MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN ---.- 1 pleasure! that leave 'u;rpehind them. pally follllllld 1001. TIIIII Oink UNITED NATI Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 18, 1950 U:S. MayBoost Arms Purcl-rashes In Canada French Fears Prove snag In Plans. To Arm West New vonx. Sept. 1'1 - (cm- Deputies of the North Atlantic pm-glgn Ministers today sought, to devise a formula to meet French fears about rearming Western Ger- n . ml. ymmpromise solution on the problem of Germany's part in the defence of Western Europe was being prepared for the next meet- ing of the la Foreign Ministers themselves. scheduled to confer again tomorrow. The deputies aimed at writing I mmmunlqlle to meet unanimous approval which would: 1. Not publicly commit France at this time. 2. Back the United States' proposal that the Atlantic Council should work towards the incorporation of German units in a Western European army at the appropriate time. Informed sources said Foreign Secretary Bevin of Britain indic- ited approval of including Cler- nan units in a European defence Coming Events" "Dance, Clyde River Hall, Sept. tlst. M... "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "chicken supper and Dance, Lo: '-5, Monday. September 18th. "Dance in Mlllvale School. MOI!- tay. September lath. "Dance. Orwell Hall. September mi. Millview Orchestra. . g "Dance Iona Hall . Wednesday, 3PDtember 20th. "Unloading Wheat Monday and Tuesday at 03.25 ewt. Macduigui A: Boyle. "Show. Moreli. every Tuesday. ilrilday. Saturday. Show starts S30 ocock. "Provincial Plowing Match and Horse Show. September Zfth and 28th. "come to the regular Dance at lha Bonshaw Inn Tuesdly night. llacNeill's Orchestra. "Dance. French River Hall. Monday. September lilth. Dancing I till i. Door prize. "in stock. Asphalt shing'u. etc Booking orders for Bulk Wheat to urlve noon at 33.35 per ioo. Bring ills. W. I. Bowman, Hunter River. '"Unloading carioad Bulk Wheat may and Monday. 33.35 cwt. Lil; car. Bring bags. R. L. Dickie- "Sandy's Theatre Under the Stars-Shows every Wednesday and ifriday nights. Car service, sandwiches and soft drinks. "Provincial Plowing Match. H dds. September 27th.and 28th. 51350 Gas supplied free to com- Mint "motors. b"Afton Hall. Tuesday, Septem- dbr 19th. Variety Concert. films. yclloe 'and lunches. Fairview omcna Institute. g"Ci'iicken and Ham Supper at We llew Hall Tuesday. Sept. 19. A" jllfi of bail. Supper starting l 32.10 p,m, '15" Taxes in arrears not paid 15. Albion School by September 1950. will in handed in for .0 ection. By order of Trustees. 0 . m"'Free Enllrtement with 3191'! 3 not film mailed or left at 8:! a Studio. luv. Great George mtet. Yellow Cab Building. Char- etown. ;;Af,tarnoon Tea at the home of it up. I Miami ll. West ftoyaity Womanta "M. ...... awmwelk l C. Convention dip; Nmm Ql-ICCn'. Wm b5 hm River Baptist Church on mfgdlv. September 19th. After- ,” session V2.30. Evening -eeslon "3"Vlhl! live fowl chicken and ””'""- WM-y.. a A'. it. till noon. '1 L. Dickieson. New qtunw. "Mu!-r Dante. Ilorsii or S - .'',';,L''”.' Hall. ' anunidiiv re ciusppsiic Music by M I" New 1-imam. I--c-no Germany set-up. L. B. Pearson. Canada's External Affairs Minister; has said that the best way to neutralize Western Germany is to integrate her in a European system of which her arm- ed forces would form a part. He said Saturday that; Canada has not yet been asked at the At- lantic talks to send Canadian troops to Europe. Nothing has hap- pened yet at the meeting. he said, to change the Dominion's announc- ed plans in the western-defence set-up. To Ask Special Force Meanwhile. informed sources said that State Secretary Dean Aches- on of the United States intends to ask the United Nations General Assembly - opening this week-to earmark forces which could be used to combat aggression under the general direction of the United Nat- ions. as was done in Korea. This proposal would be in line with Canada's action in setting up a "special force," now being made available for use in carrying out Canada's obligations under the U. N. charter and the North Atlantic Pact. ' Informed sauces said it is poss- ible that under certain circumstan- ces, Canada's "special force” would be sent to Europe. However. it is the Canadian Governments announced belief that Canada can best aid Western de- fence at this time in supplying arms and equipment to Europe rather than ground troops. Might Wreck Cabinet PARIS. Sept. 17 - (AP)-French officials fear that any decision to rearrn Germany immediately. with- out strict controls, would collapse their nragiic cabinet. 