pearson May Be Next U. N. President, . B. I lot of touglrplrltrblems coming up Pearson at the fall Assembly including Korea, the Tunisian situation in North Africa, and the South Afri- can racial situation. As president of the Pearson would have to take a more neutral attitude than he would as merely leader of the Canadian delegation. If he is pre- sident he won't be leader of the delegation although he will no doubt take is hand in formulating Csnndinn tactics on the floor of the Assembly. Assembly. Assembly as its chairman, keeping the questions moving and in spec- the top man at an Assembly when in the going is tough. And there are That the City of Charlottetown should have an annual grant from the Provincial Government to as- sist in the work of street repairs was stated last night by Mr. B. Earle MacDonald, M.L.A., at go adjourned annual meeting of e Fifth District of Queen's Liberal Association held at the Legion Home. I The speaker stated that it was highly important to the farmers nearby to have year-round roads into the city. He said he. in his legislative work, was only asking the Government for a proportional share of the Provincial revenue for this district. Mr. MacDonald added that "we will have something done in this district before my term is up or 1 will not ask you to vote for me again". He claimed this district is not getting its fair share of work done and little had been accomp- lished in the past six years, How- ever, he pointed out to the gath- ering that l-ion. Dougaid MacKin- ncn, Minister of Public Works and Highways, was always willing to co-opcratc with him. He warned the large gathering not to be fooled into believing "the Liberal Party is in 9. bad way here" and said that some members were not attending the meetings 8? th driver from Shawinigan Falls. because they were getting nothing Que-. W85 Mid Ci'lminB11.V 11- from the Government. He asked sponsible today for the deaths of mgm 1,, comma. how much they would get if "the other party" were in power. He said the present Lib- eriil Government has done mlich for the Province as a whole. "No one can accuse them of not spend- in: enough money". he said. "They have spent more in the last ten years than ever was spent here be- fore”. No Apologies Hon. Dougnld Msoxinnon said he had no spologies to make for theloperation of his departrnent T-T .....?..L...L.L (Oontinuped on Page 8 co 4) Mali Climged With Murder . .L.. MONTREAL, Sept. 1l-(CP)-- Sarita Satco. 22. was charged with murder today for the slay- ing of a 70-year-old night which- man shortly after a coroner-'s jury had found him criminally rrsponllblt. The watchman. Vlcior Serksins, died Aug. 13 of injuries suffer- ed July 18 when struck on the head by a thief who stole an automobile from the garage where he was employed. , At the inquest. police read a statement from Satco allegedly sdmltilng he stole the car and struck the watchman "two or three blows to the head." ial cases. acting as a. top mediator in disputes. Ease Pressure His real job will be to run the. On Weary South, Korean Troops ' SEOUL, Sept. ll -fFriday)-.Al- lied planes and big guns blasted Chinese positions near Capitol Hill Thursday night to ease the pres- sure on weary South Korean troops who smashed two counter- attacks. United states Fifth Air Force B-26 night bombers pounded Com- munist artillery hnd mortar posit- ions in the Korean central front sector whlie'Republic of Korea soldiers dug in deeper on the scar- red slopes. Allled artillery opened up, too, in a barrage answering B. Chinese bombardment earlier Thursday in (Continued on Page 5 Col. 6) M4 Marilimer Is Seriously Ill OTTAVVA, Sept. 11 -(CP) - A. B. MacDonald, 59. national secret-I ary of the Co-operative ljnlon of. Canada, is seriously ill in an Ot- tawa hospital. r A one-time country school teach- er in Nova. Scotia. Mr. MacDonald helped found the union during the Second World War and is widely known as is co-operative leader in Canada. and many parts of the world. Mr. MacDonald was born at Glassburn. Antigonish County. N. S. An agricultural specialist. he was Nova Scot'la's first district agriculturiil representative in 1916. He held posts with the Federal Agricultural Department and the N. 5. Education Department as in-, spector of schools for Antlgonlsh and Guysboro Counties. He was ap- pointed to Dr. M. M. Condy. head of the St. Francis Xavier extension department in 1930. City Street Repair Grant Urged By Qiberal Member New President-FF Easlern Trusi HALIFAX, Sept. 11 -- (CF) - Albert Scott Fraser of Montreal has been elected president of the Eastern Trust Company, it was an- nounced today following a meeting of the board of directors. Mr. Fraser, ii. director since 1939 and a vice-prcsloen. since 1948, suc- ceeds the late FIE. Mccurdy. Col. .l.C. Mscxeen and Q13. Smith of Halifax were elected vice- presldents. H.R. sliver, ll. vice- presldent since 1950, continues in that capacity. Maritime" Vels To Hold Reunion SAINT JOHN, N. 13., Sept. 11 - (CP)- A reriuion of veterans in