MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN _ iii- e!"- fhfl-g lg n0 hllullf from 101MB. :-_-~-——~~— n, Guardian. Three Centr- umlnln‘ DI"! Ffilllilfid ll"- pIe's ' / Paper v1 \'_>' i-»_,_ __ ‘ Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew A CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, m WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1948 14 PAGES Public wrongs are but popular right; in embryo. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN nu-i-io Subscription: Delivered 86.00. Mall $0.00; other Provinces b 0.8. H.00- CT. LAURENT URGES NORTH ATLANTIC SECURITY PLAN t9_ Germans Kidnapped Despite Russianfromise ‘Nine Canadian Labor Leaders Suspected As Reds Barred From U. S. Coming Events é‘ "pig Dance, New London, 1m- diy h-‘htvu "Dance, Bright Spot tonight, 930 to l. Admission 50 cents. "ll-rice in Rowe's Hall. Brack- ley iltitCll, Wednesday, Sept. ii. "Cillllé to the dance at Bread- ilbaize llail Thursday, Sept. B. "Sca llrccze Victoria, each Wed- nesday. Dancing 9-1. "Dance. Corravllle School. Sept. 0th. lrznks and Refreshments. "Dance in Fortune Hall, Friday. September 10th. "Eldon -Movies - Friday. "Retain oi Frank James", Tyrone Power. "Anrandale — Movies - ‘Thurs- day. "Return of Frames James," Tyrone Power. "Dance in Woods’ Mill. Thurs- (lay night. September 9th. Calf Club. "Junior Farmers’ Dance, ‘Woods’ Mill. Farmington, Thurs. tiiii". September 9th. "Dance. Mi. Stewart, every Thursday’. Eastern Rhythm Boys’ Orchestra. "ice (‘ream Social and Dance, Ilrookvale School, Friday, Sept. 10th. llfcNeils orchestra. "Whine to the Dance at Corrnn Bron Friday. September 10th. Good music. "Rrlrlizeinwn —- Movies — Bat- llrriai". "Rrturn oi Frank James", TlT/iur Piiivt-r. “Vitiiadiiig car Feeds at Col- ville. Wednesday afternoon and Thtirsdai. Cecil J. Stewart. “lunch. Cardigan Head School. Fririsi. September 10th. Good mlliif‘ "RPFCFYG Saturday. September ifiiit. iinnimaiit- Sale. Holy Name iin.l Charles Auxiliary. I X00 supper and Dance. \ ii I-iotid. Monday. September 13W 5lli>i>er served form 5 o'clock. "Cliwken Supper and Dance. Iiiiia no.1. Tuesdn)‘. September “~11 FYIDhPPs served from 8 P. M. "Kliius County Plowing Match. sfllfvri-lvi" 22nd. Sports. Lunches, lie \.f‘.'llll, Music. Dancing. "WWPW Wednesday. September 20th {iv tiliickeii Supper and Dance. NW.‘ i‘("."!i. "Come to the Dance. fiiverdale School. Thursdly. September 9th. Si“; of refreshments. MacNeilPs C10.‘ Ya, . “Dance in Craplud Hall Tues- ‘hY- 5PM. 21. in aid oi Crapaud 5600M Music by Don Messei-‘s Orchestra. W‘? "IPPUYIS of Canadian Leg- hilx ‘vi be held in Mt. Stewart Ruff“ "i" Rider. Sept. l0 at rganiini. Charles Carrlgan. Sec- "The monthly meeting of Kings- anl Brailch Ne. 30. Canadian d g °"~ 5" Kinaeton School. Thurs- Beiiiember 9th. 8.30 P. M. All "l"! Please attend. "Will all who are interested in {aialxlllng the Craplud Branch of we rlnce Edward Island Libraries "fl a meeting in Crapaud In- tiitut 9m n’? Tgfilmn-‘Thuraday. September l! hmdQtilfens County L. o. 1.. will Md seir annual parade at Brook- bphfl eoirrniioi- 12th. at :30 P, u a p Mlttending divine service at - - The Rev. J. N. Skinner of- in h, Sister, Lodlll cordially "will be loading hogs at the ‘Efllxifglnw ooh-its each Thai-my: .130 Wlmwi-e. Bradolbane. until n. m.: Borden Somali. Hun- i Jgfuvif‘. Until HOOD; flummgr. until 1.39 n "L. and Km, Biflltfln “ntu a ' ' *1’, 7 P-‘lll. Ind NEW YORK. Sept. ‘I - (OP) —— C. S. Jackson, president or the Canadian section of the United Electrical Workers (C10,) today was taken into custody hv United States immigration officials when he was about to attend