Mexlrns "of to ' More Men All lw'loads on a wining horas. V. is PAGEB ,,.j7 Two Boys Drowned When Ice Gives Away On River KINGSTON. (CP)--Two Kinse- ton boys were drowned Monday when the ice gave way beneath them as they walked across the frozen Cataraqui river. Donald Kotomych. 13. and his eight-yelit-Old playmate Billy Croul were on their first hunting trip with a .22-calibre rifle given to the Koiowych boy as a Christmas pre- cm. i They were walking across the river near Belle Isle, on Kings- ton's eastern boundary, when the ice broke. Tommy Bridgen. 10. of Kings- ton. who was hunting on the is- land, heard the young boys shout- ing and crawled on to the ice. Bridgen slipped into the icy waters and swam towards the youngsters. carrying his rifle with him. when he was close enough. he held the rifle out to Kotowych but the boy disappeared below the surface. Young Billy had already Potato Dealers Report On Current Mark in response to nume jl-requests for comment on the Dlf - potato market. the P, 3. Isllll Potato and Turnip Dealers Association have prepared the following report ll'0lll sources usually deemed re- llflblc. "The potato market across the continent is slowly recovering from the shock it received when the De- camber crop report was issued in Washington on December 17. with tho details of the increase now issued to the trade it turns out that the increase is very largely in the Pacific coast areas. and is the result of a change in last years report and a corresponding increase in ihe I954 estimates on the new basis. The 11.5. -is still short 25 million bushels of potatoes com- pared to last year. and. in addition the heavy cullage In Maine and the Red River Valley is bound to reflect on the market sooner or later. B "it should also be remembered ilirir. the Canadian crop is down 11 million bushels. Ind the movement of previous years of table potatoes to the south is now reversed and at many points us. potatoes are moving North into Canada. All of which should indicate that P.E.I will profit most if the growers will move a portion of their crop each month for the next five months. thus supplying the demand for our potatoes but not crowding the mar- ket at any one period. MOVEMENT FROM P.E.I. "The movement from RBI. to date by ii is 2005 cars against 3921 last car. and for export by water about 450 cars less than last yelr; , . "in Maine .the price is holding it 2.25 per barrel or ,8B per bu. bulk. with movement slow. The trade are using Long mgnd gnu New York potatoes. but will shortly have to come to Maine for their supplies. Milly New Brunswick growers We Purchasing washing machines in 3531" 111 trading the crop and are finding the gcullage heavy a; they open and grade the bins. "The future market declined Sharply when the December Ilth NOD report was issued. and is now gradually showing some'stsengtIs. Potatoes for March shipment are rolling for 2.15 per cwt. delivered New York or .90 per bulk bushel to lllr growers in Maine. "The Montreal and Toronto mar- kvis followed the usual trend of bring quiet previous to the holiday The storage and Track holdings in local areas are light, The pres- Car And Plane In Collision VERNON. B.C. (CP)-Three per- ”'”-l Helped with scratches mar llFl'0 Sunday when an aircraft was in collision with a car. - Involved were pilot Morris Gur- IPII. of Tranquiile, B.C.: passenger Gentile Desfautela of Lumby. B.C.. and Albertrwerner. quick-thinking motorist fromr Cherryvllle. B.C,, about fve miles east of this Okans- W valley town. RCMP said the carburetor of Garrett's single-engine plane iced, stalling the motor and forcing him l" attempt an emergency landing ”” "1 Icy strip of highway. Wer- "rr saw the plane was in difficul- llfli and drove into the -ditch to live it landing room. b The plane skidded into the ditch. are off a wheel and a win . ram- med the car from behind; g ded up "Toff it and landed in front of the lnhicle. The pilot and 'paasengar here treated for minor injuries. C oming Events "Card Party. Mt. Albion Legion Hall. December 29th. Lunches. . "Card Play in Orwell Cove Hall. Thursday. December both, in aid of Hockey Club. i "Card Party and Dance. Oorrsn Hall, Wednesday. December "New Yearblve Dance. Belfast Hill. sponsored by Mt. Buchanan Women's Institute. Door prise. Ri:v(-hliiiin" o-lilo l;'hmIg'Oc TIT '"g"n:"'”" ''""''I '-W5 WWII uoimmii. (on - The ma Ilse. itichas-d'a Cards 1 to 10 gu.k.u'mi...'