MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN h“; conquered human nature. subdue your appetites and you c- 11“ Guardian. Three Cents. Ipmin] Dally Founded 1881. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew it's a melancholy hath, that great: men have their poor relations. Maxims? A OIL. MERE MAN cum-i- g CHARLOTTIPPOTVN, CANADA, THURSDAY, olcroaaa 2s. 1124s 16 PAGES Subscriptions Delivered $6.00. Mail $5.00; other Provinces I U. l. IMI. EXPECT EARLY U. S. ACTION T0 SIGN ATLANTIC PACT Russians Arm Powerful Police Force In Germany Truman Says Peace, Freedom Depend On Potato Shippers Already Worrying About Car Supply Local potato shippers yesterday citpresled uneasiness respecting the lupply of refrigerator cars for the next few weeks. One important shipper said that unless the Cana- riiar: National Railways is able to route an adequate number of "reefers" to the Province to take care of the export trade in No- vember and December, island sliip- pers may easily lose the preferen- tial duty on seed potatoes as they lost ii on the table stock. ’l'lit~ Canadian Pacific Railway, he sairl. is furnishing thc Saint John Rivet valley with an adequate sup- ply of reefers. That is why New Brunswick potato growers practi- cally filled the whole nf the United Stairs quota of Lflflflrlfltl bushels of lahlr stock. Tlurlng the ncxt month six boats -three for Summcrside and a like number for ChRfl0ilPlO\\'l1——\\'lll load the equivalent of 500 cars for ' A U. S. Election Result By CLYDE BLACKBURN NEW YORK. Oct. 2’l—tA?l- President Truman tonight climax- ed a. series of fear-inspiring char- ges against his Republican op- ponents wlth the blunt declarat- ion that "the peace and freedom of the entire world" depends upon the result of Tuesday's elections. 1n his address prepared for de- livery in Boston tonight the De- mocratic presidential candidate claimed that Republicans, with an "anythlng-to-get-votes" point of view are "helping a Communist intrigue" to beat him. Truman did not explain just why the election outcome would have such an effect on world peace. Governor Thomas Dewey. c011- tlnuing his chase of the Demo- cratio candidate back from the mid-west, followed Truman in Cleveland tonight and tomorrow night will follow him into Boston. Tlhe New York Governor main- tains his determination not to get down to personalities and abuse but it was reported from his train that his standard now is “on an hourly basis" indicating that Dew- ey ‘might. be stung into making a (Continued on Page a Col. 4) the South. but, ill-ginning the first nf Novcmbcr, a largo iuimhcr of reefcr cars will he irccrlcd to lake.- rlirc of shipments to Long island. how Jersey. Pennsylvania. and oth- er Middle Atlantic States. Those rhipments, consisting individually of from one to fivc cars, are com- Claim Canadian Potatoes Sold For llflralivclji small but. in the aggre- liilt‘ rcprcscnt mi important part of tlic island's export trade. More- over, they constitute a permanent, 1 and therefore a dependable portion of the. Island's potato business. Another shipper stated that. a l minimum of 1.200 recfer cars would ‘ he needed for the month of No-i vemllrr. Rniloay officials said last night. "WA expected there would be g 5ll‘ll'lfli-Z€ of reefer cars hut ex- Wcssed the belief that the watt-r flllllnrcnts would rciicvc thc situa- liiili iv a considerable I‘.\'lt‘lli. l"‘""mll5l.\’ visiting railway offi- rials had expressed confidence that the reefer supply situation could be handled satisfactorily. Coming Events "lldllft- K. of C. Hall, Souris. TAllWFFAFLl‘. October" 28th. | .