the U. E. W. convention here. The immigration service sold he was one of nine Canadians "ta-n- porarily excluded" from the United States on the grounds that they were suspected of being in affili- ation vwith the Communist Party. Jackson. ititernaiiorial vicc- presi- oi‘ its Canadian affiliate, district five, was seized by immigration officials when he landed at La Guardia Field in a, Trans-Can- ada Air-Lines plane, As the immigration automobile bearing Jaoitson was ptilllng away from the plane, t/wo men, ident- ified as U. E. lawyers, attempted to c-pen the doors of the car and were almost knocked down as an official ordered the chauffeur to start. The Canadian official was taken to the nearby Ellis Island immi- gration centre. David Scribner. a general counsel for the U. E., told the convent- ion today that Jackson will ap- pear in Fedeinl court Wednesday when the Union will seek his re- lease on a writ of haheas corpus. Scribner linked the detention of Jackson with the investigation begun last vieek by a sub-com- mittee oi’ the House of Represent- atives labor ccmmittee into "the ideolcigicnl aspects" oi the U, E, He sold that riffc-rts by the Union to arrange bail at Ellis Island and through the office of the Attorney-General in Washington were rebuffed without explanations. Arthur Klnroy, an associate General Counsel c-f the Union. said Jackson was on his way tn take part in the national con- vention of the U. E., now in pro- gress. The U. E., with 400,030 members, is the third largest 0.1.0. union. Kinrcy said that Jackson olccied chairman liinnriay’ of the major committee at the convention and rwas to trike an active part in the convention activities to- dray. George B. Aldridge c-f Toronto, a delegate to the convention from local 52, said Monday lilglit that only scveii c»! the l0 Canadian rlelezaieii had’ been permit-ted to enter the United States, ANGER. LEADS T0 DEATH TORONTO. sent. 1 -(CP) - Angered when his automobile broke down, Gordon Mctcalf. 21>, smashed his fist through a rc.~.i~ plate glass window and died of WOllllCiS today. Coroner Fred 'l‘ickt~t. iri the forearm of the heavy-set. 200-pound man. and lie had suf- fered serious loss nf blood. when he reached hospital. dent of the U.E.w. and president _ W35 , said several arteries were sevexrl, Sehuman Gov't Falls PARIS, Sept. 7 (AP) Premier Robert Schuman's French government resigned tonight 64 hours after It had been laboriously iput together. cabinet i Members of the gub. Hmllled their resignations to l President Vincent Auriol when they failed to receive a majority lvute on a technical question in the Chamber of Deputies. The cabinet went under on its first test of strength, . During its short life the cabinet, the second headed by gmunmm ordered a cost of living bonus oi 2,500 francs ($8.36) to almost all French office and industrial workers. ‘ The bonus had been accepted lby labor unions, but wit), p“, liesiatious that it was not enough The cabinet did not last long enough to take any other actions. Find Death 0f BeSabIe Man Was Accidental That George McKay of DeSable came to his death at the Prince Edward Island Hospital on Sept. ilst, 1948. as a. result of an accident icaused by a collision between n car driven by William Shazlccy and a load of hay driven ny GPOTEe McKay on Aug. 23rd. the glecenscti later developing pneu- lmonia from which tic died Sept. 1, |\'.'E1S the gist oi the verdict brought ‘in by a coroner's juzy yesterday afternoon at an inquest held to in- iquire iii to the death of the late lMr. McKay. _ The verdict further added "that liln blame whatever be attached to liho ririvcr of the car, William ‘Sharkeyi . The lury comprised Messrs. Percy Giv itomnnnifi-i. c. Atkin- son, Starling Beaten, P. S. Brad- ley. GA. Cudmore. Elmer Blanch- ard and Fullerton lvfcLcod. Coroner was Dr. .I.D. McGulgan. Representing the crown was Mr. ‘GR. Holmes. K.C.. while Con. lstablc A.W. Green. of Borden de- tachment conducted the case for the R.C‘.’