of". naming Daily rounded last. no Gurdill. '.l'hr-ea Cents. The PeI's Pap .. : Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1950 it Read rybody 16 PAGES Iubscripiinna Delivered 00.003 llall ll.0Q' other Provinces O U. I. 31.00. m U. N; FORCES MASS FOR QUICK DRIVE INTO NORTH KOREA Full Airing Of Formosa Question Seen Probable Third N. B. Settlement Evacuated-As Forest . Fire COntinues.To Spread BATIIURST. N. B.. Oct. 5-The right against a large iorest iire 12 miles tom Bathurst. in Northern New Bnlnewick's Gloucester Coun- ty, was concentrated tonight on saving homes aiter evacuation oi 20 to 30 families irom a third tiny settlement-Lincour. V Dwellings at St. Rosette and st. Charles South had been evacuated previously. The latest evacuees raised the total to more than 200 since the fire started last Satur- day. About 150 women and children were under Red Cross care in the parish hall at at. Therese. A hall at West Bathurst accommodated 25 more, and the others were with relatives. Two homes were known destroy- ed. Unconfirmed reports said two or three more had been burned. The tire continued to eat through a good mixed growth or hard and soit timber on privately owned land. It meant a loss or pulpwood and other forest products irom which many or the residents make a living. The serious situation depended on the wind. Coming irom the south- west. it had died down tonight. A 'orecaIt of snow ilurries tomorrow rave promise oi some relief. About W flrb-lighters. with wo- nen lending a hand where pos- Ilhle. battled the blue. The evacuations irorm small swups of dwellings, all with dif- ierent place names in the Robert- wille area. were the largest in New Coming Events 3'-'a's:u your to Garnltuns Photo Stlldlq Charlottetown. , .-.... "spacial dance in Gordon Lodge thanksgiving night. Oct 9th. "Dance Vaueyileld Hall. Fri- day. October 6th." "Free Movies in Wheatley River Ball. Priday. October sth. le or iIl.llchQ. "Hernia: Dance. . last Royalty Rink Hall. 1-Yidby. Bus leaving BL" - and 0.00. terminal 9.30 1 "Dance in weierveie school. many. October 0th. ,3urlte'a orch- "Naw Glasgow stores wlli'ba iloaad Thanksgiving Monday. Oct. "Dance. Mareli Hall. Monday. October 9th. George Ohappell and his Harry Islanders. "Reserve Tuesday. Oct. 24th ior valriiityl concert in Heart: Memor- A "Monthly Meeting oi Mt.'Btew- art Branch Canadian Legion. in Melon Room. Mt. Stewart, Mon- :lay evening. October mi. "Now unloading car Albion Nut coal. Court & Son, Bediord Station. "Chicken Supper. Dance, Iona Hall. Tuesday. October 10th. sup- per served from six to ten. "See '10 Pathotau Deep" in technicolor at Hunter's River to- night. "Buying live iowl. capons and chicken Tuesday I can. until noon Highest market prices. R. L. Dick- elon. "St. Andrew's Hot Dinner in Mt. ltewart Legion Hall. Wednes- illi avanlna. October 11th. Dance aiter. Glchastra. "Don't miss pantry sale at itoiaaasra. eaiurday. Oct. 1. st 2.30 rinliuhy Canoe Cove Women's in- "fbav ltarch Factories at Mur- ray Harbour. River and last naitia are now were - ;:d. taking potatoes by appoint- Brunswlck in recent years. Mrs. Zotique Beaulieu. a 70-year- old resident of St. Rosette. became an outstanding figure in the relief work by taking charge oi the evacuees at St. Therese. She is the mother of 16 children. A Red Cross truck was due to- night irom saint John and Mone- ion with blankets. mattresses and other supplies. It picked up two Red Cross Corps women members at Moncton. The truck will be used to tansport residents ii any iurther e acuatlon becomes neces- sary. National C VI. L Elects Officers HALIFAX. Oct. 5 - (GP) -1415: Isabel Holden of Ottawa today was elected national president oi the Catholic Woman's League oi Can- ada at the closing oi the League's 30th annual convention here. She succeeds Mrs. T. E. Duroch- er 0! Windsor, ont.. who served as head oi the organization ior the last icur years. Most Rev. John 0. Cody. Bishop of London. Ont.. remains as na- tional director. Other oiilcera are: Mrs. Fred Drake. Regina. ilrst vice-president: Mrs. James Freeman. Riverside. Ont. second vice-president: Mrs. P. Brtusleres, Stllcry. Que., thid -" -, ” ; Mrs; 1-lorrnaa Btevl ens. Calgary. iourtb vice-president: Miss Madeline Clay, Victoria. tiith vice-presid -jdlgacarace Cough- , v.. J5?Kt!l”e1it.'e- president; -Hisa. 111:7 -wlcaensav. Montreal, secretary; and llrs. I. 1. Kelley.