‘"\l‘i‘lllil‘l'iidP llance. New Lon- " l"! Friday. Don't mzss it. "York Concert iroxt, week. Tick- Plo at Hcndcr=oii At Fudmore. _ "ti"! Chickcit Slipper". Hamp- ""l Hall. November 3rd. Women's l liisziitiie. ' .. . l "Reserve October 29th for Mas- Dllrlrndc Dance in St. Peter's Legion ‘ Hal. Goodprlzes and good music. Hhmg Hulmvfen Dance. Mlllvielv wilt Frldlv- October 29m. Miilvlcw a l. Lunches . ‘ "Dance, My, 5 m invert. wry n ursdal‘. Eastern Rhythm Boys‘ rchcstra. ‘.'P0\\‘l'llll Ladies Aid (Ihicken 3:12PM‘ postponed until November l “Barr-reins galore, 15th Anniver- "zleaale now nu. McC-uigan and "Bflfttalhs galore, 15th Anniver- lary sale now on. McGuigan and Boyle. ‘ h"Dance. Ellis Bros. .new Warr- ollltgl. Central Royalty .Thursday. as‘ her 38th. Downtowners and lie MacKenzieh Oghestra. C"5l>ecisl Meeting of Churchill hgnillfllll‘? erg‘ Trustees will lie n s uroh, rn . 0mm ma. s P. M. “Tu” 1 "Mlsquerade. Dance and Bale of “miles. Covehesd Road School, fmober 29th. Prices for best cos- umea. " Ofnweins mum. Islanders collllll‘! Club. ‘travellers Bast. "hi" Where s good time always ex- “Unloadi r Ooivlil t tile "m," Ill I n e In“; It special prices. 8m? ma. Hampshire. ' ' C ‘laloes cheaper than Maine Product AUGUSTA. Mo. Oct. ZZVV-iAPl - Fraudulent labelling and sale. of Canadian potatoes as Maine brands have liecn tiiscoverctl in Mass- achusctts cities, the. liiainc Depart- mciit of Agriculture said tonight. “We are vitally concerned over these reports," said A. M. G. Snule, chief of the Department's inspec- lion Division. . “Every case will be carefully in- vestigated rind prosecutions will rc- suit." He said (.'_vi"il C. Sullivan of Bos- ton, administrator of the Food and Drug Administration for New Eng- land. has promised full cn-opera- tion in the prosecutions. William E. Hirpcy of polatn-lirwintling-iiuv inspector". is in Boston. Smile said. conferring with Federal officials. Canadian pofalocs are being sold Caribou. ‘ Discusses Impact 0i Nfld. iinion 0n Fishing Industry AMHERST, N. 5.. Oct. 2'! -(CP> —'Iii1e impact of Newfoundlarids confederation on the fishing iii- dustry of Canada is going to he “quite considerable." J. Watson McNaught, parliamentary assist- ant to Fisheries Minister Mayhew, said here tonight. Addressing the annual banquet of the United Maritime Fishermen. ‘Mr. McNriught said fitting New- foundlands cod industry into the Maritimes‘ fishing industry was one oi’ the problems in the confed- eration agreement that would re- quire the closest consideration. "Our job is to fit the marketing of Newfoundland cod into the framework of the existing market- ing scheme." Market outlook for fresh and frozen fish was “generally favor- (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) .,¢____ Margarine Ban Judgment Nov. l5 OTTAVifA, Oct. 27—tCPi The Supreme Court decision on the validity of the Parliament's ban on margarine la expected about Nov. l5. it was learned today. The judgment had been ex ccted earlier but was delay- ed by a heavy roll of cases be- fore the court. The court heard nrgument on the constitutionality of the leg- islation early this month. The Dominion argued that the pro- hibiting act. passed 62 years ago. was within the competence of Parliament while opposing groups held that the ban should come under provincial jurisdiction." The island's cranberry crop this season has been an unusually large one and of excellent quality, Mr. Chester E. Shaw. chief fruit and vegetable iiispectoi" for tile Domin- ion Departriiciit nf Agritulttire, said yesterday. Figures for the volume of cran- berry exports are not yet available, Mr. Shaw said, and the exact Qtltlilill)‘ exported can only be estimated, since permits for the shipment of Island cranberries to other Provinces are not required. Most