'Whether State Secretary Dean Acheson of the United States has found I solution by his proposal to merge German troops under I uni- fied Western command is problem- Itioai. The idea is considered by some to be sugar coating for a pill the French are not eager swallow. one French official blandly stat- ed that American officials are press- ing for German rearmament now for their own domestic: political advantage. Except on that issue the French Ippcar willing to support the whole DNSIIIII proposed by Acheson to loYIlOkN0l'lZI1 Atlantic Council in New or . ROME. Sept. 17 -- (Reuters) - Iialy has contracted to import 200.- 000 tons of Russian wheat and other bread grains at "slightly more than thctworld price," it was learned today. It was understood that Italy accepted the Soviet price to help build up food stocks and also to obtain payment from Rus- sia for machinery and other goods she has bought from Italy. lifisi Ceiling i On 25 Million Reciprocity Deal OPTAWA. Sept. 17 - (CP) -- The United States Government has paved the way for greater future arms purchasing in Canada by lifting the ceiling on the 325,000.- 000 Canada-U.S. arms reciprocity deal. Lifting of the ceiling was dis- closed by a Government source Saturday. In efifect, the U. S. Gov- ernmenthas informed Canada that it no longer considers there is any limit to the amount of arms- ments the U. S. can buy from this country. It means. too, that the U. S. Gov- ernment has decided to ignore the Buy American Act, 1934. which restricted the U. S. fighting forces from placing ofif-shore orders for arms-. unless such orders were in the "public interest." The loophole - the "public in- teres" - provided the legal basis for cementing of the reciprocity deal last May. and for the latest move of eliminating the ceiling. Canada still is seeking. 1. Complete removal of the Buy American Act. . 2. Reduction of high U. S. tariffs on Canadian armaments. Continued on p880 16. C01. 8 Appointed To Ontario Bench I-I. Aldous Aylen. Ottawa lawyer. has been named a justice of the c Ontario supreme court. He has been practising law in the cnpita' for 30 years.- and is a graduate of McGill University and osgoodc Hall. See Parliamentary Duties I Year-Round North Korean Morale. ON THE INCHON FRONT. Sept. 17 --(OP) -North Kor- ean troops are handling their tanks and other equipment "very inefficiently" and Com- munist morale as a whole ap- pears "very low." Gen. Mac- Arthur was told today during a. battlefront tour. Marine officers in the field briefed the United Nations commander on the situation they found in storming Inchon and advancing on Kimpo nir- field and Seoul. I Both headquarters and f.eld officers said there was no in. dication of enemy artillery. The Communists are using mortars. machine-guns. small arms and tanks. PROTEST NEW TAX ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. Sept. 17 - (CP) The Newfoundland sec- tion of the Maritime Battlers As- sociation has sent rt protest to Finance Minister Abbott against. recent taxes imposed on carbon. ated drinks. Battlers here foresaw a "seri- ous" slump in sales 'IS a result of the 30 per cent tax imposed in Mr. Abbott's recent baby bud- get. Give Labor Govit 50-50 Chance In Vote Tuesday By Hal Cooper LONDON. Sept. 17 -(AP) - Winston Churchill appeared to- night to have a 50-60 chance of toppling Labor in the House of Commons Tuesday. His intended knock-out punch is in the form of I motion ensuring the Government for proceeding - in the middld of I rearmmcnt drive and international crisis-to put the steel industry under state owner- ship. If the motion carries. Prime "Reserve Sept. 25th for Ham lair-id Bean Supper in Millview ll. "Meeting of Conservative Com- mittee of Hope River Poll in Hall. Monday. Sept.-18. at 9 p.rn. "Contact E. W. Johnstona. Ken- sington. before selling your Tim- othy Seed. "Come to the Ladies' Aid Chick- In Supper in Pownal Hall, Wednes- day. September aoth. Supper serv- ed from 5' to 9. "Film Board showing in South Granville School. Wednesday. September 30th. Admission free Sale of candy and lunches. 