-Winnipeg. treasurer. voluntary total abstinenco as a means or combatting the intoxica- tion problem wns advocated. Another resolution urged the British Columbiaiaovernment to exempt Catholic schools in that Province from property taxes. The league also passed reeolu-- tions urging extension or the ml- ion Act to ban "love and sex com- ics." strict supervision of tele- vision when it comes in Canada, pensions ior lncurably ill or crip- pled persons and iavoring "the growing practice or double ring wedding ceremonies." . u Newshtrief WASHINGTON. Oct. 5 .- (AP)- The' lad-ioot United states mina- awesper Magpie was officially liai- ed today as sunk by a fioatingomine of! North Korea with 21 men misa- ing. The navy said 12 survivors were picked up by a sister ship and taken to Pusan. South Korea. U. 5. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERG. Oct. 0 - (Friday) .. (AP) - A briiada oi British and Australian troopd baaebean moved by air to positions nearer the 30th poagallel in Korea. sources disclosed ay. VIENNA. Oct. 0 - ilrrlday) - (AP) communists Thursday znigllt called oii their moral strike in the soviet sector 0 Vienns'and in the soviet sons and early ic- day Red riotera loosened their stranglehold on the Austrian rail. ways. The Russian-controlled ra- dio said the communists decided to end the strike "because of West- ern pressure." Bevin Beats. lly OLINN WIILIAIIB MABGATI. lngland. Oat. s .. (AP) .- rbraien secretary la-nest Bevin told the ruling labor Party today the coat of raarmallavslt is -- vast military, strength is." a atando Lewishasn, England. he served in "MWIIIII I-ls. Biotin School has threat the peace oi litmus." a.Iao.ooo the Royal Navy from ins to isoi. PH treat. Oct. Om. lath Davin and mate; anion It and Only mm In-iavor. saw service in the batter rebellion 3 Ma. ladies Ale oi P. at ur prime Davin daai-d ntwasanee shame i Chin and picked u the nick- "''l” '. "P '0 Mr "M" in a deiancs debate a the Later that the WM stem is nssrw nnarne J:ck which stir: until his mm ' n "M l the I. "W law I eieii pm” all t to all that ii. " aevi mm Re C3" lo Owe.” m p as mud "Pm h M g to te prn of eolc . will ll 0. n Joined the. .N.R. and ioughtw -'3:-1'-m vi-'-3-r M" 'c""'-' ""6" W M" f:;'-.. c .:”'t rare.” ::.....'":: "ll " m""" ”' ”'"”"""' "While there is no evidence that 'I'"'- "'"0""Mtoiy. a lot of our vi:y mail: and at aloektiaacoart. ' 11"" "in l” ' "MVP "”' any try contemplates a major weak-minded paopia are repaat- rather at noon and six daugh- ' '”'""' 5 "”' Wt” -v id ehieweu "tan incident it." -' to u twumivos be was an glue a and arias your ' "' mine mil E 0 ' . - uential figure in tha tagioe 4"" set irom its beginning to its peasant luaty state. . . , The first has one bailout” ascension was In in France in i me by P. ole males and Marquis . NNlaliil0! 