shippers. however. like to have the berries inspected before exporting and copies of those certificates “ill, later mi, give a. fairly accurate idea of the quantity exported. Mr. J. H. Atkinson, superintend- ,ent of the National Park, Caven- dish, said yesterday he never saw rsut-h aivahtinciaiit crop ‘of ci"an- bcnucs in the Park area as there was this fall People came to the on Page 5 Col?!) icllflhllleu Dr. iloutley Resigns ‘lied Cross‘ Position legally in the United States at 60‘ routs to $1 a irundrt-dyrvoight than the support pricr- for pniiiluvs. The fllill‘i‘f‘lllliil. Soulo said. adds to,lhc profit of tinscrupulous donl- crs “hcn the potatoes nrc sold tinder" hlziinc labels at lliainc pn- lflin privcs. At Boston, Sulliwirr snlri ilrc poin- tur-s are living hrmighi ill from Now Bi’tli\S\\'ll‘l( and packed iii bags with Maine brands. "'l‘hcy are able to sell those pn- " the Govern- mcrrt-stiptinrtctl prices on Mmnc potatoes." he raid. less " Maine WINNIPEG. (lot. 2'7 -- iCPI - ‘lhr. l-‘rccl W. Rourlcy of Toronto today aimotinced his trlire-"ncnt as Jifiiiflllf-ii ccmlinlssinncr of the Cari- adlan Red Cross. effective Dec. 31. ‘ The FB-yr-ar-old commissioner" told ilit‘ semi-annual meeting of lllie Sovictvls Contra] Council lic was retiring bCCflusf’. “l feel thc rjoh is for" a lfllllllfl‘ man." Hr- will continue lo represent the lCanndlnn Red (‘rezs on the inter"- lnailnrlal s-cnc nurl will be cou- lsizlzrrtit at home ‘Death Yesterday Bishop Of Edmundston EDMUNDSTON. N.B.. Oct. 27 -- iCl-‘J-Mosi. Rev. AM. Roy, Bishop of rldmtindsuiii, N.B .dicd at l p. ni ..\i)'I‘ today. He. was consecrated as Bishop of Edtiiundston in 1945. His deaf-h ocdurred in hospital here at. the age of s5. Bishop Roy became ill Oct. 1 while preaching a retreat in Quebec City and “'41s in hospital there for 10 days. Returning to Edmundstnn Oct. 17, he was scheduled to speak at several functions but was ob- liged to enter hospital again last Sunday. Dr. Jean Fkartler heart special- ist from Quebec City, reached F41- mundston early today to treat the patient but Bishop Roy suffered a severe heart. attack at noon and died shortly afterward. In August. i945. Msgr. Marle- Antoine Roy became first Bishop of the new Roman Catholic Diocese of Ddirnundsum and the first Pran- ciscsn Father to be consecrated as a Bishop in Canada. Fourth in a family of 16 children, he was 55 years old March 24. He was born at St. Michel de Bei- ieohesse. near Quebec City. where his mother still lives. she is a ndnieoe of Most Rev. Ignace let. eeeondmshop of Montreal. His father. Mule-Arthur Roy. a l Six brothers of Bishop Roy are in the (Tatholic clergy in Quebec "Province. A seventh died while "preparing to join the Franciscans. Three nf his sisters are nuns. He. first studied in the parish school of Si. Michel de Beliechasse. terminating his classical and theological studios at. the Quebec Selminary‘. where he was ordained in i917 by Cardinal Begin. predo- cessor of Cardinal Villenouve. Be- fore joining the Franciscan Order he served one year as assistant Curate in the parish of Seinte- Crolx-de-Lotbhilere. Que. His first religious vows aa a Franciscan were taken in liiiri. Three years later he took his sol- ornn vows and. because of his Un- usual gift. of eloquence. was im- rnedlately assigned to preaching. Bishop Roy became well known throughout Quebec and other Prov- inces as a forceful preacher and writer. rm» a time he specialised in preaching of retreats for laymen as well as for religious oonvents and seminariee. He published several books. Oar- dinai viiieneuve rated his "advice to students of ' '. l colleges“ al orneofthebestbooksonthesub- ject and wrote the foreword. Known