MAXIMS or A MERE MAN local soon ll ofl it I WI U spontaneously. Issuing Guardian. Iolndsd ilfl. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Cont. ill-it'll (I s Smuts’ Speech Seen As Lightening Tension At Peace Conference island Farmers Apply For Polish Vets MONCTON, Oct. 7- (CPl--Ap- iicatlons have been received from arltlme farmers for 145 Polish war veterans who are coming to Canada to do fil-rm work. M. W. Roberts. regional em- ioyment officer for the National mployment Service said today that farmers in Nova Scotia lead the applicants for Polish war vet- erans with 100 applications. New Brunswick farmers have applied for 35 an 10 requests have been {eceiived rom Prince Edward 1s- an ThyMarltlmes have been given a quotll of 200 of the 4,000 Pollsh veterans who will arrive in Cm- ada the end of this month from Italy. All the veterans are single men and some speak English or French and all have had previous Jinn experience. Mr. Roberts said. Coming Events "Oamew-Mon 6-43.30; Tues. 0.30, "Ga-ms of the Waterfront." "Races at 1.1755... October 14th. 3 Classified Races. 2 Farmers Races. (BY Boss S PARJS. Oct. The speech od Smuts before the plenary session of the peace conference appears to have contributed to a notable lesening of tension here as the conference races toward its con- clusion. The view expressed todsy by the 70-year-old South African Prime Minister that the confer- ence has been successful had an important impact on many dele- gates. some of whom had become completely cynical about its pro- gress. ~ But when the Field Marshal. the only man here who also was at Versailles, came out flatly and said that "answers have been found here to what appeared to be insoluble questions," and that on the whole the conference did not need to achievements. a good many pes- simistic delegates began to revise their gloomy opinions. A British spokesman applaud- ing the speech said it was the addreu “of a thoughtful man who never allows himself to get too close to the conference." The Canadian delegation also seemed more cheerful than prev- lously. Most Canadians feel the Council oi’ Foreign Ministers will accept a good many recommen- dations from the conference. ‘The view also was expressed in Canadian circles that the con- lference in bringing out the full extent of cleavages between the Siav group and the west caused Munro. Canadian Press ts Writer) _ R i t icw her foreign pol- afillziovies at Bradalbone to "lets"?! ‘Lrevnght o! exparmwes ' here. “Dulce, Mom" swwm Hm‘ Returning to Paris after three Monday, October 7th MacKensies Orchestra. "Dance Moreli Hail, Wednes- day. October 9th. MacKenzles Orchestra. "Poultry buying daily live and dressed poultry, paying top mar- ket price. Davis as Fraser, Ltd. “Dance in Seven Mile Hall. Wednesday. Oct. 9. music. "Dance at Flat River Hall. Wed- Bay Good nesziay. October 9th. S nsored Belle River Branch amd an Legion. "Regular Hospital dance. Mon- tague Curling Rink, Saturday night. ' "Buying daily live and dlcssed oultry, paying to market prices. oudreault & Mc uaid. Soulris. "Remember Pantry Sale. Rogers Hardware tomorrow. October 18th, Hampshire W. M. S. "Hampshire yviu. s. will hold Pantry Sale. Rogers Hardware Store. Friday, October 18th. "Chicken Supper and Dance in Cardigan Hall. Monday. October i401. Webster's Orchestra. "Dame ni Leith Burt's. Stan- hope, Wednesday night, October 9th. Music by Island trio. Sale of lunches. "Dance Emerald Hall. Wednes- day. Oct. 0. sponsored bv Miss Beatrice McCcurt and Mrs. Elea- nor McCourt. , "Gtlicken Supper and Dance, Vernon River Hall. Mar-lay, October 14th. C. W. L. Miliview Orchestra. Supper served G P. M. "Collecting llogs snob Iridsy it Davis and Fraser Ltd. for truekinl service through Summer-ville. Aibery Plains. "Vernon River. Avondsle and Hermitage. Phone Gordon Lea 20-2. weeks away. one can see s-re- msrkable change in the general atmosphere and it seems far more favorable