5.. ll. N. Committee Approves U. S. ,ProposaL10-3 3! Francis W. Carpenter LAKE SUOOE N. Y.. Oct. 5- (AP)-Overriding objections from Nationalist China and the soviet Union. the U. N. Assembly's steer- ing committee today recommended a full airing of the. question of Formosa. the last bastion of Chime Kai-Shck's Government. The 14-member committee voted 10 to 3 ior an American proposal to give the issue, right of way in the Assembly. in addition to Rus- sin and China, Communist Chech- cslovakta also voted against the proposal. The committee . chair- man. Nasrcllah Entezam oi Iran. did not vote. , The iull Assembly is expected to approve tomorrow or Saturday the committee's decision. The steerlngcommitteealso vot- ed for an Assembly hearing oi iresh Soviet charges of American aggression against china. The vote was it to 1. china was op- posed; Iran and Cuba abstained. The Russians already have com- plalnts against American bombing of Chinese territory before the Security Council and the As- sembly. To get the new charge be- iorc the Assembly. the Russians took over as their own a com- Dlaint irom Communist China that American planes had again violated Chinese territory and an American warship had fired on alnid searched a Chinese merchant s p. Warren l-L Austin. 11.. 8. dele- gate. called for a iull debate on the charges so world public opin- ion can judge the iacta. Nationalist china and the sov- .lct Union are bitter opponents in the U. N. and their combination (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) 25,000 South , Korean MAHAKAIAH MOIIUN BANA The Kingdom of Nepal, tiny pro- western "buffer state" between lndia and Russia. announced re- cently that it smashed r. plot to overthrow its government, The Nepalese embassy said the pot came to light after the arrest of Sardar Raj Chalise and six other leaders 0! the Nepali Congress Political Association. in Katmandu. the capital. All seven were said to have confessed that they plotted to assassinate Maharajah Mohun Shamsher Jang Bahadur Rana, who has been prime minister and . " in-chiei oi . the army since isil. Anti-Reds. Are Murdered By RELMAN MOBIN TOKYO. Oct. 0 - (Friday) (A?) - The bodies of 25000 South Korean men, women and children - murdered for being anti-Com- munist - have been found in south Korea in the wake oi the routed North Korean Communist invas- ion army. The total is an officially estim- ated minimum. American oificers say it mhy run much higher. Each day brings new disclosures oi Red atrocities against South Koreans. some oi the victims were Amer- ican soldiers taken prisoner by the Communist army. The tctal oi these is not knoumi In stunned silence. the United Nations Commission on Korean heard iirst-hand reports irom its own iield observers on atrocity slayings by the Reds. The iield observer-s' reports were read at Pusan Wednesday by Gra- ham mcas. the mmission's acting deputy principal secretary. '"!'irst - hand iniormatlon. has been obtained by the commission's iield observers oi the murder of civilians and prisoners of war de- spite aasu ances oi the North Ker- ean au ties that the latter would be treated in accordance with the principles or the Gen- eva oonventions," the commission said in a preliminary ,report to Trygve Lie, U. N. aocretary-gener- al, at take Success. N.Y. "Additional evidence is currently being gathered to indicate that the atrocities have beanccrnmittcd on a large scale in anal formerly oc- cupied by the North Korean auth- Down ' Foreign Policy Critics; hammering at his (oraign pcllny. one resolution sought to bind him to call a,big iive.-coniorance of Russia, Coannuniat China. Brit- ain. Praaea and the llhitad stares g. and to get the atom bomb outlaw- Tha coniermce voted it down. orlties. These atrocities involve in some cases the brutal beating and mutilating oi persons prior to being murdered." The commission said its ob- servers viewed more than 800 bod- ice oi slain south Koreans in Tac- lon "and more were being exhum- ed at the time . . . when they had time. the Reds covered the evidence oi their at- rccities with earth. when they hurried. they leit many bodies of their victims sprawled in open ditches or in exposed mounds. Mass graves, large and email. are being iound daily in South Kdrean communities along the bloody Red retreat trail. some have nct yet beexf opened by American oiiicers