.., ' 0' ”'i""P'l,M "I In halts! . . mu Monday we now a parlour: pimiy replaced now, . i ' . i ' . 01. Russia It ltlon 30"? blood was completely raphaed dur- Bison-eceived 4 pints of blood when H" cmzig o death in community I0o.Im.mapiI-aotlcally..dBv gate mg . one-hqur ope;-euon in yum can bleeding ogeug-rgd on wmnriitg lb hglhllllif nrmgdn -MM. . . , . up page gwpped for I 1.: iiiiau. werallon. , n ,4: s. I new - noun a. other eivio autism is. V In u-ix. mm A dsmclll Clirlltmll device. It. iisveiba red um of-their ror Ina suoimd. II, pt. rowing of the rel valve of he G" "WI '&ll.m. St-wm. There Ind the plain at g n. , u reporigd 'ifeel- iebara has been a :3" 5'5 Hllmiic I!!! V IWP-I, the ever before" at "Vite .- "v. ,, .- - 1 to of osrdlolagy under mrtenllsandibleb down and t gygg oparationwIaper- been swept away. et Outlook ent offered price on 70's of 1.00 Toronto will allow .85 per bu. to the grower here. This price does not give us the premium over Maine and New Brunswick pota- toes that we previously had, an our good quality this year shoud re-establish this premium. "The fall sped market for P.E.I. potatoes is about filled. and seed will likely be quiet until March." Find Gossip Good Medicine OSWESTRY. Eng. (CP)-Au- thoritics at the Oswestry hos- pital have discovered a. new meriicine for their women patients that works wonders and does not cost a. cent -- gossip panels to relay to them the latest neighborhood goings on Volunteer "gossipers" m o v a through the women's wards, spending 10 or its minutes to give each patient the latest birth, death and marriage news. Hospital officials said Monday it does the patients "worlds of good." Pope's Health Much Improved Monday that the health of the Pope has shown a provement" in the last few days. "Since last been untroubled by hiccups and his the announcement said. His daily outings in the Vatican gardens. begun last week to help the 78-year-old Pontiff regain his strength. have been lengthened and the Po e now is working and giv- ing da ly audiences to Vatican offi- cials. He spent most of Sunday work- ing on a Christmas message to the world which he plaru to publish in the next few days. The Pope, who had another plasma infusion Monday morning. is suffering from a small hernia of the guilet and from gastritis. Montreulers Hope No Tax Increases MONTREAL (GP) -Montrealers Monday took hope of an added year without tax hikes when Mayor Jean Drapeiu declared himself In favor of scrapping the latest as- sessment roll, The mayor said he favors a new rail to go into effect in two years- a timing that might coincide with possible results of a basic metro-I polltan area evaluation. There already had been 85.000 complaints about the latest roll. which would have increased real estate taxes about 20 per cent. and the Quebec legislature "froze" it VATICAN CITY (Reuters)-The Vatican press service announced 1- Thursday he has , The PeI's Pa onanrnswsrrowx. osnsna, 1-rmsnsv. nnomssism :3. 1954 PW. OF SERIES: STIFFE To Participate I In Consecrotion His Grace, Most Rev. J. Gerald Berry. Archbishop of Halifax Metropolitan. Nova. Scotia and P. E. Island, who will assist I-Iis Ex- cellency, Most Rev. Guiovanni anico. Apostolic Delegate to Can- da at the consecration of Most Rev. Malcolm A. Maclilachern. '" hop-elect of Charlottetown. which takes place in St. Ninlan's Cathedral, Antlgonish on Jan. 18. "marked im- ;" rest has been more satisfactory," I . Most Rev John It. MacDonald. Bishop "of Antigonlsh and Chan- cellor oi at. Francis Xavier Uni- versity who wlll preach the sermon at the consecration. C P" Photo. 530.000 Barn Fin" In Meadowvele. Ont. MEADOWVALB Ont... (CP) - A 380.000 barn fire Monday roasted to death 126 pigs and seven cows. Cause is believed to have been faulty wiring. - The blaze broke out in the 50- year-old barn of Ian Davidson. who owned the cattle. The pigs. valued at 315,000. were owned by a neigh- bor. Robert Davis. Meadowvali is about 15 miles last year. Annual Binge LONDON (AP) -- The Russians are shopping today for the Soviet Union's Jan. I binge. a combina- tion Christmas and Na Year's day called "Novle God (new year)." "On Novie God." goes an old Russian saying, "you comb out your hands (beard). take off your valinkie (felt boots) and drain your botilka (bottle)." It's the one non-ideological occa- lion of the yin .