'fPoultry - Buying live oultry weekly for American and aneu- ion Markets. Poultry weighed and 1 id for on farm. Contact urban . ROI . Central W. 23036 Grafton S and Polli- reet. Char- iottetown before selling else where. Phone-dur 33. Night lulu-16 Minister Attlee will ask the King to dissolve the present House. That would mean a new national election. perhaps in November. On paper. the Labor Party holds 313 seats against 308 for all other parties in the Commons. There are three vacancies in the '62.'o-mem- ber House: the Speaker is non- partisan and votes only in the case of a tie. Actually, Labor has I paper majojrity of seven because two Irish Nationalists listed with the -Oppdsttion have refused to take their seats as a gesture of protest against the partition of Ireland. Victory or defeat for the Gov- ernment f , d mainly on the Labor Party's list of absent and ailing members. Just how many votes the Party expects to lose this way is I secret. At least six Labor members--tin eluding Sir Stafford Orlppc Chan- cellor of the Exchequer-Ire ailing Ind'mIy miss the big showdown. A seventh-Dr. Mont rollick- Is somewhere on the high aces re- turning from a trip to the Far East. An eighth. Tom Drlberg was last reported maki I tour of the fighting front in ores. rbrelgn Secretary Bevin. attend- ing 5 big-three conference in New York. offset his Ibsome by pairing his vote with I Conservative un- able to attend. 1110 Conservatives are not die- closing their own absentee ilct. The 75-year-old Churchill nu plcdnd that his p . if return- ed to viewer. to an act nationalizing the iron and atgel iniustry. i ' ,. i Job Soon OTTAWA. Sept. 1'1 - (CP) Many members went from the spe- cial. emergency session of the House of Commons with the feel- ing thatparliamentary duties will soon require their year-round at-' tention. Few expect a return to the leis. urely days prior to the Second World War when a session of three or four months was, all that was required. There had been some expecta- tions that the wartime pressure on Parliament would ease following the defeat of Germany and Japan in 1045. But the reverse has hap- pened. The pressure has increased and Parliament as been in ses- sion 10 of the has 12 mcnths. when the 13-day emergency ses- sion adjourned Friday, there was no certainty it would not be re- convened before the end of the year. It was tentatively adjournedl to Feb. 14, but Prime Minister St.l Laurent made it clear that mem. bers will be recalled if the interna- ticnal situation warrants such ac- tion. The emergency session passed legislation ending the nine-day general rail strike. but it mainly was occupied with plans for Car.- adian participation in the Korean war and for an accelerated de- fence program at home. Within a few hours after ad- journment there -was a develop- ment which may require parlia- mentary action in not too many months. Dean Acheson. United states Secretary of State. called upon North Atlantic Treaty powers to raise and equip their own milit- ary contingents for a prospective new international army in Europe. It is Canada's participation in such international affairs that has bccn partly responsible for the steady lengthening of the sessions. Membership in the United Nations and the North Atlantic Treaty has brought increased responsibilities. In 1930. the year of the outbreak of the Second World War. Parlia- ment sat a total of 109 days. In the war years. sessions were ad- journed instead cf prorogued so Parliament would be available for immediate recall in case of an em- ergency. In 1946, the first year following the end of the war. parliament sat ilil days, The sitting days num- bered lid in 1947 and 119 in 1948. In 1009. an election year. Parlia- ment met from late January to end of April and again from mid- September to mid-December. This year it met from mid-Fafb- ruary to the end of June and then was mailed for the special ses- sion. . TOKYO. Sept. 17 - 'ReulerI)- Al Jolson arrived at Pusan in Korea today and within a few hours gave his first show to vs- Home at a military hospital. no la the first American entertainer to arrive in Korea. HAMBURG. Sept. 17 - (AP) - The German independent news- paper "Die Welt" says it has proof that German prisoners of the Second World War are being fenced by the mmlana to fight on the Communist aids in Korea. The paper reports suing a post- card written t a German by I Controls Are Clamped On U. S. War Materials WASHIINGTON, Sept. 17 --(API --Thirty-two war materials -- in- cludlng steel. iulnber, industrial al- cohol and nylon yarn-tonigh: were ordered under Federal antl- hoarding control. The order is effective tomorrow simultaneously with restoration of Government curbs on con.sumers' easy payment credit affecting automobiles, furniture and house- hold equipment. Minimum down payments are decreed as well as time limits within which install- ment-plan purchases must, ne paid off The national production author- ity, backing up Presiderrt Tru- man's &'i0,000,000.000 defence pro- gram. issued an "inventory con- trol" regulation to prevent over- buying by bush essmen. It was un- exoectedly broad. The N. P. A. order will not al- fect consumer buying--though this may be r.