MAXIM8 OF A MERE MAN what nothint A GOKIBY Zr... and an heart-felt Joy. earthly gQII. If iaitha aoul'a aha Inn- um-gin. Dally Founded 1501. ii” TNJUEED WHEN Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, JUNE 12, 1950 CRUISE SHIP, CARGO VESSEL COLLIEE Truman Charges Russia Is Preparing For.War Maine Renews Protest Against Lower Rates l For Canadian Potatoes Weather Notes MONTREAL. June 11-(CP) - You can't win. on Friday. Montrealers swelter- ed under the highest temperature of the year-86. Tonight. the Do- minion Public Weather Office here forecast that the low during tho night would be 40. And there were snowflurrles in Northern Quebec Sunday after- noon. lrish Author Dies DUBLIN. June 11- (AP) - Sicphen Gwynn. Irish author. died today. He was 87. He was a member of the British Parliament from Galwny from 1906 to liilli and in 1017-18 served with the Irish convention which discus- ted plans for the Free State. As an author Gwynn was best. known for his biographies of literary figures. including Tenny- son. Oliver Goldsmith. Thomas Moore. Sir Walter Scott. Horace Walpole. Dean Jonathan Swift and Robert Louis Stevenson. Crops Damaged By Electrical Storm PLASTER ROCK. N. 13.. June 11 - (C?) - Newly planted crops in the Tobique Valley were hard hit Saturday by a heavy electrical storm. high wind and driving rain. Damaged transformers and a bra- ken poke loft fighter .1! it with: out power until noon to ay. Three- houses wore struck by lightning but none suffered serious damage. Coming Events "Cardigan play Fort Augustus Hail Monday. June 12. "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo Studio, Charlottetown. "Reserve Ilhgust Dlli. Corrun Ban Picnic. "Dance. Orwell Hall, June 14th. Miltview Orchestra. "All Taxes due Emerald School hlilsf. be paid before June 20th. By order of Trustees. "Reserve July liith for Cova- hea.-l Picnic on st. Eugene's Parish (ii-ourrcls. "Corran laan Players in Cove- liead Commun-lty Hall. Monday, June 12th, at B P. M. "Reserve June 14 for ice cream social at Clyde River. sponsored by Presbyterian Ladies Aid. fisliow. Morell, every Tuesday. Fflday. Saturday. Show starts .9.00 oclock. "Regular dance at Skyline New London every Tuesday night. Dan- iflniz from 9 till 1. Good mails: and canteen service, "See "Bringing Up Mother" at Cavendish Hall on Wednesday. June 14th at 8:30 p.m. "Come to the regular Dance at the Bonshaw Inn Tuesday night. McNeill's Orchestra. "Seeds. Open daily. Also Mon- day and Thursday evening iuitll 9 P. M. Closed Sundays. Arthur Vtssey. York. "The Lot 05 Dramatic Club will Dresent their three not play in Hunter River Hall. Tuesday. June lath. Good specialties. "Junior Farmers Lobster Sup- Dtr in Holy Name Hall. St. Peter's 3Ilr. Wednesday. June 14th. Sup- Mr for 5 P. M. "Effective June 14th and until l-hH' notice. our store will be '1W9d on Wednesday afternooria. gllllns ocmral shore. Rose Val- "Rc-ornnlution Meeting at ciwehead Community Hall. Tues- day. Juno ism. at too r. M. to talk 0V0i' the Put and Present Season in connection with Covehead Com- "illillkv Sports Centre. ,"0Dcning sup or at Mrs. '1'. R. Ivhonb Rlvarv ow Home. Lower llluo. Wednesday. June ma. "III. Chicken, Lobster. accompan- lf 5! homo made butter and roll:. "I. cake and ice cream. Phone 'lr-5 l-owe llontagug By Ernest G. Warren WASHINGTON, June 11 - (AP) - the Maine congressional dele- gation protuted again today against any move to lower freight rates on Canadian potatoes com- mg across the border for ship- ment to southern parts. Earlier this year northern rail- roads filed with the Interstate Commerce Commission a proposal to equalize rates on Canadian po- tatoes with rates enjoyed by po- tatov shippers from Aroostook County. Maine, to the Harlem Riv- er in New York State and points slightly south of the Harlem River. Such rate schedules, unless pro- tested. automatically become ef- fective within 30 days of filing. The congressional delegation pro- tested