-which the Commu- nist party his en. unable to take away front". a people. or to horn In on dire . ANNUAL DU!!! ' The Mosoowlrsdlo -told Monday night of the annual rush on the stores for holiday purahuea. Now, as ..VCI'. there is a heavy accent on wine. vodka. cognac and sham- --i northwest of Toronto. Russians Preparing For On Jan. 1 holiday, but it Is a Communist oc- casion and the air is full of Com- munist slogans. ' Nov. 7. the anniversary of the Bolshevist revolution, is an even greater day for party oration: and propaganda about the Communist way of life. b I when the red .i-evolutionists clini- insted the religious observation of Christmas. they discovered they could not do away with the spirit of the day. The people still decor- ate trees and give some to the children. 'I'lie'Boviet rite Claus is called "Grandfather Frost." i Woman's Blood (GP) -It MII.L'l'0WN,, N .B.. a happy looks like 1955 will be new year for Miiltown. in operation two months as a co-operative, the, textile mill now is expanding. Preparatory steps toward opening two additional de- partments were taken Monday. Within two weeks another 100 employees will be going back to work, joining the 200 already there, As 1954 closes, the co-op has enough orders on its books to keep the big plant busy five months. One of them is from the federal government. for 144,000 yards of RCAF linings. Tom Jones. Jr.. president of the Milltown Textile, Co-operative Ltd. said Monday night the mill has "lots of orders . . . it's been ter- rific, beyond our hopes." Only a few workers went back 45 Canadians Die In Accidents By THE CANADIAN PRESS Christmas w e e k e n d brought death to 45 Canadians in a variety of mishaps. The toll compared with 63 during the same weekend last year and 96 for the period in 1952. A Canadian Press survey cover- ing the period from 8 p. In. Friday to e rly. Monday listed 24 traffic deaths, seven killed in fires, two drowned. two suffocated, four as- phyxiated. three fatally injured in falls. and one each in a. suicide. a fight and a hunting accident. Quebec r ep or t e d l4 violent , deaths. Ontario 12. Manitoba five. New Brunswick four. British Co- ,lumbla and Nova Scotia thrca each, Saskatchewan two, and New- foundland and Alberta one each. Have Field Day WNW YORK (AP) L A police- estimsted crowd of 2.000 bargain hunters was on hand Monday for I start of the liquidation sales of 12,500,000 worth of John Wana- maker department store stock. A Union Square store which pur- chased the inventory plans to re- lease sections of the stock over a period of days. Wanamskers's. one of the city's oldest stores. closed Dec, 1 . . 'Among the fastest selling Items .:t')'nday were 200 men's tuxedoa at nmxmmv. Calif. (AP) -Dfs- covery of a mysterious system of growth was described Monday to the American Association for the Advance of science. Each organ of the body-blood iystem, kidney. liver and others- apparently produce these brakes. Each organ makes brakes which act only upon cells of that organ, not upon any others. The brakes go to work to halt growth of the organ at a certain time. But they can also be re- leased to permit new growth after an injury or damage calling for new growth. Dr., Paul Weiss of the Rocker- feller ,In.stlvute for Medical Re- search, New York. described the new evidence at a. symposium touching upon mysteries of normal and abnormal growth. -which in- cludes cancer. TINY MOLECULE! The brakes are apparently tiny molecules which the cells oi an organ make. and then release into the blood stream or lymph fluid. They circulate. anl can coarse back inside the cells of that organ. -There. Dr. Weiss theorfaed. they combine with. or otherwise re! strain.-bk molecules of material which sewebas templates or pat- 091111”. - guides for producing new a a T955 Looks Like Happy Year For N.B. Textile Town Into the lmill Monday. In the in- itial stages of reopening the card- ing and spinning rooms. But in 10 days or two weeks. 