to reasonable settle- ments than when dokflifhts We" taking place in commission meet- Rs' s Premier Smuts speech under- lln-ed this new feelinll- 125 Doctors Expected To Attend Meeting HALIFAX. Oct. 7—<CP)--Medr- cal men from many parts of the Maritime; were in Halifax today for the joint annual meeting of the Nova Scotlla Medical Society and Dalhousle University refresher course. The latter got under way with lectures and other features at Camp Hill Hospital auditorium. The business of the society will begin tomorrow with a session of the executive. About 125 doctors are expected to be in attendance at the meet- ing and course. Body 0f Ace Test Pilot Found Wl-TITSTABLE, Kent. England, Oct 7-(C-Pl-'11he ofa mun washed ashore here. today was identified as Geoffrey dc Havil- land, 3'7, ace British tm ilot miso- ing since his experiments. Jet plane fell into the Thames estuary Sept. "7 ‘mm dimloled head in. gut-lea, a. broken arm end s. broken 98. Witnesses had seen De Hovil- land's plane apparently explode in IA! "Dance to O. K. Preabyb Music at the island Country Clup. Travel- lers Rest, Tuesday, October 8th and gridalyr, October 11th. Dancing to . "Victoria Branch of the Canad- lsn legion presents the rptooura ‘Let's Face It" in Vittoria all on ‘Inlusdsv evmznc. October 1on1. Dance after the picture. "Car Bran to srrlvs at Mel- ville snd Albany for our hog Mt- rons shortly. Please contact our agents. William McRae snd Georss MaoKa . remectivsiy. livestock thrusting Board. "itlsbber mo; whit dry blocks. team incl traces. 30 riding wagons. harness. nickel " Producers. Attentionl lull in your Litter Lovers 0on- tut coupons st once. and listen to the uwnm Barrel. Iv night. 8:15 o'clock. station ORYY. Livestock Marketing Board. "Winners in the llsltetlnii loan! ‘H! Invls Contest" last week were. amid Iuloitt. Cordl- mt Dalton. Ion Augus- . and J. Harry Wsttli. Wil- lhe air while on a practfce flight. LONDON. Oct. PL-u (Rveutem-q on me evc of sr smenfls re- British polt are asking whether the Conservative opposi- ticn envisages s coalition with the Labor party st some future date. They point to opposition leader Winston Churchill's references st the Blackpool Conservative con- vention to subimla “D011 Whllih the two principal British parties are on common ground-their sntl-Communiln. their bfbld agreement on loreiln policy. and {heir like mind on some social o: the political scene wonder whet-her Mr. Churchill. perhaps thinking his rty may be unable to regain is former strength within the space of a single Parliament. anticipates the coalition of Conservstivi with their chief adversaries ls s pol- ublc national necessity." Mr. Churchill followed his de- ' mum nil-mil nunciations of mtlonllilllltifl flhflfi'fi l4! “W” be ashamed of 115a- Ponder Possibility Labor-Conservative Coalition ane Roars Alon School Research Director Making Survey In P.E.I. Thirty thousand Canadian lohool children. for one reason or another, are absent from school during each day of the regular school term. according to Dr. A. J. Phillipa, ‘Toronto, national di-r- ector or the study of School Health Research. who arrived in Charlottetown yesterday. Sponsored the Education As Canadian Public Health Associa- tlorl. the financial support for the study of the causes of absenteeism on the part of school children has been provided by the Canadian Life Insurance Officers’ Asocla- tlon who are donating a yearly grant of 810.000 for carrying on the work. The responsibility of making an exhaustive coaat-to-coast survey of Canadian-school conditions has fallen upon Dr. Phillips who is now on an official tour which will take him across Canada and to‘ the capitals and many of the lurker cities in every Province. He has already visited Hall x and Fredericton and will leav Char- lottetown tomorrow for his next stop at Quebec City. Accurate Check Kept ' The method used by the Na- tional Committee for School Health