the Mliritlmes who saw active ser- vice overseas in 1914 will be held Oct. ii and 12 at Amhcrst, N. S., Red Chevron Club officials here. said today. The first Maritime meeting of its kind ever planned. it is belrig sponsored by the Red Chevron Clubs of Saint John, Moncton and Halifax. About 30 delegates are expected from Saint John and more than 20. from Halifax. in addition to Monc-l ion representation. Former Islander Dies in Boston Word has been received by Mrs. Alex Cosdy, Charlottetown, of the death in Boston. Mass. of her brother Fred. son of the late William and Mrs. Acorn of Vernoll River. ' Mr. Coady left the Province in early life for Boston where he was employed as conductor on the. elec- tric cars. Later he was on the Boston police force from which he retired some years-ago. He was married in early life to Catherine I-legan of Hope River who died I few-years ago. He is survived by a family of five chil- dren, Mary, Mrs. Charles Egan; Edith. Mrs. Arthur Egan. both of Belmont, Msss.; William, Wey- mouth. Mass; Fred. Quincy. Mass, and Catherine. nurse in Military Hospital in Waltham, Ma.ss.; also two sisters in this city. Mrs. John Callaghan and Mrs. Alex Coady, last surviving members of a fam- ily of is. SPABSELY IOPULATED ....g.. The Anglo-kyptian Sudan is three-quarters the sire of Europe. but has less than 10,000,000 inhabit- 1 has named a street in honor of the Expansionslns 1 Harbor Facilities MONTREAL. Sept. ll--(CP)- Transport Minister Chevrler to- day nnnounccd a 37,300,000 ex- pansion in Montreal's iharbor fo- cilitics lo handle enlarged traffic expected to stem from the pro- jected St. Lawrence Seaway. The minister said the National Harbors Board is planning to spend the sum over the next fwnl or three years. He did not give (lPl.IIllS. In an address prepared for de- livcry before the Richelieu Club, Mr. Chevricr said consideration also will be given to ridding 5,- 000,000 bushels of grain-elevator storage capacity in the near fut- ure. ”In further anticipation of the semvay opening," he added. "it. is apparent. that new unloading berths will he required to handle the largo bulk carriers in place of the present cnnallers." Will Sell Rubber To Red China . ' SINGAPORE, Sept. ll - (APl .-. Crylnn is ready in sell her entire rubber output to Communist China in return for sorely-needed rice. V. Coonioraswsmi, parliamentary secretary for the Ceylonese Food Mllilstry and ii. membe of is six- man mission ell route to Peiping for trade negotiations, said today. Ceylonts rubber production in i950 nmoimted to ll3.500 tons. I Ceylon has been shipping rubber through Dl'lVllle channels which have coniicrtiolis with Polish ship- ping interests. Red China. will ac- cept the rubber only if it arrives on vessels of the Soviet bloc countries. The of Fairbanks. Alaska, Finnish musical composer Sibelius. who j- MAXIMS . OFA MERE M N ..-..-.1. b no man sully dour has not found be is stupid. r Homing Dally Founded 1&1. The Guardian. Five Cents CAIRD. Sept. 11 .-(Reuiers)- Premier Mohamsned Noguib's special army and police squads to- day raided the Ministry of Fin- ance and offices and homes of sev- eral high government officials, seized doeumenis and sealed build- ings in a hunt for arms-scandal evidence Two officers arrested Ahmed lV.l.llllb El Gaaly, formerly private secretary to Faud Sefag El Din, former Wafdlst Finance Minister already in custody. The raid was understood to have been requested by ihe present Pin- ance Minister. Abdel Gelil El Em- ary, who is investigating purchases of arms over the last few years. Naguiu said he intended to probe the scandal of buying faulty arms- for the Palestine War. Searches were made in the hom- es of Muslafa Fahmy, Director of ReacHAgreemenl In Strike LAUZON. Que.. Sept. 1i-(GPi- A settlement was reached late to- night in a strike of 2,500 workers at two shipyards here after day- long negotiations between company and union representatives. The strike began Aug. 15. Robert Black. manager of Davie Shipbuilding and Repairing Com- pany, said work at both Davie and George T. Davie and Sons. Ltd. would get under way tomorrow morning. Under the agreement, the work- ers receive an immediate hourly wage increase of 12.cent.s up to Dec. 15, 1952, and 15 cents "after that date until March. 1954 when the new contract expires. They also re- ceive an additional 10 cents retroactive to March 1 last, the day the old contract expired. 