100 will be working in these departments, Mr. Jones said. 88 Below In Siberia Sunday FAIRBANKS. Alaska (AP)- Ofilcials of the Fairbanks wea- ther bureau said Monday a re- port had been received from a Siberian weather station that the mercury across the Ber rig sea from Alaska dipped to below zero Sunday night. The World Almanac says the world's record for sub-freezing temperature was taken in Feb- ruary l892 in the northern Siberian village of Verkhoyansk. It was 90 below. The coldest temperature recorded on the North American continent-82 below- was at snag in the Yukon in 1947. Predicts Home Building Level To Continue High TORONTO (OP) - Gordon 5, shipp, president of the National House Builders Association, pre- dictsd Monday a continued high level of house production across Canada. in 1055. . He said constnictlon on 97,428 new houses was started during the first 10 months of 1954 compared Wltlal 89,879 for the same period in 95 Tilerebwill be about 65,000 incom- pleted unit.s carried over into the coming year as against 59,967 oar- "rieo gm-ward into 1054. he said. Mr. Shim) cited the following conditions as favorable to con- tinucd high level construction: is continuing high birth rate, the need of many families for larger quart- ers. and more generous financing offered by the revised National Housing Act. BEAVERTON. Ont. (CP)-Po- lice chief Hector Reid has been temporarily suspended from duty as the result of ii charge of drunk driving laid against him last Thursday, Reeve William Gillespie aid Monday. Provincial police aid the charge after Rcidis car went of fthe highway while he was ton his way to an accident. Find Mysterious ;System Of Brakes To Control Growth growing until there is'so much brags material that the growth new brakes which helps control ml But if you should lose one kidney. the production of brake material is reduced. Then the remaining kidney is free to grow and enlarge to take on extra duty. similarly, Dr. Weiss said, loss of blood could reduce the amount of blood brake material to permit manufacture of more blood cells. N. Y. Diamonds Disisppeor - NEW YORK (AP)--Tivo trays containing iamond jewelry worth 365,000 di appeared mysteriously from a Fifth avenue jewelry store safe Mo n d a y during business hours. Edward Segan, manager of the Marchal jewelry store. said the di- amonds were in the safe at in- ventory time Monday morning. but were gone when a clerk looked for them at 3 p. m. Ponce were told a repairman was on duty in the rear room where the safe was located all day, except for his lunch hour, when he looked the only window in the room. Clarke said no strangers were seen entering the back room then An 0lIl.fIrI&l'ODI-If can KID Is Replaced, . Report -wash In . . vie. tnsuum direc- has unusual feature gaseous its use fast can Dramatic Heart Operation was calm break occurred in the heart tissues, or for mitiei stanoua was attempted. IIIAIT fllllill Ills: - It and im- time.-at the rate at r while .the surgeon worked. trouble before the eperatled I I-2 mlnuta. taking or at any other time. i D . blood -within an hour. followed by abundant tom of blood. massif Blood from a lad Oren bank VII nmwd into the arteries of In lower limb, two ta at a ,an hour A atom! and than a Iiird break heart. In. It , aural-ianud for to resin, one want esimnes and the heart -land nimrr sioppod completely for advent- aoa of the heart failure, Dr. lid- eusrd Oagnon repaired the breaks. mm; the heart aeration, a sour electric shocks were given to hi. ,.. 16:- The premier won a vote of con- fidence from the National As- sembly by a margin of 209 votes to 251 on the question of admitting Germany to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and scored an- other success when ” ts with- drew an amendment delaying im- plementation of the treaties. Then he asked the assembly! foreign affairs committee for per- mimlon to resubmit the key pro- posal providing German rearrna- ment within the framework of the Western European Union-the pro- posal which was defeated in the assembly last Friday, bringing on the series of confidence votes by which the premier hopes to force through approval of the treaties. EEJI-JCT PROPOSAL Meeting early today. the com- mlttee rejected lllle proposal for resubmission of the WEU clause by is vote of 20 to 19 with two ab- stentions. That forced Mendes- France to ask the full assembly to reverse the committee's decision. That meant an automatic 24- hour delay as assembly rules re- quire 8 day to elapse before a. pro- posal can be voted on, If the assembly approves second reading of the WEU proposal. an- other day must pass before the vote on the proposal itself. I Mendes-France. In an eleventh- hour appeal before Monday night's first vote, asked the assembly to maintain Western unity. To those who want talks with Russia before ratification. he