probing the slayings. South Koreans told the oiilcers that the atrocity victims died be- cause they were opposed to Com- munism. Canadian legion Chainnan Jack Moore Dies WINNIPEG. Oct. 5 - (CP) -- Jack Moore. a Canadian Legion institution ior a quarter century, is dead. The railway man who presided over every national Legion con- vention irom 1930 on died last night at Deer Dodge Military Hos- pital at the age oi as. a iew weeks aiter his last convention. Never more than I sergeant in military rank, he handled the big. often noisy gatherings oi veterans with the poise of a general and the trenchant discipline or a ser- geant-maior. . - Kindly. coioriui but firm. his "in my opinion, the ayes have it" be- came almost a hallmark oi than biennial meetings oi' men irom all over Canada. v ' The vetorans,lovad him. His word was law. his humcr legend. . Bum Arthur Inaat Moore oi Stable Market Predicted For Potatoes Next, Year OTTAWA. Oct. 5 -(OP) - Based on present crop expectgt- ions. a fairly stable market for the lowly Canadian spud during the next year is indicated. Government agricultural experts naturally won't hazard a guess as to the price trend either to the producer or to the consumer. but they do point to reports that blight, is reducing the potato crop. Ii that happens. the feeling here is that producer prices. at least won't go below what they are now. At present they are about 25 cents a -bushel lower than a year ago. Final oiilcial estimates oi the 1950 harvest won't be available until mid-November. but a pre- liminary survey issued by the Bureau of Statistics three weeks ago placed the crop then at 55,- 363,000 hundredweight against 53,- 5l8.0o0 last year. Since then. however, there have been reports of blight iniesting the country's potato-growing areas. bringing the possibility oi reduced yields and a steady--ii mt. higher-price range. The extent oi blight will be shown in the. Nov- ember estimate. Washington Reports Washington reports indicate that lower United states pl'i:es ior potatoes this year may reduce Canadian exports to the American market. Canada normally exports about 10.000.0M bushels, both oi table and seed variety. to the U. 8. each year. Potato experts here agree that the U. 8. market may be less at- tractive this yaar. However. a re- duced Canadian crop would avert the possibility of any prlce-de- preasing surplus at home. There is at present no price- suppart prcgram ior p:tatce.!. 7 'thougri' the 'g0V'ei'hment supp:rle'd' the price two years ago when surplus conditions developed in the Maritime Provinces. Quebec and Ontario are the big- gest potato-produclng provinces. but they also have a large local market and consume all of their own crop. Quebec, for example, is expected tentatively to produce 15,295,000 hundredweight this year against 12,000.01!) in 194.0. while Ontario's preliminary estimate is 13,091,000 against 11.232000. Maritime Estimates The Maritime Provinces. par- ticularly New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. are the ex- porting provinces. both to Ontario and Quebec and the United States. This year their preliminary estim- ates are down-New Brunswick at 0.004.000 against ll.200.000 and P. E. I. at 8.314.000 aninst 8.151.000- Nelthar Province had a large local market and both must ex- ' port. Production in Nova Scotia this vear has been placed at 2.930.000 hundredweight against 2.904.010 The harvest in the four western provinces. which consume their own output. has been reported at around 2.000.011) each. The western totals are higher than in 1940. but last year pro- duced a poor harvest. L .. E- ly. the expected 150 crop. though higher, actually would be lust about normal. In terms of bushels, Canada produced N.000.000 bushels oi potatoes last year. Oi this total. about tl7.000,000 bushels went into the domestic market as consumer table stock. arrz.