es an unttring worker and student. Bishop Roy has continued to devote considerable time to Banner Cranberry Crop In Province This Year iNlaine To Send Dut iPotato Ambassador ‘ aucusra. Me.. Oct. 2'1 -;tAP\ »—Maine will send _a potato, am- lbassadot" to other Atlantic seaboard states to ti"y tn repair" the damage ldone to sales hy loner-priced Cana- lciian offerings. "A l Governor Horace lrhldreth and the executive council approved to- Iday the expenses of Wendell A. {Sharp of Houiton, a state senior lpotato inspector. to make the trip. l Agriculture Conrmissionei" A. K. ,Gaz"tiiicr said that dealers estimate Canadian seed potato sales have icost Maine growers 30 per" cent of ithelr usual seed trade. l Canadian seed potatoes are priced Q60 cents to $1 a hundredweight ‘cheaper than Maine varieties. iDefence Dept. Party Arrives In Charlottetown Arrlvillfl from Greenwood 3'95- ierday aictrnooii. Col. Basil 5- Canipbell. assistant. Deputy De- lieiice Minister, and party of 0i- ltawa officials and RC. A. F. sen- lior officers stayed at The ‘Char- llzutetcwii last night. on their way ti. Summerside this morning. Wear-led by an extremely ard- uous journey. in which mflllll thousands of miles have been cov- ered and all sLfltiClls visited bc- tween Charlotte Islands and Char- lintictown. the party was happy to fire. reminded that after three weeks 30f continuous flight, they, were Oi‘. schedule. Primarily an air reconnaissance. ‘Col. Campbell stated that. some |\‘av_v. Army and nations‘. defence ‘matters were also being attended to. The purpose of the flight, he continued. is to familiarize mem- bers of various departments with local conditions in the field, in- spect. the. condition of plants. fix- rd assets and constructions and wtCohtinued onursae s Col. zi- tfaeuua eacno fa-rmc. died in 1929. study. ALWAYS IIIII i l . i ‘ with Carribean Market Still Open To P.E.I. Potatoes "The sale Of PE. Island table stocir potatoes in the eastern Car-, ribean la not likely tn he seriousiyl‘ affected this year, although gcn-_ eral trade with Canada will proh- lbly be Put in two due to cur- rency difficulties“. stated Mi". T.G. Major, Canadian GOVUIIIPHCIIL Trade Commissioner- at port or Spain, Trinidad. on his arrival in Charlottetown lsst evening, "Local authorities are authoriz- iIiB hard currency for potatoes on the hssis of minimum require- ments," Mr. Major said, "r113. will M9311 that there will be no orp- portunity for expansion this year. Requirements are based on the success or failure of the local veg. etsble crop. tatoes are used to silpplcmciii.." The Commissioner drew a pic- ture od the 160 year old trade be- tween Canada and the Carribcan. from the original fish-flour-lumbei" and molasses-sugalr-rulzn trading, througfh an expansion caused by an increasingly industrialized Canada. This was broadened con- siderabiy during World War II. when United Kingdom goods were unavailable, and the peak “as reached in um. when '10 million‘ dollars worth of purchases were made in Canada. "A Lot of Good Will" "We have maintained an office dc-vvn there for fifty yiears," stated Mr. Major. "and because of Canada has a lrit. of grind-pill." Alter the first. world war, Ca-racl- l_ln National Steamships establish- ed a service arid now. in this alr-. minded world. Trans-Canada Air-‘ ways will inaugurate a service 0n Pl 0.5.131... ‘Jr-tar; Col; i f‘ Expect Big Things From New Wheat By GEORGE KITCHEN OTTAWA. Oct. Z7~tCPl4Th0ib sands of Western Canada farmers will seed Prairie wheatlancls next spring with a new bread grain variety which promises to yield bigger and better crops and creasing wealth. The variety is Saunders wheat. r. strlaiii developed at the