my wits GALLAGHER. ritANKP'UR.T. Germany. Qct. 23-- (Ap) .. outright rejection of the soviet bioc's latest "peace bid" and , use between East and West to ream divided Germany appeared ggrtain tonight. L550;-mg in nearby Prague under tau, Molotov. soviet Deputy Pm- mier. Russian-satellite foreign min- Mgs approved Saturday night a long tirade against the West and a four-point soviet proposal for :0 r Coming Events "Dance, Iona Hall, Tuesday. Oct. 24th. uM,,u your Films to Garnllum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Masquerade Dance in St. Tercsas Hall. October 25th. "Dance. Grandview. Oct. 26. B- B. Ramblers Orchestra. "Hops River Bazaar and chick- en supper. Oct. 24 and 25. "l-lallowe'en Dance. MUMGW Hall. Wednesday. October 26th- "lteservo November 7th. Chicken supper and Bazaar. South Rustico Hall. "Show Mor:ll Community Hall. every Tuesday, Friday, Saturday. Show starts 8 o'clock. "Come to the regular Dance I-3 the Bonshaw Inn T ugly filth!- scNaiIl'r13tch!!I1'l."” ' " ' "Masquerade Dance in Fortune Hall on October 28th. Modern and oldtime music. Prizes. Lunches. "Masquerade Dance, French River Hail. Monday. Oct. 80. Prizes for best and funniest costumes. "United Church Chicken and Ham supper, A. ” le Hall. Oct. 25th. Supper from 6 P. M. "Buying live poultry as usual Tuesday A. M. till noon. Highest market prices. R. L. Dickieson. New Glasgow. l "seven Mile Bay Carnival: also Chicken and Ham Supper. October 25th. supper served at 5 o'clock. "Regular Dance at afyllne. New Iondon every Tuesday night. Danc- ing from 0 till 1. Good music and canteen service. "Cornwall I-fall. Wednesday. October 25th. Ches and Loman and the Country'cousins. sale of candy. I "The Annual ” Meeting of the Vernon River Credit Union Ltd.. will be held in Vernon River Parish Hall on Wednesday, October ?5lh .et 8 P. M. "Progrusive conservatives of Southport Poll are requested to meet at Biaks Wood's. Monday av- ruins. it 8 P. M. C i I 2-Bld- Blako Wood, Chairman. "The Annual Meetinl of the Sumsnerneld Credit Union me. will be held in suminerileld Hall Special speaker E. M.- Gvrmln Lunch will be served. "Notice. Buying live Fowl. Chickens and cspons. Mend of each week. beginning the . Highest .prlces. G. C. Green. Emerald. "Reserve Wednesday. October for Chicken and Ham supper. Wlnslos station I-fall. sponsor y Highneld Presbyterian church. Snorer served from 5 P. M. "conservative Electors of aatley River Poll are r uested meat at Hall. Monday. tober rd. at 0 o'clock. to ap int dele- amoto attend Nomina in con- ... . Florence Murray. evacuated from Korea on It afternoon. October son. the New Glasgow united at the Mission Bandmfliatgk 3;Ieio'ok in his Caven- ureh. Dr. Murray outright Rejection of Latest Russian "Peace Bid” Certain German settlement. No one here - British, Eb-ouch. American or German - saw any hope of negotiations growing out of the soviet bloc's plan. nor anything new in the charges the west is re- arming Germany. Propaganda Show In London. official Foreign office spokesmen declined comment but other Whitehall sources said: "It is clearly a propaganda show." The Soviet-directed Prague show was viewed more as propaganda than diplomacy and designed to achieve these effects: i.'Frighten the West. partic- ularly wobbly France. into re- lecting Germany from Western Europe's defence on the grounds it might "provoke" the Rue- sians. 2. serve as 3 covers for Rus- sia's own program for rea.rm- lng East Germany. which cert- ” villa. said he iliew from Stockholm air at Harwell. Italian is alnly raises the fears of the German-hating Czechs and Poles despite being under Mos- cow's thumb. 3. Another shot in the Rus- sian propaganda campaign ssh tlng,up the Communist bloc as guardians of the peace and the only ones who want Germany united. The emphasis the Communists placed on the move to incorporate Germans into the Western defences was considered significant. The Prague meeting took place within a few days after a sharp soviet note to France. Britain and the U.S. protesting against the New Yvrk, 328 Three d9clsl.ees.,qn. i Oerindliy. Kremlin s......'..:. There was no doubt here that Western Europe's resrn-lament and more particularly German particip- ation therein has shaken the Knut- lin more than any Western move since the end of the war. Molotov. veteran of many fruit- less Big Four meetings on Germ- any. was certain to know that he was torpedolng any hope of West- ern agreement to talks on Germ- any when he inserted point four in his program. calling for equal ..