-nai iced and ior conversion in starch iaotories. The rest was exported or used ior 5994 ior the 1050 crop. The higher western output this year has given rise to reports in the United States that Canadian potato production is shifting irom the eastern tn the wastem prov- inces. Oiiiclals here say this is not so. that the increase is due merely to a return to normal PTO- duction alter a bad year. Movement of RB: Potaioesjlnderway ,aAnrr JOHN. M. 3.. Oct. 5 - (op) - The annual movement to overseas markets or New Brims- wick potatoes - the Provinca'a largest cash crop - was well un- derway toda . Two vessels were lead arriving this morn- ing and a fourth was scheduled for later. Dares yaaaela have already oi DD. not is well advanced. Moat or the crop is being gathered from 5.0oo.aarsa oipotato lands in the River valley. Mllatiea ior in- uX- barrel: Souih Kgans Meet Siiffening i lied Reilance By Don llutla TOKYO, Oct. 6 --(Friday) - ,(AP)--Weary tbut high-spirited Korean republican troops iought through the most determined re- sistence yet encountered inside Communist Korea Thursday to reach within 50 air miles of the east coast rt oi Wonsan-a key United Nat one cbiective. Bugged Anfantry oi the South Korean 3rd Division slashed through land mines and barbed wire into changlon. coastal town 63 road miles north of the 38th parallel. The advance was made in a day-long clash oi artillery and small-arms with Reds reported to number one division and a. com- pany oi Red marines-possibly 10.000 men. The republican 3rd Division was the northernmost speartip of a United Nations army oi more than 175,000 awaiting expected orders oi Gen. MacArthur to wipe out Rad resistance in all Korea. - only 20.003 south Korean troops thus far have crossed north of the , 38th parallel-the arbitrary line. which ior iive years separated the Communist northern regime from the Republican Government in the south. . The south Korean Capital Div- ision also was north oi the paral- lel. It engaged a by-passed Com- munist iorce. estimated at about 1,200, in the hills west of 1-Iwangpo. 25 read miles north or the old boundary. Reds Siitiening resistance by the northerners-iive days aiter Mac- Arthur's broadcast demand for their ca.pitulatlon'-bore out re- connaissahce reports of Fifth Air Force pilots. The Reds apparently were at- tempting to regroup on a, C ' jirle lust north-oi tbe,3ath. paral- lel. It was from there that the Reds jumped off June 3 ior their invasion of the south. The previously-iortiiied line ran frcm llaeju on the west coast to the Communist interior cities of Kumchon. Chorwon and liwschon. at big hydro-electric pcvwcr centre. Intelligence reports. -however. indicated only three North Korean divisions were available to deiend the Red homeland now. The Reds had committed the bulk of their army to the invas- ion of the south. and lost it when the United Nations counter-oi- ienslve and the lnchon landings oi Sept. 15 snatched victory irom them in one oi wariare's quickest. turnabouts. Wonsan. noted ior its Japanese- buiit chemical plants. is another Commun' t strong point. It ha been heavily bombed in recent months. however. and its indust- rial war potential has been de- strayed. Civilian refugees told AP cor- respondent willlam Jorden that the Reds were preparing dug-in positions west and north oi Cllangjon to try to slow the ad- vancing republicans-who have clogged more than 270 miles in 17 days. v As the Reds gave no sign oi iii-idntinucd on Page 5 Col. at I0-Year Term For Starvation "Death NEW YORK. Oct. is e- (AP) - Guy Scielzo. 