Research is to have 24 rural and 2d urban teachers in every Province keep an accurate report on scientifically-designed charts furnished them by the Na- tional Committee. The work done voluntarily bv the teachers and Dr. Phillips states that with- out this voluntary work on the part of the teachers it would be impossible for the Committee to secure the necessary data which to base their findings. The chart when filled-out by the teacher will enable any one to see at a glance the total num- ber o-f school days lost by any pupil of that particular school. It will also indicate whether the causes were medical or non- medical. If medical. it will show whether the cause was the com- mon cold. sore throat. influenza. bronchitis. tonsolitis. sinus. diges- tive disorders. eve or ear condi- tion. dental condition. scarlet fever, mumps. measles. chicken pox. or other diseases. 1f the cause were non-medical. the chart will show whether it was the inclement weather which kept the pupil home or whether he was needed for home help. If the child is practising truancy or if rnrental neglect is responsible for the absence, those causes will be shown. The analysis will cover the school life of 20.000 Canadian school children. Based or? s na- iiorlal school population of 2.- 000000. the study Will qnbrace one per cent of the school p00- ulalion. D1‘. Phillips says that that percentage is considered suf- ficient to give a fairly accurate picture of the real causes of school absenteeism. After the survey haa been care- fully unalvud. the findings will be fog-worded to the nine Provin- cial departments of education in Canada. Dr. Phillips pointed out that the means for cutting down school absenteeism is solely in the hands of those departments and that his Committee has no auth- omv to rectify any nf the evils. Last night Dr~ Phillips addres- sed the Normal School teachers at Prince of Wales College and this afternoon will address the “respective teachers who are now tgking an intensive short course at the Normal School- 0h SCARBOROUGH. mgland -(OP) --Fishln with rod and line. Capt. C. H. lsby. V. 0., and Col. L. Sadier, members of British ‘runny Club. each caught tuna fish after a one-hour struggle. Of native that seamed to o some way towards socialist inking- thst is. profit-sharing schemes and intimate oyer-enlplme consultation in ndualry. s p101"! has aroused much specula- ton. Whatever the long-term thoughts of the Conservative leadership. it is certain that its immediate pol- icy will be one of tooth-snd-nsil opposition to the Labor Govern- ment. This is particularly the ease as regards measures of socialist legislation. such as the imvtndln nationalisation of the gas an electricity suplv industries and so far as controls and strict ration- are conce ed. t is clear st Mr. Churchill intends to retain leadership of the party and of the opposition in the House of Commons. None may challenge his will in this matter. but the decision will cattle misgivings among s see- tion of the Conservatives who ' economics, was arrested shortly af- Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew‘ crmapowmvwn, CANADA, TUESDAY, OC'l‘OBER s, 1946 g Florida West P.E.I. Growers Harvesting Five And A Half Million Bushels Of Seed Potatoes Within the next three weeks the unprecedented crop of laproxi- mately five million and a half bushels of seed potatoes will be dug in this Province, according 1o Mr. S. G. Peppin, Dolrrinlon sup- ervisor of seed potato certifica- tion. Mr. Peppin bases his esti- mates on a seed-potato acreage of 31.700 which, he says, should give an average yield per acre of 175 bushels, The dlggi-ng of Irish Cobblers is now in full swing. Mr. Peppin says. with Katahdins in King's all-o being dug in some sections. Late blight, which at one time was feared might have a serious effect on the yield, has been com- paratively light and the overall] damage from that disease should not amount