Jan. 11 and the new rates have been held in abeyance. A hearing of the rate schedule and protests against them will be held before an I. C. C. examiner tomorrow at Bangor, Me. Representative Frank Fellows (Rep. Me.) whose district em- braces Arooslook County. is ex- pected to appear to represent the congressional delegation. Today's protest. addressed to I. C. C. chairman J. Monroe John- son, was written by Senator Owen Brewster (Rep. Mc.), chairman of the Maine congressional group. who said it was endorsed by all the delegation. It recited that Jan. 11 the dele- gation protested the rate reduction on Canadian potatoes originating in the Eastern Canadian Provinces. "We renew this protest in con- nection with the hearing before the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion to be held in Bangor on June 12." the letter said. "and earnest- ly urge the commission not to take any action that would put the potato industry of Aroostook County in further jeopardy. "The granting of the petition to the Canadian carriers would -be prejudicial. preferential. and dis- criminatory against the Aroostook producers and shippers." The letter said that about 15.- 000.000 bushels of Canadian pnta- toes have entered the Maine mar- ket. "forcing the Government Ito carry out under the support price program the purchase of a like number of bushels 6! American potatoes paid for by the Depart- ment of Agriculture and charged to the taxpayers of the United States. , "The granting of the Canadian request for a change in the freight rate would add to the Canadian selling advantage." 375.000 in Stolen Gold is llecovered TIMMINS. Ont. June ll - (CF) - The 375.000 in gold stolen. from nearby Dclnite Mine June 2 was recovered several days aim. In- speotor I. R. Robbie of the On- lario Provincial Police announced today. , He said that a safe containing three gold bars. 316.000 in SIOCKS and 55:00 in Canada savings bonds had been found in the bush five miles southeast of.Tiiamins. Police made their second arrest in the robbery Saturday WW3" they charged Morley Lathnm. 20. with breaking and entering. Earl- ier they arrested Edward Clements, 20, on a similar charte- ny sterling F. Green wast-mvcrrou. June 11-40?) ..nlaliig united states retail prices will go still higher. assem- bly lines this month may set a peacetime record. bushlwi AU thriving. and Washington's econ- omists wonder: can this lost? The experts agree there is vast. proven strength underlying to- day's economy. and room for "nu: growth. Another six months of prosperity is taken for granted. There are 2.710.000 more lob! than three months MO. Inf? 1- mmoo fewer jobless men. Profit-I no higher than last. years. stocks are flirting with a four-year re- cord. liven the federal deficit is diminiahinl. The chance of inflation is dis- .countod too. But tensions have Sharp Attack On Communist Aggression By Ernest B. Vaccine ST. LOUIS. June 11 - (AP) - Presiden-t Truman blasted at Sov- iet Russia Saturday for talking peace while "preparing for war." Ii. was his ,most devastating at- tack on Communist aggression since the outbreak of the cold war. Speaking from an improvised stand to thousands standing in a blazing sun. he made this blunt in- diotment: "With a cynical disregard for the hopes of mankind. the leaders of the Soviet Union have talked of democracy-but have set up dic- taiorships. "They have proclaimed national independence - but imposed na- tional slavery. "They have preached peace - but devoted their energies to to- menting aggression and preparing for war." And he condemned the Soviet Union for maintaining history's "largest peacetime army." President Truman pinpointed his charges by 13' specific references to Russia or its rulers. He' was cheered as he began his address and when he finish- ed. But his grim words were heard for the most part in at- tentive silence. The major foreign policy pro- nouncement was televised and broadcast over all the