30, was sentenced to- day to iive to lo years in prison on conviction oi manslaughter in the starvation death oi his son Guy. Jr. His wiic, Mary. 30. pleaded guilty to the same charge and received the same sentence yesterday. The husband and wife were in- dicted soon after the little boy was canted from the family's vermin- iniested apartment last November. The child died a. low hours later. A icur-year-old emaciated daughter recovered. - ltegrouplng London Conference Stamps Approval On "Spender Plan Potato Board Seeks Price Support Action Mr. E. D. Reid, manager oi the recently formed Potato Mlrketin; Board yesterday released the fol- lowlng with relard to the activi- ties at the Board and also general information on proposed action of the Board with respect to the pre- sent low level of prices "Yesterday afternoon the Board. under Chairman D. A. MacDonald. met the P.I-:.l. Potato Promotion Committee and last night met ten members oi the Executive oi the Dealer's Association headed by Co. G. E. Full. At both of these meet- inll a complete survey of market conditions and prospects was made, he situation may be i-ummarizr.-rt as follows: At present we face in our major export market. the U 1 A ll END of 420 million bushels which is at least 80 million more than their normal requirements and a low level of price prevails in that country, e.g. potatoes are being delivered to New York by Long Island growers nt 31.25 Der cwi. and it was felt that suci. competition would make it most difficult to enter that counry at prices which would net the grower a worthwhile return. "At the same time in our do- mestic market we are facing low prices irom producing areas near the consuming centrcl. e.g. in Montreal. Quebec growers are de- livering potatoes to Montreal at 75c per bag. "The Marketing Board consider- ed the possibility of setting mini- mum -prlces here but in view of the fact that Boards in other Provinces have not taken similar. ,(Contlnued . on Jags. 5 0. - Unemployment Insurance Claims UITAWA, Oct. 5 -- (CP) --Un- employment insurance baneiit claims iiled in August jumped 40 per cent over those oi July and 22 per cent over the previous! August. the Bureau oi Statistics said to- ay. Claims tiled in August totalicti outs. compared with 48.930 in July and bowl in the pa ” .. August. Totals included Quebec up ircrn 14.800 to 10.007. Ontario irom 13.- 4051 to-18.820, British Col-umbin irom 0.708 to 7.004.; Nova Scottie irom 2.453 to 6.233. New Brunswick irom 1.900 to 2.872. Alberta irom was to 3.233. Maniiolae irom 1.742 to 3.506. Saakatchc-wan irom Gill to 1.457. and Newfoundland from 220 to 255. Prince Edward Island's to- tal was down froth 109 to l82. Benefit ayments in August tot- alled si.4l.,002 covering 1.926.194 unemployed days against 343126.614 ior 2.053.013 unem loyed days in July. and 83,717. ior 1.050.007 days in August. 1940. Canadian Dollar NEW YORK. Oct. 3 -- (CP) - The Canadian dollar was down 7-l8 oi a cent at a discount of 5 7-10 per cent in terms oi United States funds in closing foreign cxchange dealings today. The pound sterling was down l-10 oi a cent at 02.80 3-id. PIZNNIES SURPLUS LONDON - (CF) - Britain's banks report a surplus oi pennies. The 2.200.000.4100 now in circula- tion ere gradually drifting into the banking houses, while the 14,000,- 000 ntruck at the mint in 1010 have never been issued. Afghanistans KARACHI. Pakistan. Oct. 5 - (AP)-Pakiatan's Defence Ministry said tonight daiending.Palrist.ani troops have driven invaders irom Afghanistan back across the bor- der aiter six days of lighting. (In New Delhi. Afghanistan's Ambassador to India Sat-dar Nalib Allah Khan. denied Pakis- tan Government charges and tsaid the clashes in Northern Pakistan involved only Pathan border tribeamen who are agitatlnguior an Independent state of ab- toonistah. (The Ambassador said the Amhan Government is "always max-ed to settle the questiote (oi tooniatan) amloabl . but utlon -- llliting 3.000.000 Listen with 1 across the border 4 Pakistan Claims Invading Defeated independent Puahtooniatan.") Pakistan's Government announ- cad Wednesday her northam bor- ders had been