to more than one per cent of the crop. Mr. Peppin said. Fields Still Green Practically all fields of Green Mountains and Sabigoes are still green and it would "be a gori- scnd if a heavy frost were to kill every potato-top in the Provmcc wi-thln the next day or two," Mr. Peppin said. He explained his statement by saying that many Freedom Df Sohaotls Short-lived STUTTGART, Oct. 7—(CP)— l-ljalmar Schadst. Adolf Hit- ler's former Minister of Eco- nomics, was arrested by Ger- man police tonight and locked up in Jail here to await trial before a German denazification court on charges of being a "leading" Null. The one-time financial wiz- ard of the Third Reich was arrested in the nearby village of Bncknanx III hour after he arrived here from Nuernbcrg, despite suggestions by the Un- ited States military govern- ment that he and the other two Hitler satellites acquitted last Tuesday by the international military tribunal should not he ra-srrestod until convicted by s German court. His arrest was ordered by the German mlnl-stry of state of Wuerttemberg-Baden after the ministry for denazlflcation classi- fied him as a "leading" Nazi-one who held a major position with Hitler's government and rendered it an extraordinary servi-ce. Conviction would carry a maxi- mum penolty of 10 years impris- onment. confiscation of his ‘o- perty, and debarment from pilitlcai office or administrative positions in industry. The arrest came several nours after Dr. Camlll Sachs, chairman of the Nuernberg denazifioation board. affitounbéd that proceedings had started against Schacht. Franz Von Papen and Hans Fritsche, but that they would not be arrested for some time. Von Prlpen and Frltsche were acquitted with Schacht at Nuernbcrg. The circumstances of Schaciltfls arrest indicated that he would be tried by n German cienuzificallcn court here on charges involving his former connection with the Nazi party , The orrest occurred in the home of Paul Reusch, German mining magnate and a friend of long standing. U. S. military government auth. oritles dissociated themselves from Schachfs arrest by a public stale- ment issued a few hours before he arrived in Stuttgart. To Arrange Final Details Df Executions NUERNBERG, Oct. ‘I -(AP)—- Unlited States Army authorities, steadfastly refueirrg to disclose ds- tails oi how Adolf Hitler's doomed henchmen are open-din their las‘ days, said todav the A lied conbrcl‘ council in Berlin would meet Thursday to arrange final details of the executions. the advice to leave the potatoes in the ground for ten days after the tops have been killed. If all tops were to die now, Mr. Peppin 5x. plained, many farmers, inclined to post one their digging until later, woud ‘have a more disease-free "f0? since that interval would give plenty of time for most of the blight spores to die and would also give the grower better cilancc ,to notice the tubers which have become affected with the disease. l Large Orders Robbed Mr. Peppin said he expects wi-ll be a great demand for refrigerator cars within the ten days as many shippers Pose to get as much of the away as possible before the for refrigerator cars arises. While Mr. Peppin has no offi- cial connection with the market- ing of potatoes, he informed The Guardian yesterday that several large buyers of seed potatoes from Florl-da. North and South Caro- lina. Virginia. and New York have been in the Province recently. Large orders have alrevdy bgen booked for Cuba and Mr. Peppin said he considered the demand for Island seed-potato stock very goo-d. Moncton lawyer Gets Fou°r Years there non- next pro- crop need MONCTON. N. 3.. Oct '1 --(CPi WRoscoe ll. Allen, Mont-ton bar- rister, was sentenced to four years in Dorchester penitentiary with hard labor by Magistrate W. F‘ Lane. in city police court here today. Allen was found guilty on Saturday of a charge of misap- propri-ation or $5,060, the property of A. F‘. Ralph, 5i. Petcrsbul-g. , The