major radio networks at home. The State De- partment's "Voice of America" moved it all over the world in 24 languages. The President's speech concluded a reunion with army comrades of the First World War-members of a' field artillery battery. He warned Americans against what he called the dangerous be- lief that the United States can abandon its aid to other free coun- tries in these critical times. The tiupslde-down view" of ”isolationists" endangered both world peace and national secur- itn )”Isolationism is the road to war. "Worse than that. isolationism is the road to defeat in war." He reserved for the Russians. though. the stern language of a prosecuting attorney. And he condemned them for the demons- tration of Communist. youth in East Berlin late last month. The Soviet leaders were "turn- ing the school children of Eastern Germany into the same kind. Of pitiful robots that marched mm hopeless battle for Hitler." large Attendance At Gracie Fields Concert OTTAWA, June 11,-(CPI-Gracie Fields. famed British singing Si-1". sung to an uudiencc of 4.500 hell! Saturday. In her fourth trill '-0 Czinudn. she is makinll 35 Coni-'-"it uppcnrziiices iu centres from Bi".- lish Coluniblu to Newfoundland- ENEW--CANIERA WASHINGTON. June ll -iAIl) - A camera that can photograph a 26-mile strip of the earth in two seconds from a plane flyins in 10,000 feel has been developed by the Ul1llFd States Air Force. The Air Force said Saturtlay that the camera is a special de- velopment for tests to detcrmlno its value in reconnaissance. Wheth- er it will be installed in the new long-range B-36y reconnaissance planes, and in faster but shorter- ranged jet reconnaissance planes. was not disclosed. Expect American Boom To Last Into Winter j-ZWW developed in at least four fields which officials eye with appre- hension. The trouble potentials are: Prices: the coal: of living. creep- ing up since February apparently will climb anew. Food prices. meaning mainly moat. lead the parade. Credit: Consumer credit. most- ly the easy-payment kind, is mov- ing towards an all-time peak. At ;1s,ooo.ooolooo it now is almost one-fifth higher than a year ago. steel and automobiles: both are thriving. This will be the first 7.000.000-car year, auto men be- licve. Building: A housing boom un- paralleled since the '20:: in driving up prices of lumber. gypsum and other materials. The price of tho end-produ t new houses - may start. climbing again. W OTTAWA. June 1i1,1(SpeCla1) -Prince Edward Island Liberals taking part at meetings here for the past four days, told the Guard- ian tonight. that this year they have won greater recognition in the National Liberal Federation than has been the lot of the Pro- vince in former years. This recognition is in the form of election of P. R. Mecormnc. past president of Queen's County Liberal Association to the nation- al executive. Second honor falling to Prince Edward Island Liberals here was the election of Mrs. George Inman of Montague as a vice-president of the National Federation of Liberal Women. Reason why P. E, I. Liberals had not hitherto won a place on the national executive was that there (has never been a Province-wide Liberal association such as exists in the other provinces. This dif- ference was called to the attent- ion of Senator Gordon Fogo, presi- dent of the Federation by P. R. Boyle, president of the second district of Queen's Liberal Assoc- iation. Mr. Fogo recognized the Elected To National Liberal Executive ported Mr. MeCormac's nomlnnt. on. Mr. Boyle said he and other delegates felt that Mr. MoCormnc's election to the nation-wide advis- ory council of the Liberal Feder- ation was a. distinct step forward and is placing of the Prince Ed. ward Island Liberals on a footing equal to those of every other Pro- Vince, ..Delegates voiced regret that FY1110?! COUMY was unrepresented at either the National Liberal Federation meetings or those of the Federation of Liberal Women. Delegates