-presentation between East and west German Governments in fl .m......m...........A. (Continued on Page 1:. Col. 4) N. S. Has first Snow of icason HALIFAX. Oct. 23 -- (CP) - Nova Scotla had its first snow fall of the season today during one of the coldest October days on re- cord. One tenth of an inch of snow fell on Halifax. and in the An- napolis Valley orchardlsts were caught with many apples still on their trees. Freezing weather predicted for tonight by, the wea- therman is expected to cause con- siderable damage toltbe crop. Prisoners.-Are Taken From Train And-Shol By DON WIIITEIIIAD SUNCHON. North Korea, Oct. 2; - (Delayed) - (AP) Korean Communists massacred at least 03 11.5. prisoners of -war Friday night near the sunchon railway tunnel 10 miles north of here. The Communist guards led their prisoners from a train into nearby fields under the pretext of taklnz them to supper. Then they machine-gunned the Americans, sixty-six men were killed on the spot. Two otheradied during the night of their wounds, By some miracle. at least 21 men, many of them woiuided. lived through the hour-long massacre to tell the story of horror. The survivors have been flown to Japan for treatment. Equal to " ' id The slaughter of the American prisoners was equal to anything I saw in 1945 at Buchenwald. the,in- famous Nazi concentration camp. The thin. emaciated bodies of the men who had been prisoners more than two months were piled in three groups along the railroad tracks. These men had been shot, piled one on the otheriand their bodies covered-with earth. some Americans escaped from the train before the Reds decided to machine-gun their prisoners. Those have been making their way south Tor several days. I set out from sunchon with Brig.-Gen. Frank A. Allen. of Cleve- land, 0., deputy commando cf the let Cavalry Division. and Richard Tucker of the Baltimore Sun to ciieclcon the repoluif-'islaughter.l A South Korean army officer and A . (Continued on Page 13 Col. 4) Is Acquiiled In lye-Beer.Deaili , AUGUSTA. Me.. Oct. 22 -(AP) - A Fort Falrfield 'farmhand once convicted of manslaughter in the lye-spiked beer death of his fiancee has been freed of all charges. At- torney General Ralph W. Farris said Saturday. Carl Peterson. now 41. was sentenced to five to 10 years in prison in May. 1949. in the death of Yvonne Poitras. 21. a widow of Van Buren. at a party in 1943. The Maine Supreme Court order- ed a new trial last August. The court said Superior Court Justice Percy T. Clarke's instructions to the jury were "highly prejudicial" to Peterson and that the court should have considered Peter-son's "mental age of six years and eight months" in judging a con- fesslon. Farris said he advised A. ostook County prosecutor James Archibald to drop the case because the high court held there was lack of evi- dence. , The stale claimed Peterson ad- mitted he intended the lye-spiked draught for another man who showed interest in Mrs. Poitras. Peterson now is entirely free. Report Atomic Scientist Has Skipped ROME. Oct. as - (Monday) .- (AP) .. The Italian atomic scient- ist. Dr. Bruno Ponteeorvo, new a British citlsen, saued on a Russian ship from Finland for Leningrad aept, 2. the Stockholm correspond- ant of Il nsmpo reported today. The correspondent. I-Ienrlco Alta- to Helsinki to investigstn the in- tunationel mystery of the where- abouts of Pontscorvo. llescrlbed by European scientists as one of the foremost '1-esesrohegs in tritium. bule element or the hydrogen bomb. Since July 25 the Icldlltllfwhsl been on a vacation from Britain where he worked for two years at the British atomic research 91,0!!! GWIIIIDII N- ported Saturday that he had ski tonuasia. ":1 'rempo's correspondent said "Oak River Bazaar and chicken supper. Oct. 24th. 29th. a --c i the Harri ton if. r; U. ergxlrlholz Ditty. M MAY: 0”- 23;-a .3 3 'o'clock. Admission as cents. oeAi”n mu, Wednesday, Oct. 28th, Masquerade din”. WI"- Lsdles with lunches free. Mao- il be Neilrs orchestra. Sponsored by Credit Union. . .. To Russia . Pontecorvo. his Swedish-barn wife and three children flew from Italy to Copenhagen where they left their Swedish plane "for fear of being followed" and took an ex- press for Stockholm. At Stockholm. he reported. the family spent the night of Sept. l at a house occupied by the soviet Embassy An attendant at sfcckholm's Brooms Airport recalled that they arrived at the airport. the next morning in a soviet ilimbassy car with in suitcases. the correspond- ent said. . Finland's Interior Minister. Jo- hannes Viroelinen, new to Helsinki on the same plane. .Altavilia sold the scientist and his family were driven in an auto- moblla ifs-om the soviet legatlon in the harbor. The correspondent said the nus- sian ship Rellostov weighed anchor as soon as the scientist and his family were aboard. The shy) was due in JIM. I. he added. Pontsecno worked in Montreal and at atomic project at obaiir tluver. t.. during the war. Most 0 is that Isoorvo was in g on a IrltlsiI- passpo . Itemsnfo-sen. which printed the first news of his departure. said however. that it had .109!” , his passport was Canadian. 