violated by a large army oi Afghan tribennan and regular troops Sept. 3) in Baluchistan. Pakistan said the aim oi this invasion had been to cut the strategic railway from Quatia to Chaman at a point about 450 air miles north oi Karachi. Pak- isi.an'a capital. ' The Pakistani I eience Ministry said reconnaissance reports show- ed the invading ioreaa retreated this mumagu-an the border in the Qu an area. Pak- istani troops were said to have reached Jllga. an area about six miles inside Pakistan's northern frontier. No casualty ilguraa ior gl er daawaraannouneaL.' la --- t LONDON. Oct. 5- (Reuters)-4 Ministers of the British COlflll'i0YIa wealth today stamped approval 01 a huge British-version Marsha; Plan for Asia. . Unoificial observers are certaitl the United States will be ukerl for heavy financial backing. The plan, called the Spender! Plan aiter the Australian External Affairs Minister. Percy C. Spam der. calls for spending 55,000,000.- 000 over a six-your period. to rats! llvlnil standards for 570,000,000 people-one quarter of the world's population. The idea at the plaig is to try to smotherwcommunisni in backward areas. Agreement on the plan was an- """"C9d t0d3Y hy the Brltlsfi Treasury aiter a10-day closed com icnence of Ministers irom severl British Commonwealth countries: Britain: Canada. Australia. New Zealand. India. Pakistan and Cey- lon. Fisheries Minister R. W. Maya how represented Canada. The hemispheric spending-sprm-y ”k9lY to get. under way in 1951. will benefit India. Pakistan. Ceye ion. and the British territories oi! Malaya. Singapore. Sarawak and Borneo. The Spender-Plan draft now will be referred back to the mambo: governments for individual am proval. They will have to decide how much money they can C0l1l.l'la buie. Financial observers here said financial co-operation of the Una lied States would be vital. The:I also nrcdicied that Ci)-ppgrntion all the international Bank for R9- construction and Development will be needed. . Experts calculated that ahouli 82.000.000.000 will be needed frond "external sources". The spenders Plan bundles together individual six-year plans from each plriicla --paling. country. its aim is to rel.-6 llvinl standards-uby-developing ba- sic industries. agriculture. trans- portation. social security and cri- ucntion. The communique said that ihd ministers also approved I drari constitution ior a bureau central! in Ceylon, to administer ll sepnra ate ihree-year 522.400.1100 technical aid scheme for South and South- east Asia. This plan. to begin al once. is designed to train technln clans. if (lies 0 WZARD do keen 09 with (tie. Nttcntaons AND -(Ac lNs1'Ai.LMEN1'9 Af -tlia sans. meet, .. l HALIFAX. Oct. 5 -(OP) -0i- iiciai iorecaets issued by the Dom-e inlon Public Weather Oiiica ati llalliax. g I Synopsis: A iew patches of cloud were drifting across the northern reg- ions tonight but skies were clear in the remainder of the forecast dis- . trict. Temperatures were dropping rapidly. Cooler air pushing down across Eastern Quebec will cause widely scattered snowilurries in that part poi the district Friday. but other regions will not be aiiect- ed. . Regional iorecasts. valid until midnight Friday: Prince Edward Island .. Clear. Little change in temperature. Light winds. Low and high Friday at Charlottetown 32 and 56. High tide today at 4.16 A. M. and IN P. M. sun rises at 0.10 A. M. and sets at 5.46 P. M Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. BOIDEN - CAP! TOIMINTINI3 IIIIY BIIVICI Daily heart lander all leave names have C. '1 0.10 All. I0.” AM. LOO PM. 1.40 PM. 4.80 PM. 7.8 I'M- sands loavs lei-den have C. I no A.M. ' 10.8! AM. LOO Ell. 0.00 PM. ass PM. see Ill. WOOD ISLAND!-CAIII00 - naiu Pill! leave weal lmade I All. 11 Al. 1 LI. 4 us. I Inca ma - u.eene.ten.ir.u;Ise - & ' -.-a a. .. -t ? , 1. t. --rs.-e---...;v .:.-.-.......-. 2 - 5. ti.