in Ottawa for the past. four days are Mrs. George Inman of Montague, Mrs. D. J. Riley of Charlottetown, past president of Queen's Women's Liberal Associat- ion: Mrs. T. W. L. Prowse, and Mrs. Rlussell Roper, also past presidents of the Queen's Wom- en's Liberal Association. J. Lester Douglas, Liberal mem- ber for Queen's entertained the delegates at the Parliament build- ings prior to the concluding din- ner on Saturday evening. At Saturday's meeting senator Fogo was re-elected' president of disparity and the association sup- the Federation. On Behalf Of Gunman Creates Panic In Store NEW YORK. June lla(AP) An armed (Negro) man blazed away three times at pursuers with a gun. creating a panic among 1.000 shoppers Saturday in ii. crowded Lower Manhat- tan store. Six women shoppers were injured during the melee which police said resembled "a mad- house. with people screaming, ducking and falling to the floor to get away from the shots." Two women were taken to hospital for shock treatment, and the others were attended for minor injuries at the scene. The man, identified by-- police as Lester R. Trice. wounded himself with one shot during the chase. Trice was cornered by three store officials and turned over to police. Head To Observe Anniversary - TORONTO, June ll-(OP)--Mr, and Mrs. C. L. Burton tomorrow celebrate their 50th wedding an- niversary. Hundreds of visitors are expect-4 ed at Thornlezi. their 15-at-re homey in suburban Thomhlll. A whole field is lieln: converted into at parking lot: for the day. I Mr. Burton. former president and new chairman of the ' board of directors of the Robert Strap- 50" Company. is 73. So is Mrs. Burton. W He calls it a. "crime" that young persons must wait. sometimes for years, before Irey can afford mar. riage. Prime Minister Appeals Women At Liberal Party Gathering OTTAWA. June 10-tCP)-Prime Minister St. Laurent urged the Liberal Party Saturday night to give women a greater voice in both party and public affairs. i.'I would like to have at least one woman on our side of the House and in our caucus." said -Mr. St. Laurent in a speech pre- pared far delivery before a joint banquet meeting which included conventions here this week of the National Liberal Federation's Ad- visory Council and the National Federation of Liberal Women. "I can do no more than appeal to provincial organizations und constituency organizations to do their utmost to give a larger place to women in their organizations. and to our women themselves to assume the place which is right- fully theirs." 'He said that "all our Liberal women ask is that they shall not be kept, in the background merely because they happen to be wo- men.” Referring briefly to the national situation, he said: "We have no reason to be ashamed of Canada's port in the achievement of the North Atlan- tic Alliance or of the share we are taking in creating the actual and potential strength which will make that alliance an effective as- surance of peace." Tlirninf: to the political front. Mr. St. Laurent said the Progres- sive Conscrvntivc opposition had been trying to enlist sympathy and support by ”liropaganIi:I" about steam-roller tactics and g.i'.:- Barbdra Ann To Have Holiday ...NEW YORK. June li1-(G)- The next two weeks are going to be the first. "real holiday" Bar- bara. Ann Scott has taken since inter- Mrs..tdoritiv7-liiil Sued For Divorce CAMBRIDGE. Eng, Juno (AP)-Red-haired Mrs. Richartln Morrow-Tail was nccused Satur- day by her husband of misconduct with a Cambridge University scholar who helped her fly around the world in a year and a day. Suing for divorce. husband Nor- man R. Morrow-'l'alt named Mich- acl Townsend. 26. as co-respond:-nt.. Mrs. Morrow-Tait, also 26 and a former artist's model. set off on her round-the-world trip in a single-engined Proctor plane in August. 1948. She had hoped to make the journey in six weeks. Townsend went along as navigator. After in series of nrcldonts they not as far its Alaska. where the plane was wrecked In it forced landing in November. 