money was sent t0 Allen to invest in property but he failed to do so. A second and similar charge of Meanwhile. H.151!!!" sllhlchl- misappropriation of $4.000, the om. of the three acquitted top- prcporty of . Ralph, was Tali-Tm? M1115. WES HITQSIBQ bl! C151’- hrought into court Saturday and mun police in Stuttgart and was locked in Jail to await trial before. a German dsrs-lzification court on charges of being s “lent-ling" Nazi Sehacht, former Nani minister of Alien pleaded not guilty. The cnse has been set over until October 8. tel- he arrived from Nuernlberg. l-iis arrest was ordered by the German Ministry of S of Wuuttem- berg-Baden. Conviction on the charges he is faced with would carry a maximum penalty of 10 ears imprisonment. confiscation of increase in D. S. Digarettefrioes is ropertv and debarment from i" 1,,- g 1 NEW YORK. Oct '1 _r,u=>- pom c“ Office or mm Bu‘ V! The American Tobacco Company positions in industry. As Schacht awaited a new trisl, time was running out for 11 of his former cabinet colleagues. con- demned to death by the Internat- ional Military . The men drawing the extreme penalty are ex ected to hang in the Nuemberg Jal Oct. l6. Unconfirmed reports circulated here that an American Army sergeant would perform the hang- in s and bod been seuetiy blllcted ou side Nuernbcrg. Meanwhile the status of the oth- announced s cigaret price increase of 5 cents a thousand net. effect- ive in the United States today. The increase amounts to 29 cents a thousand at the manufacturers’ level which is subject to the usunl discounts to the trade of l0 per cent and two per cent. The llet increase is equivalent to 1-2 rent a pack, However, it is anticipat- ed that retailers probably will boost prices one cent a puck since they were required to absorb the 1-2 cent increase granted to manu- er two acquitted defendan‘ —diplo- fscturers by office of price ad- mall: Franz Von Ps en and pmpae minktration last April. The prices of cartons are expected to be lift- grdist Hans Pit she-remained doubt. ed from five to seven cents. FOR BETTER BAKING [D580 WHEAT OF CANADA FLOUR Mllilli iROM Siliiiil) W/Hiiii) HARD III! I YOUBII‘ III-ll- potlito growers repeatedly ignore‘ not for his own others. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN He ls benefloesit who sols kindly sake, but for sn- iieads Travel Bureau 1‘ LicuL-Cnl. w. w. Reid. 0-5-9; l who has been Blllwlnted “Qpenlwr o; we P. E, Island Tourist _Bur- eau. (fol. Reid, who is also [rele- tm- of physical fitness for t e Prmtnoc. has been acting-super‘ April 15 last. Will Assume Control Df French- ianguage Paper —(CP)—The Mcn-treai Gazette sail today that Le Devoir, Montreal French-language dolly of which Henri Bourassa. Nation- alist. leader, was the director leading spirit for many years, will shortly come within the direct ovlln- ershtlp of the Roman Catholic Arohbislfop of Montreal, Most Rev. Joseph Chnrbonneau. The Gazettcsaidthe shareswhich gave nztuui ownership, and had been llelzi in trust. y Georges Pet- letier’. who succeeded Mr. Bourassa posai of llle church authorities. “The charm: now und-er way. it is understood. is that the shares will be acquired by the archbishop directly, and active control of the source." the Gazette continued. "As far as can be learned. there are to be m immediate changes in the editorial set-up. Mr. Peiietlcr has been in failing health of late years. and able to give little attent- ion to the paper. and arrangcnlextts for his full retirement will be made. coittinug as now for the time ‘n.3,. Find Three Injured At Wreck Scene ST. JOHN'S. Nfld, Oct. 7 —(CP Collier-Few’ details were knour. here tonight. 