68 Americans Are Massacred By Korean Reds The late Hon. Mr. Cox Tributes To tale Minister Expressive of public sentiment on both sides of politics are the following tributes received last evening to, the memory of the late Hon. E. ii. Cox: From I-Ion. A. W. Matheson. Act- ing Premier and Minister of Health and Welfare: "The Government of this Prov- ince has suffered a severe loss in the sudden passing of Hon. Harry H. Cox, the Minister of Public Works and Highways. Although he held the portfolio in the pres- e t Government for less than a gar. his business experience and good common sense helps imoke an easier task for those who served with and under him. He will be greatly missed in Council where his advice was sought and valued. "Out late colleague represented his constituency continuously for over twenty years. Any man who could hold the confidence of his neighbours in six successive elect- ions must have been able to do something of value for ihese peo- ple. In each election he was re- turned with a handsome majority. "When he fool: over the heavy duties of Minister. Mr. Cox gave all his time and devoted many overtime hours to meeting the public and hearing their proposals. It can truly be said that he served the people cf the Province faith- fully and well. No one will doubt the statement that he sacrificed himself for his country. "Many members of the Coun- cil often looked to Mr. cox for guidance in the administration or their own departments and always found that he was willing to help and that his advice was sound. "We extend our deepest sym- Dallw to his bereaved widow and son." From Hon. Dr. W. .7. P. Mas- Mfllan. former Leailer of the Op- position: "I wish to pay my tribute of respect to the late Hon. 1-l.H. Cox. mister of Public Works in the Prince Edward Island Government "some days ago he was stricken with a grave cardiac attack from which he failed to rally. He was my great personal friend and political enemy for nearly thirty years. It is a coincidence that he and I have the same length of service. in the Provincial l.cgisl'ii.- ure. I will greatly miss him as he also claimed" the dennship of the House.--rwhich is held by me. "Harry. so well known in this Province. was a splendid type nl business man. a very charitable man who contributed generously to all financial drives and helped out many a poor family and gave many fishermen and laborers their start. He will be greatly missed in the Legislature vvherehs was an universal favorite and a great op- ponent ln debate. in: ms.-l I cross- ed swords scores of ti-mes. yet I had no better friend and I deeply deplore his death. As an admin- istrator. I can say that he was good and just. always showing fair play and doing the right thing between the department in- volved and the citizen. "I have seen those qualifies of justice and fair play exem llfied in many cases in his aclm irat- ion of the Fisher-men's Loan Board and the troublesome De- partment of Public Works and I am afraid that the great respon- sibility and heavy work in the Public Works Department was in- directly the cause of his deaih. Thus I say Good-bye to another of my political adversaries. and to a very great friend. "I extend very sincere sympathy to. his widow and family." SUNDRIDGE. Ont. Oct. 2! - (OP) -- Digging in her garden. Mrs. M. Christie of Sundridge found her wedding ring which she lost it years ago. dv-ton Death Yesterday Of Hon. Harry I-I. goo: pg Prince Edward Island has lost one of its most popular men in public life in the person of the Hon. H. H. COX. Minister of Baibllc, Works and Highways. who passed away yesterday at his, home in Morell. He was seventy-five years of age, and had been stricken several days ago with a heart attack. The late Harry Herbert Cox had . I colourful career as a merchant. lobster factory operator and ex- gccutive before entering polif.cs as Liberal representative in the Legislature for the Second District of King's. Defeated by a small majority in l923, he came back to win in the general election of June 25, 1927, and was re-elected continuously since that time. A non-portfolio member of the Government for some years. his appointment last February as Miri- istcr of Public Works and li;gh- ways was hailed with general ap- proval on both sides of the House and throughout the Province. He had acted as Minister of this de- partment on a previous occasion. and also served for some time as chairman of the Fisherman's Loan Board and the Provinces repre- scniatlve, on the Atlantic Herring Commission. Since his portfolio appointment he served occasional- ly as acting Premier during the absence of Premier Jones from the Province. Born at Morcll. June 17. 