said rejection of the treaties would make such si conference more difficult than ever. Cunso Causeway Electrical Contract ANTIGONISI-I, N. S. (CP)-SIL ver and Roberts Ltd., electrical contra c tors here, have been awarded a sl56,000 contract for the complete electrical ulrk on the Canso causeway. The firm will begin work imma- diately installing lighting for the causeway and wiring for the opera- tionnf the bridge and locks. CHICAGO (AP)-American mo- torists set a ghastly record during the Christmas weekend. exceeding the pre-holiday prediction of the number of deaths that would occur in traffic accidents. Of the-514 persons who died vi- olently during the weekend. 391 were traffic victims. Both figures were records for a.-two-day holiday period. While automobiles accounted for the great majority of accident vic-' tims, 63 persons died in fires dur- ing the 64-hour. two-day period. Fails, bullets, drownlngs and mis- cellaneous mishaps accounted for 60 others. One fire which lashed out when kerosene was splashed in a wood stove took 12 lives at Parkin. Ark. The National Safety Council es- timated several days before the holiday that 870 persons would be killed in traffic. SHOCKING TOLL Ned Hf. Dearborn. president of the council. said "certainly there must be a better way for a civil- ized nation to spend Christmas than by killing more than 500 in- nocent people on the highways and In their own homes. We can only hope that the shock of this toil will result in greater care. courtesy and common sense over New Ll just four months ago turned down the European Defence Community plan, that he knew of no alter- native to the Paris agreements for rearming West Germany. New meetings with Britain and the United states on this subject are no longer possible, he empha- sired. QUESTION OF CONDITIONS The premier said France was not in a position to oppose the "sen- timentally painful” issue of Ger- man rear-moment - the qumtlon was only under what conditions of control and guarantee it should take place. He said France would cut itself off from its Allies if it rejected the agreements. He warned the deputies it would be an "uniparadonablc and irretriev- able error" to throw away Brit- ain's pledge to maintain a strons force of troops on the Continent for the rest of the century if the agreements are ratified. An ad- verse vote would also jeopardize the long-sought agreement on the sear. He said it was true that legally the assembly could vote in favor of admitting Germany W NATO while refusing to vote in favor of admitting a rearmed Germany to the Western European Union, but that the government airways had regarded all sections of the Paris agreements as an indivisible whole. - Socony-Vacuum To Supply Jet Fuel NEW YORK. day It has signed provide jet fuel for the first turbo- prop airllners to be P130811 in 597' vioe in the United States. put the first of 22 turboprop Vis- count planes into in Feb- New York and Montreal ruary. 391 -Die In U. 5. Traffic Accidents Over Christmas Year's." The over-all hourly rate of accl- dent deaths from ii p. m. Friday to midnight Sunday throughout the day observance of Independence Day in I950 when 793 persons were killed by accidents. 25 Homes Buried homeless by a landslide that en- Cannen Colombia's Pacific coast. The disaster occurred on Christ- mas Eve. wiping out roads and tel- egraph communications with the department's capital, Quibdo. The 25 known dead were buried under tons of mud and stone loos- ened by recent rains in the tower- ing Andes mountains. Dispatches reaching Bogota said thousands had been left homeless during the past few weeks by slides in the Choco department, da. score or more persons were e . on Declares Teaching Today Better Than It TORONTO (CP)-A leader of Canadian teachers suggested Mon- day that critics of today's educa- tional system "come out of their ivory towers" and realize that teaching today is better lhjfg it used to be." Dr. L. P. Patterson of Montreal. president Of the Canadian Teach- ers' Federation told 115 delegates to the amual meeting of the on. tarln Public School Men 'i'eacIiers' the lifeless heart. 