'Repoils"Bl1u7rch Debi Free HAMILTON. Sept. 1'! -(CPi- The treasurer of the United Church of Csiiada reported today that the church is debt free and its capital reserves are much stronger than 10 years ago Rev. Victor Mooney presented his report to the church's General Council and predicted that'in an- other five years the church will be ready for a strong advance. The church represents about 2.000.000 persons in Canada. Dr. Mooney reported that the church 10 years ago was in debt more than 51,700,000 but the debt has been paid off. He did not say what the church's capitol reserves amounted to but reported that they were built up mainly from bequests and special gifts. including annuity gifts. Re- ceipts from bequests in 1951 total- led 5982.204. in-----9. Elecled President Of Accountants iil0NTREAl.. Sept. ll---(CP)-- .l. Lorne Mrl.ean of Vancouver iorlny uns elected president of the (Tnnndinn institute of Charter- vd Accountants at the 50th an- nunl meeting. He Riirrcefls A. l-Emile Ecnuvais of Quebec. Oilior officers: Vic:--prcsideni. Vl'nlier .7. Mac- rlonnld, Winnipeg: regional rop- resrniaiives. Gerald E. Marlin, Halifax, and W. Givens Smith. Regina; and John C. Ncwlsnd, Egyptian Police Seize Suspects, Documents ln- War Anns-Scaiiilvalhllrolie Seizes Callie Being Smuggled Inlo Slales MALONE. N. Y.. Sept. 11-0.?) -The U. 5. Border Guard today said it had seized Holstein cattle near here Wednesday night which were being brought into the coun- try in violation of the :foot-and- mouth disease embargo. The 10 animals. all milk cows bearing forged United States tags. were destroyed and buried. A man seen herding them through a hole in B. fence fled on the Canadian side. It was the first seizure under the embargo along the New York State border, according to Dr. L. E. Brunscher. Federal veterinarian. The Border Guard was set up to enforce the embargo. The United States Government banned shipment of cattle from Canada to the United States sev- eral months ago after an out- break of foot-and-mouth disease in Saskatchewan. The embargo still holds although the disease has been eradicated. Polio Forces Furlher Delay In School Opening FREDERICTON, Sept. ll. -(GP) --A third poiiomyelltis-forced post- ponement in opening New Bruns- wick public schools-this time un- til Sept. 22-was nnnounced today by Education Minister Brlttain. The schools originally had been scheduled to open Sept. 2. Saint John schools now are slat- ed io resume work Sept. 23. School buildings there will be used Sept. 22 as polling stations for the pro- vincial election. Similar arrange- ments may be made at other centres. Mr. Bl'iii.ain announced the furthcr postponement after it con- ference of education, health and cabinet officials. He said the situ- atlon will be reviewed again next week, when nnotlicr postponement may have in be considered. Thlee new polio cases, all in Wesimorland County, were report- ed today, raising me New Bruns- wick total to 220 since the disease struck early this summer. The. number newly reported in the lasli week was 39. St. John County has had thn most crises. '76. followed by West.- morlnnd. King's, York and Car- leton. only Northumberland, Madawaska and Sunbury Counties have cscaped. Mr. Brlitoln again urged parents to keep their children away from public gatherings. M 'lliE (moo me Youiic. this file ow, We to Keep i.ooikisc:j K (liar ism ., 5 St. John's, treasurer. VAN(TOllV'F.R, Si-pf. ll (CP)-- A nine-year-old girl today told In court of watching a baby-sitter at her home inking narcotic "fixes". Police were amazed at the knowledge of vibe nine-year-oltl and her slx-pear-old sister in the ways of drug addicts. The little girls glibly tlcfnilcd every step ln' hired by the children's father to ants look after ihn home during his absonre in northern British Col- umbln. The two women and the procmluro of what is known "l saw Erivm-' come ovorv as "inking a fix." Imnming and put a needle into The hnby-sitter was Shirley Shir-lo)-'5 grm," Taylor. an 18-year-old unemploy- She. walrhed from he bod ed sis-nogrnphrr who was paid Si which she occupied with or six- a day to watch the children. year-old sister. Two other sis- Sho was paid by Mrs. Glen: iers. four and five years old, Simislcr, 4."l-year-old housekeeper. were in the house. Kids Amaz'e Police With Details On Drug Addicts Andorran, 19-your-old mechanic, today were charged with rnnlri- huiing to juvenile delinquency by taking narcotics in front of child- ren and also ..charged with pos- session of drugs. "I saw Buddy (Mrs. S1-mlsierl, Don (the wanted man) and Err- lno all give shots to earls oibcr," the youngsters told police. Mrs. Scmlstor pleaded guilty to I possession charge and WI! FF.- HALIFAX, Scpl. 11-(CP)--0!: ficial forornsts issued by the Do- minion Public VVrAlher Offlrt hero and valid until midnight Friday. Synopsis: A rllsfurhavirn, ll rnnlrorl I11 northern Maine and is moving slowly southeast. On Friday this disturbance will cross Novas Scolla and move out to sea. This rain will end and the weather grndunlly clc.-ir. RI-gioniil forecasts: Prince l-Zdwnrcl island: Cloudyq wilh widely scnlicrod slimvcrs. A lililc cooler. Light. winds. Low nnrl high Friday ni, Sydney. Fharc lolioinwn and Moucinn 48 and B9. Siimniary for Frirlay ('lnurl,v. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 3.20 A. M. and 0.02 P. M. High tide on the North Shore al 1.22 P. M. and 11.47 P. M. summerside tide eighteen mlnq manded until Tuesday. Miss Tay- lor and Anderson wt-rs remanded Pirvlne for hearing. utos later than Charlottetown. sun rises iodnv at 5.47 A. M. and sets at 6.30 P. M.