.‘.I.P. Dr. .. ll. Shaw. provincial Pfliillfilfilllii- who pcrofriried the autopsy on the body oi’ the dc- ccascd 11d the victim had suffer- tCoiititiucd on Page 5 col, 3T Killer continues At Liberty In Jamaica KINGSTON. Jamaica, Sept, 1_. (CPl-Mc-rc ilinii 400 police con- iliiicd to search high and low to- nlg t for killer Ivan Marlin, The swashbuckling dcsperado ~has slriiii at least three persons. wounded seven others and terror- yized 1.250.000 Jamaicans since ne lncrit mi thc rampage a week ago. -‘"l‘he convicted burglar broke out lof penitentiary last April. BY DANIEL DE LUCE JERUSALEM, Sept. 7 — (AP) _. Jewish eix-terrorlsts in Pales- tine are confidently planning a now campaign. Their objective is Jewish control of King Abdulloh‘: ‘Irons-Jordan. Trigger-quick veterans of Irgun Zvei Lcurnl and the Stern Ganfl. proud of having spearheaded a long underground war against “tho Holy Land mandate power relinquished by Britain last May 15, gay one more year may lee their goal reached. The Arab kingdom they covet is three times larger than Pales- tine, which it borders on the Jordon River. Its normal popul- atlon is 400.000 Moalems and "fiance, Oovohead Canteen. Wednesday. Sept. 8th. Rollie Mac- kenzie‘: Orchestra. “Remember. Dancing. Modern and Old ‘Iime- Islanders Country Clib. Travellers Rest. Every Thursday nlie. "Just arrived-Two carloads of bran and shorts: one car-load ber- ley meal; two culoeds hog grow- er, pl: starter, lay mash. duh’! ration. wheat. chick grower. We deliver. N. L. Dlckieson. New \ I dewish Ex-Terrorists ‘ Plan New Campaign Christians. New it also has 100,- 000 Palestinian refuguees. There is nothing furtive o-r hush- hush about Jewish tcrritoriiil ambition. You can read about it in Irgun and Stern pamphlets handed out as freely as tourist folders, You can hohnob with fcnner underground chiefs at teaa and cocktail parties. Over a glass of Palestine brandy you hear the re- mark; "may our next drink to- gether be in Amman (capital of ‘Irana-Jordeni." To the question of how the Jan are to gain Trans-Jordan there is the careful reply: "not inevitab- ly or necessarily by force, It might he done hy negotiation. There are several ways. But it will he dnnfl." Irgim and Stern hold the view that Palestine and ‘Trina-Jordon are a mingle political economic entity which belongs t0 the Jews by historic right. They do not recognize Britain's action in splitting otilf ‘Prime-Jordan from Palestine and giving it to King Abdullah to rule. ‘They claim that when Israel expands to its logical b-ontiera it will b6 strong enough to lead the Arab world out of Jioverty- stricken foreign-exploited feudal- ion Telephone Gntario To Get First Grant Under Nealth Program OTTAWA. Sept. 7 _(ci=)._ Ontario is going to gci. the first grant under the Govern. mom's $30,000.000 national health program. the Health Department announced today. The announcement laid l. cheque for $20485 is being forwarded to the Provincial ‘freanirer of Ontario to assist. the Province‘: health survey. This payment constitutes 15 per cent of film 8106.510 al- loeated io Ontario under the over-all health program. Ontario's application for an initial payment on the health survey grant was the first pro- vlndal request received in 0t- tawe. Requests also are com- lng in fretm