1948. Town- send gave up and went back to Cambridge to resume his studies. Mrs. Morrow-Tait worked at various jobs in Cnnadn and the Unlted States. and finally bought another plane. At this point Town- send rejoined her for the hop across the Atlantic. . She landed at Croydcn Airport. '1 1- she turned professional two years ago. In New York for costume fit- tings prior to her leaving for a London ice production of "Rose Marie," Canndais ice queen says she looks forward to "sheer relax- ation" with friends at Brockville, Ont. But. no idler she. since com- pleting a month-long engagement in Hollywood with Ice Cnpndes. Barbara Ann has spent. two hectic weeks with costumes. contracts and "other necessary routine.” To- morrow she heads for Ottawa- the first time home since last September-and then on to vac- atlonlnnd. Accompanied by her mother. Barbara Ann leaves for Britain at. the end of June to start rehearsals of the musical comedy favorite of three decades which composer Rudolph Frlml set in the Cana- dian Rockies. The show opens in mid-July and is contracted to run at least to August's end. Pro-rehearsal interest has made it longer engagement in London likely, she said. There is is strong possibility that the show may be imported for a New York run where the original opcretta prem- completing her 366-day flight. in August, 1943.. y loud in 102A Vg Accidenrlii .- St. Lawrence River Saturday TADOUSSAC. Que., Jun, 11 - (CP)-The cruise ship st, Law. rencc. loaded with 400 vacationers. collided in a thick fog Saturday ,in the St. Lawrence River with an Italian freighter. injuring 25 pur- sons and causing heavy damage. The cruise vessel was en route to the Saguenay. The "Maria Paolina G" was bound from Jonquleres in the Lake st. Johns district for Italy. The collision occurred about two miles from here as the st. Law- rcnce prepared to make its regul- ar stop here and the cargo vessel was pulling out of the Saguenay River. whereabouts of the Italian car. :0 vessel was not known late to- day. Some reports said the ship continued on its course. The noise caused by the impact 16 PAGES of the collision was heard in the village and brought hundreds of villagers to the shore. Ships Damaged Damage to both the St, rence and the freighter was re- ported heavy. on the St. Law- rence some 30 cabins on the first deck were said to have been smashed. The Canada Steamship Lines Quebec office announced it. had dispatched the S. S. Tadoussac at 7:40 A. M. to pick up the stranded passengers. Passengers were able to have supper on board the st. Law- rence last night and slept aboard the ship. Today they were put tip at. Man- inr Tadoussac here until picked up by the Tadoussac. expected to arrive at Quebec about 10 P. M. tonight. The st. Lawrence. mak- ing the trip light, is due at Levis Law- Que.. about 7) P. M. tor-.f:Ht., for repairs. one crew member of the St. Lawrence, Claude . Ferlandi. 22, of Joliette, Qque., was taken to St. Joseph Hospital at in Malbaie. Ferland suffered a fractured leg and knee and was operated on today. His condition was report- ed satisfactory. La Malbaie is located about midway between Quebec and Tad- oussac on the north shore. No Serious Injuries Dr. Arthur Leclerc of La Mal- boie, who is also a member of the Quebec Legislature for Charlev- oix County, said there were prob- (Continued on page 5 Col. 3) m, . Honour and shame from as con- dition rile; there all the honour llea. MAXI MS DEA MERE MAN not well your ran: some other rlptiona Delivered 86.00 lllll Province: II (J. B. 37.00 w P'1'I'PSBURC-H, June 11 -(AP) 4mm persons died and fur W H others were rescued today after? a night of horror aboard a luxurious . ca in cruiser which was trapped C t T I in the raging spill-way waters of an - I a Allegheny River dam. 