0i a United Army single-engined _ which crushed inlo Lake Melville, Labrador. Saturday while routine operational flight from the big nlr base. , Like two previous crashes in the last three vvceiLs woodland spattcred with to reach the wreckage of the plane which carried four persons. Sparse reports received here | three mm were found at the scenq. in ured. while the other man wzll m‘ ing. Names of the Americans‘ aboard the Canadian-designed Norseman were withheld. a occurred. Juis deep into Labrador from the coast. Goose Bay is situated at its south- western tip. 1 visor of the Tourist Bureau since newspapser, , 1 l i 10 PAGES MONTREAL, Oct. 8 —-<'I‘uesda_v)‘ and l l as director, were held at. the dis-i paper will be assumed by the same, neighboring warned Newfoullzliallzi. a starch party had u-mnd be to cut its wnv through Jungle-like‘ Florida MYB-Tflilsmnrlh to Cedar 1_1 r11 h 5,11} . ge trons that a new L ke Melvnc n w ch Q tgfecrlgai‘ hlllnglsesbe built and that the pres- and ent 1 used as a maritime museum. Expose TAMPA, Fia., Oct. 8 — Subscription Delivered 85.00. Mail. “.001 other Provinces l 0.8.5. Iii-ill C0ast Residents Urged To Evacuate All d Areas (Tuesday) - (AP) - The iro- pical hurricane roaring out of the Gulf 0f Mexico struck Tampa Bay at midnight Biondzvv night-on schedule- the storm warning service reported. but no serious effect was immediately apparent inland. Ahead of the whirling winds. charted to sweep across Florida and into the Atlantic seaboard at Jacksonville, was Fioridas rich citrus crop. Already thousands 0f inhabitants had fled from ex- posed areas to places of greater safety. At midnight, Egmont Key, at the mouth of Tampa Bay, reported winds up to 55 miles an hour with gusts consider- ably higher. Lakeiand. 30 miles inland. had winds of about 45 miles an hour-hardly strong enough to wreak widespread destruction. | MIAMI, F121,, Oct. 7 —— (AP) — A vicious tropical hur- 'ricane. officially reported to contain l25-miie winds, spun like a meteorological buzz saw along the Florida west coast tonight, sending thousands of persons scurrying for shelter. from Melbourne to Fernand $2.000.000 DAMAGE HAVANA, Oct. 7 — (AP) The hurricane which whippe across the extreme west end of Cuba into Sunday night a-nd this morning caused damage to fruit and tobacco crops estimat- ed at $2,000,000. Up to tonight, no fatalities had been reported in the wake of the storm. Medical teams left Havana early today for hurricane strick- en Pinlzr Del Rio province, Which. although not thickly pop- ulated. includes the towns of Gllane, Malntua and Le Fe. Centre of the storm was headed for the Tampa Bay area, the rnost populous section of the Flor- l lda west coast. Tampa. Si. Peter.- burg. Bradenton. Clcurwater, Pa lnetlo art-d smaller were in its inovrcated path. The storm was expected late tonight or early tomorrow. This area also contains a rich "gold coast" from St. Petersburg ileath and Pass-a-Grille to new Port Richey, with palatial water- front homes. hotels and beach coi- but the editorial staff generally 1T1 taggs, c. Beach residents on both coasts were advised urgently to evacu- ate the exposed areas as the spinning winds beg/an to sweep llle west coast. Storm warnings extended north of Fernandina to Cape Hatteras. A terrific economic blow was impending as winds began to shake citrus groves whose trees now hold Florida's $i50.000.00.7 orange. grapefruit and tangerine (‘r01’). Fruit shaken to the ground now would be virtually a total loss. Lieut. A. W. Byrd of the U S. Navy's weather ‘"0111. flew 51mm through the eve of the storm at 1 Nm-seman 1'-‘. M. and reported i30-mile Winds. An armv B49 flew nn a mission 17 miles from Goose lJily airport ln ever the ton of the sillfllnil huffi- on a caste to make observations. record- lntzs and photographs from above ~it5 .'i0.000-fnot or higher peak. Stonn forecaster W. 0. Johnson that winds of that violence would extend 40 or more miles 1.1.11. the storm remained of.’