other Provinces as they complete preparations‘ to make the surveys for which $625,000 of the $30.000.000 has been provided. The Govemmeni’! health scheme was approved at the last session of Parliament, Future Bleak For- lialley Apple Growers KENTVILLE, N. 5.. Sept. ‘i - (UP) - Tlhe future ls bleak ior the Annapolis Valley's 2,000 ap- ple growers as they prepare to harvest the 1948 CICip. A committee of the Nova. Sco- tla Fruit Growers‘ Association an- nounced here today that the As- sociation has not. yet been able to reach an agreement with the Fed- eral Government to market iihe crop. but iivas hopeful “a decision in the matter would be taken shortly." News Briefs MANILA, Sept. 7-(APl—-Mount I-Iibokhibok was subslclirig ‘uday after six days of violent eruption which took at least five lives and drove 35.000 Filipinos from the l:- lancl of Gairiiguln. OTTAWA, Sept. 7-(CP)—Fish- eries Minister Mayhew today em- barked on a nine-day tour of fish- ing establishments in Nova Scotla In Luncribiirg next Tuesday he will open the‘ Nova Scotla italic.- men's exhibition. OTTAWA. Sept. 7—iCP)—‘l‘:ede liiinistei‘ Howe, as acting Tran;- port Minister. \\'lil take over dr- cet contact with the freight raits issue from Transport Minister Chevi-ler when the latter heads for Paris and the United Nations meeting within the next 10 days MONTREAL, Sept. 'l~ (CR-- Headed by Mal-Gen. H. W. loa- tcr of Halifax, general commander of Eastern Command, a party of la Canadian militry men left Dor- val airfield here today aboam or REAP‘. North Star en route for the fourth annual celebrations Sept. l2 of the liberation oi Brogea Belgium. NEW POWER PROJECT TORONTO. Sept. 7 —(CP) — R. H. Saunders. chairman of the Hydro-electric Power Commission of Ontario. said today surveyworle has started on the 240.000-horse- power La Cave power project on the Ottawa River near Mattawa, sane 35 miles east of North Bay. l.i (ill fit P75‘. l t fiil‘ 03S t) F Service CHICAGO, Sept. ‘I — (APl —, Already iii the grip of threei major strikes. the United Stotesi today was threatened with a' fourth work stoppage which C. I. O. union leaders said miould cripple i the country's telephone service, ' The Association of CommuIIi-i cation Equipment Workers. vi-hose] 213,000 rnttriibers instal telrphoue equipment, announced it had set R Scipt. I7 for a. strike of Bell Telephone workers iri 43 states. Meanwhile strikes in the 011,1 trucking and shipping industries‘ continued and there were no indications of an early settlcmenti of any of the three disputes. l The strike call by the Communl- l cation Workers Union wins ordered ‘- to enforce demands for higher} ‘Wages and improved working conditions, l In New York, the A.F.I., ifllck- lng strike ended its first week amid reports that the city's milk supply is "getting critical" be-l cause of a lack c-f card-board con. tainers. The containers are avail. able at manufacturing plnnttt biit' can not be delivered because or the truck strike, Some 9,400 m€mbers International Brotherhood of Teamsters are involved in the‘ New York strike, AflOthPr 4.300, mfifllbefi 0f a local in Northern Now Jersey joined the work Sinlpp. I189 during the Labor Dgv week-end. The strikers are ask. 1M a ‘AS-cent hourly wage in. crease. of the; Denounces P.E.|. Labor Act Before British Congress MARGATE, Sussex. England, Seipt. 