-atlceably slowed by tic-e credit controls, which operate sep- arately. N. P. A. exempted ail pur- chases for "personal or household iise" from the inventory regulat- on. . No consumer items were named Thus. while stocking makers mav not pile up nylon yarn to excess women may buy as many nylnii hose as they wish. Officials foresee no shortage. Industrial alcohol was named but not liquor. But factories and dealers were forbidden to buy. receive, ordc: or deliver more than a ”pra.cticab'e minimum working inventory" of the following materials essential to the munitions drive: Building materials - cement: gypsum board. sheathing and latl.. Chemicals - industrial alcohot, benzene. caustic soda. I:hlorin:. glycerlne and soda. ash. Forest products-softwood anti hardwood (excluding hardwood flooringnurailroad ties and mine- tiea); softwood plywood and wool pulp Iron and steel-pig iron; gray iron castings; carbon and alloy steel: rough forgings; iron and steel scrap. Other metals and minerals - aluminum; columblum.cobait; cop- per and scrap containing copne': magnesium: manganese: nickel. tin; tungsten; zinc; other non- ferrous scrap. Rubber-natural rurjber iatex; all synthetic rubbers. Textiles - burlap; cotton pulp: high-tenacity rayc-nvyarnz nylon staple and nylon filament yarn. The list may be lengthen-ed or shortened. as conditions warrant. T. L C. Annual Convention is Concluded By JOHN LeBl.ANC MONTREAL. Sept. 1'! - (CF) - Demands for full employment. I minimum wage for all Canadian workers and for social action over a wide field were voiced Saturday by the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada at the close of its an- nual convention. The ccngress called on Govern- ment and employers to take etc?! to keep up employment. and it asked for a. national base wage of 85 cents an hour. In the social field, there were de- mands for a sweeping health in- surance scheme on a contributory basis, extension of old age pen- sions. slum clearance and iow-rent- at housing, and improved work- men's compensation and unemploy- ment insurance legislation. The approximately 700 delegates representing 500.000 workers mjm Continued on page 15. C01 5 and To 3”; Sentenced For .MarLiage Deal vmcouvm. Sent 1'7 -iCP)- Allan M. Alas. 18. of Edmonton. Will be sentenced Sept. 25 following his conviction of conspiracy in the bog- us marriage of his 15-year-old sis- ter. He was found guilty Friday and his sister-in-law, Mrs. Jessie Alas. M. Haney. B. C.. was acquitted of I similar charge by Judge James A. Mccieer in County Court. Alex Golrey. 7i-year-old Edmon- ton -district farmer. central figure in the case of the bartered bride. was declared mentally unfit to stand trial. I-II was ordered com- mitted to I mIntI.l hospital. The 16-year-old sister went through I marriage here with her brother acting as groom. posing as Ookey. Gorey, police said. posed as her father and Mrs. Alla was I witnsaaat the wedding. relative now in American captiv- ity in Korea. s g . 2. i . I ookey had promised to our 0500 "for the bride." police were told. Allied Adv-ance I Rolls Ahead Towards Seoul By Leif Erickson . TOKYO. Sept. 18 -(Mondayi- (AP)-United Nations forces pre- pared today to bridge the Han River barrier before Seoul as U. S. 7th Division infantrymen poure-l into the western Korean beachhead from landing ships off Inchon U. S. Marines who stormed ashore at Inchon Friday held is. solid beachhead extending from the port city to the Han seven miles from Seoul. the former South Korean capital. Seoul's airport at Kimpo fell to advancing U. N. forces last night. American engineers were getting ready to throw a bridge across the river whose spans had been knock- ed out by the relentless hammer- I ing of U. N. bombers. Music. the only IIIIIVSIIII Itllgio that never can be surpassed. MAXIMS or A . MERE MAN I . 