1875, Mr. Cox was a son of the late Julius Cox and Jane Ellen Jeffs Cox. He received his education in the dis- trict school and early in life want to work with his uncle. the late Hon. R. W. Cox, who ran a suc- cessful general store. In 1910 Mr. Cox took over this business him- self and built up a flourishing trade which he expanded until his retirement a few years ago. Other business interests in which liars 9gag.inciiise-i.the.ooerauon of a o s er factory at Neufrage and management of the St. Peter's Starch Company, Ltd.. of which its was a director for many years. isle had also been vice-president of the Charlottetown Can Company since its formation in laid. In addition to his many other activities. Mr. Cox supervised his flourishing 180-acre farm at Morcll. I A man of very genial personal- ily.'Mr. Cox was noted in ihe Legislature for his ready wit and humour, as well as for his sound common sense and practical know- ledge of business affairs. Up un- til his last illness. his youthful mp- peorance belied his advancing years, and he gave unstinlingly of his health and energy to his pub- lic duties. He was noted also for his generosity in community causes, and for his keen interest in the (Continued on Page 13 (:-offs? Rising Newspaper Costs Empliasized TORONTO. Oct. 22 -(OP)-Roy H. Thomson. President of the can- adian Daily Newspapers Associ- ation. said today that rising news- paper casts "cannot result other- wise than in increased costs being passed on to the newspaper rand- er and advertiser." Commenting on price increases recently announced by two news- print mllls. Mr. Thomson said in his opinion a general price in- crease in newsprint could not be absorbed by the publishers. Abltibl Power and Paper Co. I..ld.. advised its customers on Oct. illihat it will increase its news- print from 5100 to 3110 a ton de- llvered in New York and from 890 to sioo in the base Canadian price A similar increase was announced Oct. 12 by Powell River Paper Co. "In addition to considerable in- creases in labor costs,'zlnc, mats. ink and other essentials." said Mr. Thomson. ” ,. int costs alone were up 23 per cent since 1946. "while Canadian daily news- papers are today selling advertis- irsz at s miillne (rate per line per million circulation) rats of 32.8? against is 1939 miillne rate of S233 because of increased circul- ations in that period. it would yet see-n probable that there may be fairly general increases in present advertising and circulation rates. "The Canadian Daily Newspap- er's present rate is abnormally low by the standard of advertising rates in the English-meaklng world, as recently measured by the British Export Trade ne- eesrch Organization. ."At the current subscrfpilan rslss prevailing in Canada. a great number of newspapers are provid- ing the reader with a newspaper at a charge to the reader that does not even begin to equal the cost of the newsprint involved in the production of the newspaper." circulation of the 87 Canadian Daily Newspsper1Assoeiatlon mem- ber nswapapers 4d0.0fI). ilr. Thomson mentioned. and it is al- most impossible to keep abreast of current need for newsprint. Covers Prince Edward Island Like .... Devi CI'lAIlI1Yl'TE'l'0WN, CANADA. MONDAY. OCPOBER 23, 1950 ' VANGUARD OF SP CIAL BRIGADE SAIL r. a Islalui Men Included In Detachment (By Dave Mclsstools. Canadian Press Staff Writer) SEATTLE. Oct. 22-(CF)--The advance party of Canada's special brigade was on the high seas to- night. bound for a tiny island in the vast Pacific. It was a lonely departure Satur- day as the United States n!Vi' transport ship Jame O'Hara slip- ped her lines and pushed off into a grey mist. A U. S. srrny band played "Rule Britannia" while hundreds of Canadian and American troops stood on the top deck. sharply out- lined against the white super- structure. Some beat t:me to the music on the ships rails. Though the advance party's des- tination was not given. it was gen- Prince Edward Islanders in the advance group included Capt. A.B. MacRae of Char- lottetown and Ptes. l-l.J. Deveau of Charlottetown and Lloyd Hiokox of Kensington. er'ally known -to he Okinawa. The army said the entire 10.000-man brigade would follow