'nie battered survivors--all men - , 1”? lmtme" at dawn . clinging speaker ofythe griiish coinmbiq ri- - 9 0 9” sh 99 would not be a, single person elect- away one by one. The boat missed an ll-foot lock and swept. over the dam. After futile rescue attempts by a blimp, a seaplane and numerous small beats, a crew of volunteers drove a 100-foot sternwheel river tug into the violent waters and saved them, Authorities listed lost as Mis. William Fisher. Kl: Mrs Carol Kreig. about 30. Wife of one of the rescued men; William Lahey. .Ir., about 25; and Hull Wright. Saved were James Mcnuth, 24. the owner of the I)-foot ea-bin Cruiser; Charles Rt-illcy. 34; Jo.e'.t Kreig. 28, husband of the missing woman: and James Woffenden, 50, a lock tender who went to the rescue with Wright. another lock- tender, in an 18-fo(t skiff. The cruiser was caught in the boiling eddies where the Allegheny drops ll feet over the 300-yard wide dam. about 15 miles north- east of Pittsburgh. It could not escape from the malestrom. The reverse current created by the plunging water drove the mahogany cruiser again and again into the face of the dam. Volunteer firemen set up flood- lichts during the night; on the riv- erbenks and played the beams on the doomed craft. A crowd of 2.000 lined the banks to watch the rescue drama. Kreig. in serious condition with cuts. said he and his companions were invited on a midnight cruise the by Mx.-I-Iuth. They went up the rivers through ' the locks. But; on the return trip they missed a lock, he said, and were swept. over the dam. CANADIANS IMPATIENT CANTON, N. Y., June 11-(CP)- Prime hlinlsfcr Louis St. Laurent of Canada said today Canadians "are getting rather impatient about the delay" in starting the St. Lawrence seaway and powe project. - Mr. St. Laurent spoke at a con- vocation nt St. Lawrence Univer- sity. where he received an honor- ary Doctor of Law; Degree. IIAMIILTON. Julie 11 -LCP) - A frightened girl calling herself Mabel Cru-mfoack turned up at a. tourist camp near here Saturday and told a strange story of being held prisoner by a. man who forced her to bleach her dark hair blcnde. She and her companion. is dark six-footer with harelip. drove away before the wife of the tour- ist. camp owner. Mrs. Wesley Jeime, realized that the girl might be the 19-year-old bookkeeper who disappeared mysteriously from her heme in the Toronto suburb of York Township two weeks ago. "Site heggcd me to call the pol- ice." Mrs. Jemre said. "But I tliouglit. she was drunk and. to get. rid of her, I told her I would call the police after she left.” She did-lo hours later. Shown fl. photograph of the Crumbaek girl, Mrs. Jenne told police: "It's the same girl, all right- S'l'. JOHN'S. Nfld. .llil1P ll - (OP)-Riiln halted the i.hreat.eniug advance of two fierce forest. fires in Newfoundland during the week- end but the paper tcvwn of Grand Falls prepared for another bottle in case of a change in wind. Fire-fighters held in check a blaze 3 1-2 miles from the town but ofificials of Anglo Newfound- land Development. company said the danger "is by no means over." More rain was needed in addition to the half-inch that fell last night. The rain, and a change in wind. also helped volunteers turn back another wall of flame less than 2 1-2 miles from the port of Lewis- porte. on the nortlicast shoulder of the province. The wind turned the blaze hack seven miles from the town. where 2.000.000 gallons of high octane gasoline for Gander Search Is Spurred For Missing Ontario Girl Rain Halts Advance Of Two Fierce Fires In Nfld. except for the color of her hair." Mrs. Jeiine said the girl stopped for an hour at the tourist camp Saturday morning with a man of whom she seemed terrified. She appeared drunk or drugged. She staggered and spoke so thick- ly that some of her remarks were incoherent. She nervously smok- ed cigarets. At. the crumback home. Mabelis mother said it was hard to picture her attractive daughter as the daz- ed eirl at. the tourist. crimp. "'l"lin description of this girl's hehnvior cei'tainlv doesn't. cor- respond