16 PAGES ONS FORCES PREPARE TO BRIDGE HAN Subscriptions Delivered (Mills!) a vlncOIlU.I.07-U. in Garage Fire Damage estimated at upwards if 57.000 was caused by a fire which burned Leslie Brothers Garage. St. Peter's Bay to the ground last night. The fire broke out shortly after ten o'clock. A two-car garage situated at the village corner on the eastern side of the bridge the building was comparatively new. Everything it contained, except the cash register. was destroyed. The gas pumps in front were saved. Less than five minutes before the fire was detected, Mr. and Mrs Joseph Leslie. co-owners LI the garage had toured the building saw that everything was In order turned out the lights and gone to their home across the street. More Troops Go Ashore These developments were report- ed by Associated Press corresoond- , ent Russell Brines He said elements of the 7th Div- . landing operations, U. N. :::rnngth in the Inchon beachhead will be upwards of 40,000 men. For the lnfantrymen of the 7th. a division which saw heavy act- ion in the Pacific war. it was ii. re- turn to a familiar land. The 7th was on occupation duty in Korea for about two years after the Sec- ond Worlrl War. The Fourth American Army div- ision to enter the Korean conflict. the 7th had been on occupation duty in Japan after leaving Korea. Powerful New 'l'I.nks The marines rolled into Kimpo, Korea's most important airfield. with powerful new General Patton tanks. After taking Kimpo they Jumped off along the west bank of the Han for Seoul. is miles to the southeast. The Marines' Pattons smashed six weak counter-attacks by tank-led North Korean Reds. . ning up to the house and shouted from Inchon. i isiong started going ashore this ; morning. I When the 7th completes its )lill'Lit8S later a man came run- that the garage was on fire. On looking out the door Mrs. Leslie saw black smoke billowing out of the back of the garage. By the time they raced across the road the smoke was pouring out the front of the buildiiirr. some one ran in and grabbed the cash register, the only article taken from the building. There were no cars in the gar- age at the time. Lost in the cor.-, flagration were grease guns. at compressor and numerous other mechanicai tools. The loss was partially covered by insurance but only "a very small portion," stated Mrs. Leslie. Neighbors started to form I bucket brigade but could an- compllsh little in. comfbatting the blaze. The Moreli Fire Depart- ment equipped with a pumper and plenty of hose hurried over l.f'.f: six mile stretch between the two centres in answer to the call and extinguished the blaze. They ran the hose from the bay to the SM”- age. The garage was owned by Messrs. William and..JoIcv!L..leslie.. All week theyhad been laying forms and pouring cement for the -foundation of an extension tn the Hamiiilin Civic Workers Strike Is Settled HAMILTON. 0ni., Sept. 1'! - (CP) - The 5 1-2-week strike by Hamilton civic workers ended to- night when union members voted to accept the city's settlement of- r. Union officials said maintenance men would start servicing the city's 40 garbage truck: so that they would be ready tomorrow to start picking up garbage, uncul- lected since the strike began. A membership meeting of Local 5, Hamilton Civic Employees Un- ion, voted 410 in favor of accept- ing the offer and 73 opposed. There were 10 spoiled ballots. The contract offer provides: 1. A 42-hour. five-day week with the same fake-home pay. effective immediately. 2. A 31! weekly cost-of-living bonus effective Jan. 1. I951. 3. Effective Oct. 1, I950, an ad- justment of 50 cents a week for each 1 I-2-point rise above the June figure in the cost-of-living index. 4. A 40-hour. fiveday week with the same take-home pay, effective Jan. 1. 1052. 5. An increase of 2 l-2 cents an hour for garbage men and sew- er maintcnance men, effective im- mcdiatcly. The strike of 1,000 union mem- bers began Aug. 3 to back up de- mands for higher wages and shorter hours. The union's original demands were for a reduction in the work week from 44 hours to 40 with no loss in pay and I two-cent hourly building and had almost complet- ed the work Saturday. Origin of the fire was not KFDWH. iio Market In sight For Apple Crop KENTVILLE. N.S.. Sept. 1'1 - (CP) -- To harvest or not was the big question in the Annapolis Val- ley tonight as growers searched in vain for markets for their apples. the grower 30 or 36 cents a barrel. If he can't sell the apples he loses money. But if he doesn't pick the fruit and markets are found. he loses again. Hard-hit by loss of the United Kingdom market through devalua- tion, Annapolis Valley growers. ex- pecting a 1.200.000-barrel crop, have so far found markets for only a portion of their harvest. 0 R. J. Leslie, general manager of the Nova scotia Apple Marketing Board. said today outlets for coo.