7 —- (C?) ~ Mayor Sam Laavrenoe of Hamilton, Ont, today told British labor that Canada's constitution, the British North‘ America Act, is "hamstrlnging"! Canadian labor. i Addressing the Trades and Union l Congress convention as a frater-l nal delegate from the Trades and , Labor Congress of Inovrerice described how the B.» N. A, act gave the Canadian Pro- vinces legislatlvc nCWBfS in labor» and social matters. He said; "This act has proven a source of revenue for the legal profession in the Dominion as well as a means of hamstringing labor with the approval c-l the Employers’ Association and the Provincial Coverrnienis." Provincial labor legislation varies greatly in Canada, he said. Saskatchewan had recognized the right of employees to organize and bargain collectively but in Prince Edward Island was found the "most outrageous piece orf class legislation ever enacted in the Dominion of Canada to destroy the trade union movement." I-fe said the P.E.1. act is similar ln scope to the Nazi war labor code. Under it no union could exist without the consent of the Provincial secretary and then only for such periods as the secretary thought advisable. Rev. ‘I’. E. McLennan To Be Inducted MONTREAL, Sept. 7 - ICPF- Rev. Thomas Mt-Lennan of char- lottetown will be inducted as minister oi st. James United church’ I'\'idioy..men1bers of the Montreal Presbytery of the United Church were told today. The Predatory approved tihe pur- chase by Qt. James church of a $15,000 residence for its new minister. CANADA ililllil- i/Viiit‘ U. S. Labor Disputes i lieu Berlin Gity Spread, Now Threaten i lciiy hall. after they were released . Russian soldiers. . behind. Then another truck carry- Canam» l The official lIJOlIIL during July—irom 156.9 to Nell Under Safe Gonduet Guarantee BERLIN, Sept. 8—(Wednesdlyl —-(AP)—-Nlnetecn western zone Berlin policemen were kidnapped rival Russian-hacked police and Soviet tummy-gunners today as they left the Berlin city hail under a Russian safe conduct guarantee. Their release had been nego- tiated by the French ivlth tile ussians. They had been cornered in the city hall—ln the Soviet sector of this divided, blockaded city- slnce Monday, when they were brought in to help protect tne anti - Communist city council against Communist-led demon- strators. They had taken refuge in the Western Allies’ liaison o:- iices in the building. About three blocks from the along with ll British, UIILECi States and French liaison officers and correspondents, they were flagged down by two jeeploads of As the convoy stopped, about 2C ‘ Soviet zone police jumped out from behind a building and sur- rounded the western zone group. Another four ieeploads of Rus- slan tommy-guniiers drew up fiom ing about. 66 more soviet SQCi-Ol police roared up, It seemed ob- vlous the affair was a carefully planned trap. "Thogeflyvho haul! wipers may go on.” a‘. Russian officer said. "Those who don't will have to come with us." Frrttch officers protested and explained that Mall-Geri. Aiea andcr Kotikov, the Russian coin- niandant for Berlin, had agreed to give the western zone policemen safe conduct to the French zotic of the city. - They argued for an hour. There was a promise made to call Ru- dolph Wagner. deputy to the So- viet zone police chief. Paul Mark- S.N.S. Photo. Jack Chapman. president of that Canadian Lake Seaman's Union who succeeds J.A. "Pat" Sullivan. The C.I...S.U. merged with Al" L Seafarers International union and Sullivan stepped out. Geniine Oil Field Fire To One Well EDMONTON, Sept. 7-- (CH- Less than 18 hours after a spec- tacular fire broke out at the rogue Atlantic No. 3 well in the rich Leduc oil fields. Lands Min- ister N. E_ Tanner announced that the fire has been "definitely localized" to the one well. “We are taking every precau- tion possible to prevent any spread of the fire in the oilfield," sol/i Mr. Tanner. ‘ Recruit 2,392 Ganadlans For Maine Potato Fields