with that of my daughter." Mrs Cl”lli.'lll)RCk told it reporter. ”B1ll.sri'nc madman and a hand-: fill of dope could easily liave done this to ill! girl. It could be Mabel: it could easily be my daughter." Mrs. Jenne said the girl kept re peating, "I'm Malbel Ci'llmi'bE(lk.' She wore a sheer pink dress which she called her "wedding gown" and alternately cried and sang. firrxncn dammed allponds atWind- snr. a mile distant. to create 3 water reserve. another ouobreak flared briefly early today in the paper mills No. 2 conveyor near stacked piulpwood. The mill fire was put out quickly and officials said it was not started by flying embers. The cause was unknown. Company of- ficials were directing zoo men in the battle against. the forest out- break which advanced five miles forward the tnwii in less than 24 hours Altliouali a 20-min wind today fanned the fire. firefighters man- aged in check its advance. stiffer winds, Iiowovcr. were predicted for the area tonight. with gusts up to 40 miles an hour National Steam- ed to the House of Commons-flit any Capacity"-unless that peirso hurl made a complete tau: Canada, "from one end of I11! country to the other." The past-president. of the Nat ional Federatlnn of Liberal Worm . en told a Women's Canadian Club meetirrg Saturday that she found little good in sectionalisrn. S'h0 was "amused" to find people in this part of tlieoountry talking about Winnipeg as the "fair wut." "Why, you don't. reach the fa.) west. until you come to Vanomlve! or Victoria. where I came from.” It was time for Canadians " blow our own trumpets a littl more....to shout from the route taps." Former Presbyterian Moderator Passes MONTREAL. June 1!. -(CB Dr. A. C. Stewart, 74, of M! Ont . a former Moderator at thd Presbyterian Church in Oonad died in hospital today. I)-. Stow art. who was elected Moderator I 1944. was stricken Thu.'rsda.y Vi a. cerebral hemorrhage. ' . ,; LIGHTNING KILLS as COW i .. i PAWLLNG. N. Y., Junom (AiP)-A single bolt 0! llehtn Saturday killed & milk cows , the Sf.arkd8.'lc Farm near here. v -' EVEN A ctostoi, (oReoRA-fiot-i MAY is BE oven (0 jcaificistn 2. x..i. TORONTO. June 11 -- (CP) 3-. Min. and max. temps; Vietoriq 53 74: Edmonton 48 85; Regina 48, 83; Winnipeg 41 82; Toronto 49 88; Ottawa 49 63: Montreal 56 60; Que- bec 53 60: Saint John - 73; Mone- ton 56 71: Halifax 55 58; Char- lottetown 61 63: Sydney 08 '70; Yarmouth 53 58; St. John's - 09. HALIFAX, June ll-(GP)-Of- ficial lUlTCaslS issved by the Dam- ininn Plllilic wt-other Office at Halifax. I Synopsis: There was rain in many parts of the Miiritimcs and Eastern Quebec Sundriy, but in the west- ern regions the weather cleared during the day. This clearing was associated with the advance of cooler and arier air. which spend rapidly southeast across the Marltimes. This cooler air will cover all of the district Monday, and fins weather will prevail. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Monday: Prince Edward Island-Monday cloudy with temperatures much the same as Sunday. Light north- west winds 15. Low and high Mon- 3 day at Charlottetown 52 and as. High tide at. 7.48 A. M. and 9.14 P. M. Sun rises at 4.26 A. M. and left at 7.59 P. M. eighteen min- Summcrside tide utes later than Charlottetown. ...L....Lm.. , BORDEN - TORMENTINI FERRY SERVICE WEEK DAYS Leave Borden at 9.10 I. 111.. 1.00 p. m. and 430 p. m. and Cape Tor- mentlno pier at 10.35 I. In. Lilj p. m., 7.30 p. m. SUNDAY SERVICE Lv. Borden Lv. Clpo Torniatilnl 9.10 A.M. I035 ILM. 1.00 P.M. 3.00 P.M. 6.05 PM. 8.00 PM. standard. All times are Atlantic woon Ismmns - canmou The Canadian Airport is stored. As fire hose was strung along DAILY FERRY ships coastal vessel sprlngdnlc. stanriiiigz by to evnruale l.ewis- Lcavo Wood islands portc's 1.500 per.-(ins. wvighedi S A.M.; ll A.M.; 1 P.M.t 5 EH. imchor last night and resumed her have Caribou i Grand Falls mam stitch: and regular Notn Dame Boy run. llA.M.;11A.M-1124!!-I Ilil