- 000 barrels can be found but there is nothing in sight beyond that. He said he was leaving Monday for a conference in Ottawa with Sir Andrew Jones. chief of the Brit-l ish Food Mission, in an effort tol negctiale a deal of some sort. Still No Trace Of Missing Vessel HALIFAX. Sept. 1'! -- (CP) An R. C.A.F. Search and Rescue canso returned to base and report- ed no success tcnight in its hunt off southwestern Nova Scott: for a missing swordfishing craft. The 50-foot Sir Echo, out of wcod's Harbor. N. 8.. has not been heard from since she was caught in an Atlantic hurricane last Tues- lncrcase for all employees. day. six men were aboard. In Curbing R TORONTO. Sept. 17 --(CF) - Rev. J. R. Mutchmor. secretary of the United Church Board of Irlangelism, said Saturday that the United Chuhch played a big part in helping)to reduce betting in Windsor. m... on horse races and that there was reason to hope for good results in Montreal. "Toronto could use a clean-up too, and the United Church must do its part here." he told the Unit- ed church General Council, as- aerting that more than half of the horre betting in Canada is done in Ibronto. An admonition against dishonesty in such matter: as making income tax returns was contained in I re- port-of the Board of Evangelism and Social Service. prented by Dr. Mutchmor. "ft is just so dishonest to steal United Church Active ace Betting from Ottawa II from our next- d00l' nellhbor." Dr. Mutuhmor said. "We must enlarge ou: own concepts of social honesty and not think it string or clever to beat the government." Dr. II. C. Chalmers of Toronto told the General Council that com- mercial interests are "out to put, their signs out seven days a week." lie said United Church ministers ought to be seriously concerned about the inroads of Sunday sport. But Dr. I). .1. Wilson. a lay dole- gate from Montreal. said it was up to the clergy to preach such "crscirerjaclr" sermons that people would prefer going to church to It- tending movies or baseball games. He and many persons who su- thcy omose an open Sunday often ilaten to Sunday baseball games Windsor. If the apples are picked it costs ' b7,000 Damage In At St. Peter's Bay Last Night Gales Whip British Isles LONDON. Sept. 17 -.10?) - Crales whipped the British Isle- today and wind gusts of more than 80 miles an hour were reported from some sections. Eight crew members were res- cued by breeches buoy after the 9.- 000-ton former Portuguese line: Colonial went ,aground while un- der tow to Clyde scrapyard. In Aberdeen. Scotland. a harbo-. watchman was crushed to death by falling poles. Hundreds of small boats and yachts at coastal resorts were torn adrift and damaged. Condition Of G. B. 5. Shows Little Change ,. LUTON. England. Sept. 17 - (AP)-A hospital bulletin reported "no significant change" today tr the condition of George Bernard Shaw. 94-year-old Irish play- wright whose recovery from ar operation on a broken thigh ha: been complicated by a kidney an-: bladder ailment. . The bulletin said Show payed .1 quiet day Saturday. ' Hospital authorities said . a.. was withstanding treatment for his bladder and kidrrey t -bie "very well." Mrs. Alice Laden. Shaw's house- keeper. who saw him today, said "he is bright and very cheerful." Governor Off Bahamas Dies NASSAU. Bahamas. Sept. 17 - (AP) - Sir George Ritchie sati- ford. Govemor of the Bahamas, died today from a heart attack. The 57-year-old veteran cf the British Colonial Service arose early, complaining of indigestion. 1-is we! found dead in his living roomchaia by Lady Sanford. Sir George became governor of these islands off the Florida cons! last February. The Second World War governor of the colony was the Duke cl A Buxawsf A is one who Jusf wont so Couvmceof HALIFAX. Sept. 17 -(CPJ-Oh ficial forecasts issued by We D0m' inion Public Weather Office at Halifax. I There was an autumn chili to the air Sunday all-1100811 W9 W0 shone brightly. Temperatures to- night were failing Ind frost will form before morning at many localities. At Fredericton I mini- mum of 28 degrees is forecast. To- morrow will be another fine aur- umn day as pressure remains nigh. Regional forecasts. valid until until midnight Monday: Prince Edward Island-Monday sunny but cool. Light winds at night. west 16 during daylight hours. Low early Monday morning and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 34 and 00. High tide today It A. M. and 3.47 P. M. at 9.20 P. M. BOIDEN - CAPI TOIMINTINI FERRY SIIVICI . Dally Ineept Sunday Leave Borden vs -C. I no A.M. ins AM. 1.00 PM 1.40 I'.M. 4.80 -EM. 1.10 EM. Sunday Leave Borden Leave C '1'. 0.10 AM. 10.03 AM. 1.00 BM. 03 P3. In RM. 0.00 PM. WOOD ISLANDS-OAIIIOU - nAn.v I have Wool 'iA.M.I A.ll.llA.M. I !.lI.IP.Mi I PM It! on their radios at home. '.cr.:.e"- VER Sun rises at 3.54 A. M. and set! V -. ' vs caribou ' i ll. A.M. 1 rat. g ml. .;.