Central Experimental Farm here. ft. ma- tures earlier than other varieties. produces a larger yield per acre and is resistant lo many common wheat diseases. It also has fine milling and bread-making quali- ties. Its name is apt. it is identified for two Saunders famous in the Experimental Farm Service -- the late Di". William Saunders. firs’ director of the Domiiilon-oticxitod service, and his son, the late Sir Charles Saunders. first Domiiuon cerealist. The first link in the chain of scientific development leading in the new variety took place in 1938, when experts crossed Thatcher." an. early-ripening variety known as Brandon. Now, there are more than 100.- 000 bushels of Saunders seed av- ailable and these will be distrib- uted to farmers nex: year Saunders ripens four to fivr-days earlier than Thatcher. This is important in early-frost areas. It returns i2 to .5‘! husihels an sci-e against i0 to 50 for Thatcher. The seed will not. be sold in quantities of more than six bush- els to a grower. which import ed po- ln- l lzoooolinllw lMay Be Doubled, Briton Predicts BERLIN, Oct. 2'1 — iReuters) -—- lTlie Russians are organizing and ‘arming a police of 200.000 men in‘ ‘lllClf zonc of Germany and the] ‘filial strength uiay be doubled that, ‘ Gen. Sir Brian Robertson said to- slay. l The Government of the British ‘zone of Germany added: "The {organization is of a distinctly’ lmiiitary character and its arma- iment is formidable. ‘ "I do not kilflw why a police_ [force should require mortars, heavy | =machinc-guns' and armored cars.| [if those things are indeed being; ‘prepared as has been reported.“ l Sir Brian gate this information‘ at a press conference. thus con- lfirming reports to this effect which i ‘he ' ve been current. lately. ldiscontent in the eastern zone of lGermany is "of such proportions las to require a police force of that lslzc. and nature." | "All I can be certain of is thatl lthe police force is being organ“ iized and armed — and it is being lsrmecl to deal with Germans... "lt is evident, that immediate lplans are bemt: made to produce la special police force of 200.000 men ‘in the eastern zone and plenty of ‘reports indicate the final figure is, ‘dotible that.“ - _.Toronto “Slave Boy" Recovering In Hospital TORONTO. Oct. 27 —- iCPl --_ l Patti Gordon Kelly. the l9-year- l ‘old "slave boy" “ho told police- inst u-eck he had been locked in a ‘ closet niid fed on bread and water for" a year. is recuperatltig in hospi- ,tal. it was learned today. Police are law-ailing the result of a physicalj lexamiiiailriu of the boy before lconsidering what. charges. if any, ~ma_v be laid against Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Smith who said the boy had been in their care since he was a young child. l Works ‘For Reds i . First Sta-go l l l Dr. Kurt Fisher. chief of the} In- terior Department in Germany's Soviet Zone, heads the drive to organize a huge Russian-trained "police force" in Eastern Germany. The force. estimated at. up tn 400,-" 000 Germans, many of them recent- l ', ly released. Russian-trained prison- Belglumv He added he was not aware that , Pr; o; war, l; "en n; a "Trojan lllllflmbvufl- horse" army that would maintain, Moscow's (lamination in the event| Big Four" occupation troops are, \‘l'llh(il‘8\\'l'l. l Premier King Prepares To Sail 0n Saturday IJONDON. Oct. 27~Prime Min-i fist-er" Mackenzie King today spent ‘a quiet clay dealing with "corres- pondence in preparation for hisl departure Saturday for home. The Prime Minister, recovering in his hotel room from a blond circulation condition, will sail from Southampton for New York aboard ‘ the liner Queen Elizabeth. ‘ QFEF. SPRAINS ANKLE LONDON. Oct. ZT-JAPU-Queen l Alexandrina of Denmark sprained l "Pr rial-tr foot Tuesday night on j the stairs at Marlborough House.