AUGUSTA. Me., Sept. ‘T -—(AP) — Three teams of recruiters have signed up 2.392 Canadian workers for the Maine potato harvest, chairman L. C. Fortier of the hfeirie Unemployment Compensa- tion Commission said todiay. The employment. service has set a goal oi 7.000 Canadian workers to aid Maine fnmniers when the CF09 i5 ready ior picking. Recruiting is continuing in Quebec and New graf, but. he never arrived iClP) -—-§ index of e OTTAWA, Sept. 7 — cost-of-llvlng advanced only six-tenths l57.5~ the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today. This was iihe narrowest change since January. 1947, and indicated a slackening in the rise which has carried the index up more than 20 points over the last year The index ls calculated on the basis that 1935-39 equals 100. Today's report. covering the period from July 2 to Aug. 2. re- flected the lifting of the special 25 pew cent excise taxes on a broad list. of durable household goods late in July. ‘ It. did not. however. show tlie. iise in meat prices which came Bninswick. Fortier sa-id. Living Costs Advanced Only Slightly In" July ment lifted the vicar-imposed era-- barge on shipments of beef cai- ile to the United slates market. This will be reflects-d in the re- port issued a month from now. Contributing factors in the July rise were advances in the sub- indexcs for foods. fuel and light- ing, clothing and miscellaneous items. The licniie. furnishings and services index declined, mainly due to the lax removal. At. 157.5. far beyond the historic ‘peak of 150.6 which was touched lli viost-ivar 1920. the current in-. ldex standing compares with a .rcndliig of 1366 this time last iycar, It. was then that the iri- ,c‘rx began tlit- upward swing uliich cnrricd ii, with monthly gains of fill!‘ to mar-c than liiti points, to its present all-time I during August ivhcn the Govern- figure. l ‘power. is too great, too direct are‘. --p First Important Speech By New Liberal Leadar Immediate Action Needed In Face 0f Blrect Threat From Gommunlsni. TORONTO. Sept. ‘f — (GM- Organization of the forces of tho free democracies to ensure collec- tive resistance to aggression was urged today by External Affairs Minister St. Laurent. He told the directors‘ luncheon at the Canadian National Exhibi- tion that "such a collective action, even if at the beginning only on a regional basis, is urgent and u- cessai-y." “The threat of aggressive and expansionist Communism, har- nessed to the ambitions o! a great. too immediate for us to do noth freedom-loving BC? iiig until all the nations reach agreement to together. "That is why the Canadian Gov- ernment has been urging at horrid and abroad, in puiblic statemeizm. and through diplomatic channel-l ‘and discussions the immedllbl establishment of a North Atlantiu lsecurity system comprised of tnl United Kingdom, the United States. Canada and the free coun- tries of Western Europe. “We think such a system could create and maintain the rieconu‘! preponderance of defensive forcl over any possible adversary o1 combination o! aggressive adver- series." It was Mr. St. lament’: firs! important speech since his aelec< tion as national Liberal leader. He sairl a collective arrange- ment of the kind suggested "had in it the ultimate hope-and. the possibility -of establishing tree< rlom, order and welfare over l wide area." "Under present conditions that! seems to be our best formula fol peace." If it. could be brought about "ll may then come to pass that. lhl forces of aggression, respecting our power for war and convinced of.