by the end of November at the isiest. (Previous information from Ot- tawa. however. was that only part of the Korean brigade-possibly not more than a battalion-would go to Korea. The belief in inform- ed quarters in the Canadian cap- ital was that most of the 10.000 men in the special force would go to Europe after advanced training in the Southern United States.) Gruesome Touch There was a gruesome touch to the send-off. About an hour before sailing the body of a man was found floating in the water on the ship's starboard side. Scores of tro s and the few nurs- es aboard watched in silence as the body was pulled on to the pier. But the incident, ,vvsuooMorsoi- fen as the Canadians bustled aboard and got bunked down. A fleet of buses took the Canad- ian troops-some 350-from the big army base at Fort Lewis to the port. The American troops were already aboard. They oraned their necks as the Canadians arrived in full kit. and sorted themselves into plaboons. One G. I. said: "Geeze. look at the llmeys." The men fell out as their names were called and started up the gang- plank. on their webbing was hung the familiar pack. water bottle and tin helmet. one man had a crib- 14 PAGES guess-Iyupunel o5erl'rovhoesOll.I.l'lh. 3 FOR FAR EAST i n a Crew Missing After 1'-'s-eiglster Disappears Off Newfoundland Foiirlnches of snow in Saint ign SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Oct. 22 - (OP) - Four inches of snow fell in Saint John today. s rec- crd amount for October. The previous record was three inches in 1902. Other centres in the southern half of New.Bruns- wick reported smaller snowfalls today. The temperature at Saint John tonight was 31 and drop- ping toward the October record of 25. Probciiurder Case (Continued on Page is col. 2) ,Al Sainllohn l SAINT JOHN. N. 3., Oct. 22- (CPI-Police tonight were investig- ating what they tczrmed a case of murder in the death of Leslie Steele. 70. Victim of an assault near his Paradise Row home Friday night. the elderly janitor died in hospital Saturday afternoon. An inquest will be held Thursday night. Steele suffered head injuries and a jaw fracture. A brick. tllieved to have been the assault weapon. lay in blood where the victim fell. l-lls wallet was not stolen. No arrest has been made but pol- ice sought two youth: for question- ing. Residents reported seeing them running away from the scene. Wholesale Sales Up For This Your orrawa; oct.- n-"-- 169) -- Dollcr volume of wholesale sales in Canada during the first eight months of the year was four per cent higher than in the corre- -sponding period of 1949. the Eu- reau of Statistics reported today. In August. the sales were 18 per cent higher than in July and 17 per cent above August, 1949. FORT LEWIS, Wssh.. Oct. 22- (CP) - Note to wives. girl friends. mothers, dads and assorted rela- tives: ' For Canadian troops proceeding to the Pacific. the address is: "Number; rank: name; unit: CAPO 5,000; care of Postmaster, Vancou- ver. B.C." Says Russians Appear Masters In Mine Warfare By Stan Swintos. ABOARD U. S. DESTROYER COLLETP OFF WONSAN. KOREA. Oct. 22-(AP-A N mile long mine- field which blocked off the East coast Communist port of Woman was laid with soviet mines under Russian supervision. a United States admiral declared today. Five Allied minesweepers have been sunk thus far in Korean wat- ers. Rear Admiral Alien E. Smith. commander of the United Nations blockade and escort force in Korea, told a press conference that the Woman minefield showed such mastery of this type of sea warfare that: "The United States must put minesweeping on the same priority level as entl-submarine and carrier warfare." "The Russian apparently have everything we have and everything the Germans had in mining tech- niques," he added. Smith of Detroit. Mlch.. admitted the Korean vvair "caught us half- way between the . ” stage and getting it (counter-measures) into the field." He predicted that within one year. 35 the U. S. will have cruisers which can launch guided missiles at mine fields. Capt. R. '1'; spofford. in charge of the woman mine sweeping oper- ation, said it was a field of between- 2.000 and 3.000 mines. He said there. was "plenty of evidence" the Rus- sians supplied the mines. mine- laylng equipment and supervision. Strange Events Excite J amcs Bay Residentsl TORONTO. Oct. 22 - (GP) - The Telegram said Saturday in a dispatch from Moose Factory that Indiana and white residents of fur- tradlng communities on James Bay are in a state of fearful excitement because of a series of weird events for which they know no reasonable explanation. The story. written by Don Dele- plants. roving reporter in North- ern Ontarlo. sad detailed r have gone to Royal can an Mounted Police at Ottawa. It lists these events: Appearance of s water-bome ob: ject rm three educated Indians insist ws a submarine; A strange red light which hung almost stationary in the sky around the Hudson's Bay Company post at Nemaska. 