‘ residonce of Queen Mary. Because of the illlillT the Queen. mothcr of Denmark's King Froderick IX. can- . celled her scheduled appearance to- day al. the opening of a Danish art exhibition. Quebec Man l i LA hiAliBAlE. Que. Ocl. 2T ' iFPYA-Lionel Huard today was‘; lcondcnvneci to die March 1 for the ‘canoe-ride murder of the York- ‘lshire bride he brought. home from -the war to bear his three children "aiid live in a windowless Quebec ‘village shack. Thr- verdlct. and sentence ended ‘an eight-day trial which gripped the ‘ interest. of this Murray Bay com- munity. It. left 2T-_\'car-olri iluard broken and sobbing as ltc lranrri heavily’ against the rnil of thc prisoners box l-luard, who served ill the Air Force. coittcndori the drowning of the former Afary Florence Green of Thcvnatrv-nn-Tcos. ' Yfli'l(.‘l1ll'€. duriu: a Sunday rid!‘ ill Rircli Fovr of llic St. Lmvrcnre last May ll N0 SignOT Settlementm‘ In Nfld. Rail Strike l i ST, JFIHNF. Nfld. Oci. 2'7 WCI" -- The plil-llio hore the brunt, ‘of lhc Newfoundland rail strike; indny _as 33M sl-rikiug workers. shower! no sizn of weakening in thcii" 16-day walkout. A Both sidcs in the dispute nit the fiofi-milc-long Government - op-‘ erated line remniucd silent. and there appeared not. even slim impel of an early SPlliPHlNll. “Ll-l. Phillips. spukestuan for the. ... i the dispute before a conciliation‘ hoard would have to be initiated ivy the" Government. l The Governmcnt, ménnwhlle. st-irck in its offer of a lleven-l cont-an-hour increase. 'f‘he rallwaifl l5 cents. l Across the Island interested l groups flooded newspapers and l (ioverriment. offices wit-h their views on the subject. t that. they protested PlYmPnt of higher wages to salary men hut approved of an increase tn thei lower-paid workers. "We have all our pertshsblai livelihood for the year," they said] in a memo to the Commlssionerl of Public Utilities. To Hang l For WarBrides Murder was an accident. A rural _iury had listened to 44 witnesses. Then. in an hour and 10 minutes brought. in a guilt, l verdict after studying for s second l time the .=inr_v of a neighbor's pl-a». ty daughter on whom Huard had cast, his oyo The l2 iurvmcn gave their \'t"l'fil1‘t individually. Jlldze Alfred Savard pmnmincecl] scntciicc after declarin: earlier, that Hunrri‘; story of accidental canoc-drorvitiilc was not convlnruilz. A linrk-liriired Mnrioito Trcmhlni". ulin livcd iirxf door to the lluard shack told ihc court that. she ox- chaiigcd sccrct lcticrs uith thc ac-_ cuscrl. l The 31-year-old girl doclaredihat Hunrd said he would tel rid of hi5,‘ wifc "llic llliil fmc Sunday" ihall Parr!‘ rilrillil’. A rdcnt. of the Newfoundland Fed-j oration of Labor. said his group took a "serious vicw" oi lhe strike and felt lhc ‘workers are justified‘ in their dcsuwirds" l "I trope the Government Will, release the grfiwlng gravity" at mice . so that our people will not suffer unneccssai"il_v." he said. Supplies at many stores in lSO-l tflilfir‘ in some sections urns at a, "workers, said any move to ta-knlstandstili hccatise of lack of gas-MM rlsps o-line. 1 p, The iuipply of rnntor fuel at. Grand Fails was exhausted Oct. l 2d. ‘l The Theron States Air Force resorted to parachute packages in‘ repeater pnfiis and Trans-Canada Air Linc; sinrtcd a twioe-dailyl food. flight tn- (lander Atrportfl Maritime Central Airways all Charlottetown is operating a pas-" and the west. coast. j The n-orkers were reported with‘ sufficient funds in carry on withl a long strike. One ‘hrotherhooril was said in have 00001100 for‘ were suggestions the tie-up