‘ our will for peace, will abandon their mad designs, dismiss their unjustified suspicions and begin io co-cperate with others without: requiring that they become mero satellites," suit our use l the liiisotlloe ctr" A Charlie f0 OPEN tiiiih Mouths is when THEY Yawn? l I Eire More Catholic _ Than Italy, Is Claim . OTTAWA, Sept. 7 -—(CP) Eire. ~"niore Catholic than ltaly"—lins swept out its Communists. Prime Minister Costello told a press conU ference today. The nation now feared no iin-; rest. no political strife. such as bc-i fell the country in which the Vatican is located. Mr Costello envisaged a great. new Ireland of the future. eon- stzucted with the alt-l of a Unite-l States loan of $85,000,000 under the Marshall Plan. The country would be independ- with ii serious shortage of Amezi- can dollars. HEl‘ greatest need was a lean or a grant of United Siam Cllfffilitfi‘. 1f t-lie Pulled Staff's loans Eire the she would be "very able" in repay the loan. Mr. Cos- tello said. One other problem was that of partition which was "forced on lrclaittl liyihc British Parliament ln ent of the British crown, yet "friendly. and working‘ in associ- ation with (Zccnmonwealih nat- F 1 W] t ‘P ,‘ inns." ]e flfld n-lgnqbgi > of QhQ‘ ill‘? B ‘I! “'35 lTii lllE 0 (‘ll I‘ l! - V Parllnnlentary Press Gallery. Fl" F‘ "m" “T““‘“""i “Ml Cdml“ ‘Mnumns 9m“ "m" l” “u” wimm‘ m nmnppm“ in ‘h’, Shh could pxprirt linen. nlii=kyl'“_'l"‘a5i- 5R1“ l" C8D? 3111201 maintenance nf the. sterling arm. and ntilPT products Wirrriiilliz ilic ‘l P009500)’ "P1110!!- Eire was nevertheless troubled "m" “'“i“ "l" "m" M" “Fmlli mgkmal mremst’: Mr. Costello. before Ireland could hcccrnc a SiIOlLQ. ‘iiitlclociidriit nat- ion. mice Ireland was uiiiicd and independent. of her (‘rrnmonwcalth ties, she could repatriaic her nai- ivcs from Britain. Canada and llititcd States and thus build up her depleted population of 3,000.- 000. Although Eire was preparing to ditch he F\"f‘l‘l"..'!l \‘faii~= Re- lation-. Au ct‘ IMF» and thus sever one of her last remninir: tlcsiiltli the British crown. this ivns no lri- dlcailon that shc still would iiri work in fricudiv “assoclilioiW with England. Mi- (‘osicllrv Sfllfi. than she was exporting. i911.‘ Partition must end. said lest link with the British crown. was importing more from Canada‘ reply in prime Minister Jnliril Costello cf Eire. who Ottawa that his government isl TORONTO: Sept. 7 - to?) -. Minimum and Maxinum temper- atures; Victoria 5.1 73: Edmonton 33 66; Regina 36 62; Winnipeg 46 6a; Toronto '70 04; Ottawa 54 so; ‘Montreal 66 B7; Quebec 62 351 Saint. John 52 —C Moneton 51 BGI lliulifax 56 84; Charlottetown 61 39,3; Sirliici 61 7'71 Xarmoutli 52 '75. HALIFAX, sopt. v (GP) Official inland forecasts issued ‘tonight by the Dominion Public tweathcr Office at Halifax and ‘valid until midnight Wednesday. | Synopsis: i The heat wave is cxpected to continue Wednesday in Inland sections n! the Nlaritlmes, with l"'ll[‘PI‘lli'-ll't’§ rising to the 80a ‘l-loivever, sea hrPeyg along u" ‘Nola Scotia roast will caugg slightly cooler weather there. A ‘stonn 600 miles south of Nova ‘Scctia is moving northward, but ii: not expected in affect thq Prince Edward Island _. cl“, iionialit and Wednesday. Continu BELFAST, sent. 7 _. 1Rriitersi|ina hci. Light winds. Low earl; .. prlitic \iinis'ci- Sir Rnsll Wednesday morning and high 1g Brio-ice iti-iiglii rriifiriitcii \‘oi'ili- the afternoon at Charlottetown erii lrclmri‘: loyalty in Britain lril60 arid R3. High tide this aiteznoon at 2.3:, raid in {and tonight at 2.25. Sun sets this evening at 6.25 grin wire-paring lo ropcnl the External ,rlscs tomorzow morning at 5.30. Rplgfinng Ari’. and thus scvrr the: ‘ First quarter moon Septqnbflg l10th-306 A- M.- _