- from U. S. Anny authorities Said] Show LIVERPOOL, England _(CP) — Consideration is being given to customs bomb-damaged building be communities l that hurricane winds, felt along tho entire west coast from Nanll" Keys. and added inlawis The Federal storm warning service caused hurricane flags to be hoisted along the west coast from the Florida Keys to Cedar Keys and ordered additional warnings up ina on the east coast. llnorease In Price §Df Dairy Products Seen Justified I l l RUSSELL. 0111., Oct. 7—(CPl-< John Bracken, Progressive Com lscrvativle loader. said tonight in an pddress here that the increase of gtllree cents n quart in the retail price of milk hzlti created justifi- cation for increases in the prices lof other dairy products. Mr, Bracken charged the govern- mcllt was seeking to “get out from under" in its price control policy and sol-d that in returning milk 1 price fi-xing policy to provincial milk ihorrds the Dominion "obviously is , trying to pass on a hot rntato." ' The slttlniion now was that while like provincial hoards had juris- diction over the prices of milk and cream tile Prices Board still re- tained nuthorlty to fix values of other dlliry products. Everyone was "crying" for pro- duction but the output of nutter and cilceso was falling steadily because costs were increasing uéhlle the price remained unchang- e . Mr. Bracken said the Govern- ment's action in shifting the 1mm. trnl of milk prices to the prrrszll- lvlrll hoards had thrown the prices of c-tiler "out of dairy products balance." A PoLlflcAL Matilllla lS NEVER A MoaaY Slwlm; Device‘. 9 OTIiAWA. Oct. ‘FACE-Mal:- lng medals has become his busi- ness since the war ended with something like 3.000.000 slated for eventual distribution to mem- bers of the Canadian forces. At the moment. the royal mint is producing Canadian Volunteer Service Medals at the rate of 2,- 000 a day but that will be in- creased as more machine tools and presses become available. Until there is a stock of medals on hand the services are not re- ceivlng applications for the de- eoraiions. Present plans are to strike more lhan 1.000.000 war medals which will go to all members of the forces. about 1.000.000 Canadian Volunteer Service Medals and about the same number of a var- iety o! other decorations. On one side of the C.V.S.M. is .010 Canadian cost 9f usnlioabs More Than 3,000,000 Medals For C a n a d i-a n S e r v ic omeni;¢j§§.1;,g,,r1.g1;e;m .,.j .6, the other a sailor. a soldier, a pilot. lnemgcrs 0f the C-Wdl-U, W.R..C.N.S. and R.C.A.F. Women's division and a nursirlil 515"‘! l" marching order. Estimates are that apart from the C.v.s.M. and the war medal there will be 745.000 decorations go to the army; 164.000 to the R. C. A. R. 64.450 to the nnvv and 0.000 to the merchant navy These will be made up of : i939- 45 Star. 207.500; Atlantic Star 40.000; Aircrew Europe Star. 12.- 000: France and Germany Star.‘ Bun sets this afternoon at 5.29 185,000; Italy Star, 107.000; Africa‘ am rise.. tomorrow morni at 8.07. star. 12.000: Burma Star, 5.200;‘ 1-‘1111 moon October 10th. .40 PM. Pacific Star. 8.260 and Defence summlgrgldg 1111.. glghtggn mm. Medal 342,000. uics later than Charlottetown To accompany the voiunteer1 WOOD ISLANDS - CAIITBOU d ls 625,000 las are being ma: in recognition“ of overseas‘, longs gvlorodfislalds 8 A.M. 1i AM. service, slthowh immediate re- 1 P. -. . . ouiremenls are only expected to Leave Caribou 0 A. M. 1i A. M. I090, 1 P. M, I P. I. TORONTO. Oct. 7 —(CP)—Mini- mum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 50, 57; Edmonttm 33. 53 ‘Rgglilm 10, 36; WL-rlipeg 28, 40. 1,0 51, 52; (lttavva ‘ liaiifax 50. 70; Charlottetown 45. .55; sydncv 41, 60; Yarmouth 52. 69. 1 HALIFAX. Oct. 8- tCPi-Tues- dayl-Offlclal inland weather ‘fol-crusts issued today by the Do- imiliiflll Pilhlic Weather Office at. Halifax. Forecasts valid until Tucs- i day midnight, 1 Prince Edward Island-Overcast with intermittent rain becomlnit mienr early this morning. cooler. ‘North winds 25 mph decreasinit i his morning to 15 mrwll. Hi8“ W‘ ay at Charlottetown 64 Summary-Clear and cooler. ~§ High line this momixag at 8.04 and tonight at 9.25.