might: continue until the Old Colonyl joined Canada as a tenth prov- WJIJS Df Negotiations Completed Dy JOHN HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, Oct. 2'7 — iCP) -As soon as the elections are out of the way next week, the United States is expected to lay the basil for a decision on a military cl- ilance. vwith Western Europe. State Department officials, ll learned today. plan to con- suit leaders of Congress and the major political parties to find what they will su-pport in the final drafting of a proposed treaty t: create a North Atlantic rnutu defence system, -. Robert Lnvett, Under-Secretary of State, told a press conference today that the first phase of the projected non-Communist alliance already has been completed. Thil phase consisted of "exploratory" talks held here during the summer among Lovett and the Ambassad- rus of Canada. Britain. France, the Netherlands and Understandings reached in these talks did not involve commitments hy anyone on anything, Lmeth said. Ho-wever. they did result in a general agreement among i-hq participants on the form and scope of the defence arrangement, As a result of the Washington talks, the five Western European] nations decided in Paris yesterday to invite the United States formn ally to join with them in writing a treaty. Their invitation is one pected to he accepted. Lovett said the next steps can! be. taken swiftly. Otitiinea sketched ' ‘The rough outlines of the prim posed agreement were sketched lg the talks this summer, Dipiomatila authorities forecast that. half dozen major points will surviv‘ iContiiiued on Page 5 Col. a) l " 4m cum. ' 4o Call. flue Dlilfiiit. tam: "(its Back (a far roam‘ Maureen-r 9 xst-‘T/ . _ 1\\) w?‘ g/ =u-rl- TYHZONTO. Oct. 2T ~~—i.CPl -_ Minimum and maximum temperat- ures: Vancouver 3i 52; Edmonton 25 54; Winnipeg 30 B5: London ."- 65: Toronto 4i 52: Ottawa 39 45: Montreal .17 4D; Quebec 33 41; Saint John 39 B6; Monclon 42 5i; Halifax 4-4 M; Charlottetown 4R 50; Sydney 45 50; Yarrnciutli 42 57. HALIFAX. Oct. ZT-JCPl-Offi- cial inland forecasts issued tonight by the: Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax and valid until midnight Thursday. Synopsis: "l'ho wcriiher was fine ili most soctuuis nf ill!‘ Marilimes Wednesday but \\'ifit‘i§ were strong in the eastern regions A high prey. sure area over the Si. Lawrence vnllrxv is moving eastward and promises clear skies Thursday’. Winds will he much lighter and lcinpornttires should rise tn ncar 6n in many placcs. Regional forecasts. Prince Edward island. Clear dun’ ing the night and Thursday. Frost ru" foil ovcr" low ground in the. early morning. North winds l5 diminish. ing Thursday afternoon to light winds. Not much change in tem- perature. Low early Thursday lmorning and high in the afternoon at Fliarinilettnvn 35 and 55. Higlh tide this morning at 6.11 ,lateri areas wcrc running low" andlmm lonlgm M 74h Sun sets thL: afternoon at 4.5.5 tomorrow morning no ..‘l.’i. New moon Noverrnher 1st, 2.0] A. M. Daily Except. Sunday CAR. FERRY "ABEGWEIP Standard Time men. walking out Oct, l1. sskerhdrop one ton of supplies to lonely; bu". mp5,“, up gm" 1 pm, 4.30 p. m. Leaves Tormentine 10.95 a. m., 2.40 p m., 7.30 p. m SUNDAY Partners at St. Andrew's wlrerfsenger service between st. Johnlsippqu-g name" 6.45 P. M. Leaves Tormentine l l’. M. WOOD ISLAND! — CARIBOU Daily including Sunday Standard Time Leaves Wood Islands. Prince Nova produce on hand which ‘means our l strike relief if necessary and there. 8 a.ln., I p. m. Charles A. Dunning. i1 arm. lpdn, Leaves Caribou. Charles A. Dun- ning s um. I pm. James Pond, newiy-eleced pres- lace-expected sometime in March. l Prince Nova, 11 can, 4 pan.