80 miles inland from Rupert's House on the east coast of the bay. and was observed by the factcr and his assistant; Appearance of a large airplane accompanied by a smaller one ”whlch stood still in the sky" over ...m.......R........:..C. racing 50 miles west to Nemaska: Three huge explosions "like earth- quakes" inland from the east coast last March which shook every building at Old Factory River; strange white men who ran to hide in the forest when seen by Indians around Nrt George. At Ottawa. Commissioner 8. T. wood of the R..O.M.P. said head- quarters had received a report of Indians sighting "either a isrge sea creature or a submarine." However. he said the idea of a sub had been discarded as impractical because at the point of sighting James Bay was top shallow for submarine oper- atlons. The Commissioner said the R..C.- M.P.. convinced there was no sub- marine involvedmvaa doing nothing about the matter. ' "we have not heard anything about the other weird stories men- tioned." he added. Military intelligence and the Air Poroe said none of the reports de- scribed in the Moose Factory storv , Northern Quebec and sent Indians had been received thus. 0 JOHN'S. Nfld.. Oct, as -(CPI - A former Canadian freighter. that 1.104-fan North Voyageur. disap- peared ln the North Atlantic of! Newfoundland tonight and ho? agents here said it looked as if she had gone down. Ships which raced to the spot after a frantic SOS was heard from the North Voyageur found no trace of her or her crew members. lost. a spokesman for her agents said: "I'm afraid it looks that way.” Marconi Radio here said all ships had, given up'the search after sweeping the area 60 miles off Ar- gcntia. Nfld.. from where the North Voyageur sent her brief SOS, cape Race Marine Radio gave this terse report on the situation: "Ships searching the distressed Ir?-it fnr the North Voyageur have con- cluded their search and are pro- ceeding on their respective courses. There is ncthing to report. "A Coast Guard plane searching the area has returned to base due to darkness. All shipping has been utloned to keep a sharp lookout and report anything sighted in the distressed area." Number of crew members IbO&l'lI the former Canadian craft was not known but one official said she prcbably carried about 25. Fear Crew beet Whether they had chance to ab- andon the North Voy889l11' ill mi” boats was not known but as no trace of them was found by "1"" search vessels it was feared hero they may have perished. A plane from the United stat-.3 base at Argentia also swept the area southeast of the base where the North Voyageur last was re- -. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3!”, crime is GUY Viiio knows How A (mac. Si-ioui-D as Donia BUT CAN'T -f 1 ll TORONTO. Oct. II - (CP) - Minimum temperatures observed. between 7:30 p.m. and"l:30 am. EST; maximum temperatures ob- served betwcen 7:30 am. and 7:3 p.m. EST; Victoria 40 50; Edmon- ton 23 47: Calgary 20 48; Regina 32 42; Winnipeg 23 41; Toronto 47 53; Ottawa 37 43; Montreal 35 43; Quebec 37 41; Saint John -- 34: Monctcn 29 30: Halifax 38 40: Charlottetown 31 38; Sydney 34. 42: armoulh 40 55; St. John's Nfld. 40. D HALIFAX, Oct. 22 - (CF) Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax. Synopsis: Sunday was one of the coldest October days on record in the Southern Msrliimas. Temperatures did not go above 40 degrees in many localities, and snow fell in Nova Scotla and Southern New Brunswick. ' This evening skies were clear in all regions except Nova Scotln where it was still overcast. Mon- day will be sunny and cool in all the district. Regional forecasts. valid until Monday-Prince Edward island: Clear and continuing cool. Light winds. Low and high Monday at Charlottetown 25 and 43. High tide today at 8.59 A. M. and 9.28 P. M. Sun rises at 6.38 A. M. and sets at 5.18 P. M. ' I surnmerslde tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. BOBDEN - CAPE TOIMENIINE FERRY SERVICE Dally Except Sunday Leave lords: Leave (3. T. I.lO A.M 10.85 A M. 1 O0 P.M 2.40 3' M. (JO E31. 7.30 I'M. Sunday Leave Borden i - Leave 13. T. I." A.M. 10.85 A.M. 1.00 I'.M. 8.00 EM. us I'.M. ass PM. WOOD ISLANDS-CAIIBDU DAILY FERRY leave Wood Islands I AM. If AM. 1 PM. 4.I'.M. Leave Caribou I IAJI. liA.II.1P-lgdhlv. Asked if he considered the vessel 4 ll