'men Dr. Oagnon ged the heart for another I 1-2 minutes. Twelve minutes after the full failure. the heart started to beat by itself. a Red Oren natament laid. The patient had last 6.200 c.c. of blood and received 0.50 during one tension "Mrs. Richard now is of a a in a year or two." an institute qsokennn mid. But first she will use a few months in I convalescent hoqsital it Used To Be Federation that evidence disproved illcisms often levelled against new ways of teaching. Education, instead pf being can- fined to an "elite," now was of- fered to all children. and it was up to teachers to see to It that each child derived the greatest possible benefit. IIEJECIE OLD IDEA The old idea of laying down a strict academic curriculum and applying it to all students. regard- less of their individual abilities, just isn't practical today. Dr. Pat- erson aaid. , c As part of their new and broader duties, Dr. Patterson -- gested. teachers should go out of their way to practise as well as preach democracy to help resist "the on- alaught of communism and its sis- ter under the skin. McCarthyism." He also suggested teache . pree- em a "Canadian" viewpoint, In'- stead of a "coionisl" one. 'nse federation. meeting here un- til Wednesday. sit up a commit- teltoini: " t the, " of rural teachers and seek ways to hdp them Improve their qualifies- tlons. Delegates reprelent 5.ili0 members of the federation in all before returning to her heme. parts of Ontario. (AP) - Bacon!- Vacuum Oil Co. announced Mon- a contract to The contract was signed with 'rran.s-Canada Air Lines which will service between U". S. was 9.44. This compared with 7.77 deaths an hour during the four- Covert V ' Prlnde Edward Island ke The Dow PBIOEIIO ST BATTLE AHEAD PARIS, (Reuters) -Premier Mendes-France cleared two hurdles in the way of ratification of the Paris treaties Monday night but a committee vote brought a new delay in the. crucial decision on West German rearmament. A Heibluntly told the deputies, who Fire Destroys Tenement At Dunstoffnesge A double tenement house at Dun- stanffnage. occupied by Mr. Philip st. Germaine of Quebec arid Wen- dell Ellis, wns copmlctely destroy- ed by fire last night. The fire was discovered shortly after ten o'clock and a call for assistance was responded to by the Parkdale Fire Department, who were able to stop the spread of the blaze to other buildings in the vicinity. The house was owned by Lloyd Mccallum who resides nearby and put in the call for assistance. Fire- men were aided by neighbours. The blaze apparently started from an explosion in an oil-burning kitchen range in the St, Germaine side of the house. Mr. St. Germaine received burns on his hands. arms and face and was treated at the Charlottetown I-Iosipital. --Very little furniture or personal effects was saved from either home. It was not known whether there was insurance on the building it- self. - The fire broke out about 9 o'- clock. Little Sick Girl Enioyed Christmas VICTORIA. (CP) - Carol Am! Lavigne had a happy Christmas as home with her family. The tiny. blonde, eight-year-old leukemia victim whom doctors said might not be alive for Christmas. was as excited as any yourigsieg when she awoke Christmas morn- lnK- I It was her second Christmas ob: servarice within a. fortnight. - Because of a warning given bj doctors earlier in the month, thd family had one Christmas celebraa tion two weeks early. Carol An who knew it wasn't: really Chris' mas. felt ihe family was playing 1 real joke on Santa. Claus. She en joyed that observance but enjoy the real Chrlstmasgeven more. Doctors now hope Carol Ann wil be able to survive for a. period months. Mrs. Gerry Lavigne said. . WANT NEW CABINET POST r TORONTO (C? ---A request trial a new Ontario cabinet post be set up to deal with farm marketln and co-operatives will be cm sidered next week at the arinua meeting of the Ontario Federatin Of Alrlculture. If approved. it wi probably be sent on to the Ontari government. night reported at least 25 persons dead. scores injured ant-l many left gulfcd 25 homes at the town.of VYHANK doom-ics I . I CAN ACT , In Landslide ' NATURN- CALI, Colombia (AP) - Dis- patches reaching here Monday TORONTO (CP)-Mininum and maximum temperatures: Min Max Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . - 375 Vancouver . . . . . . 34 39 Edmonton . . 8 34 l Calgary ... -10 34 I Regina .. .. (lb 26 Winnipeg . 9b 5 Toronto . 38 40 Ottawa . . 23 35 Montreal 32 8.5 Quebec .. . ,, . 20 29 Fredericton . . . . . . . . .. 22 38 St. John.............. 31 36 Moncton ..........e-.. 26 83 Halifax . . . . . .....--.3. 26 (2 Charlottetown .. . . . . . . 11 83 Sydney . . . . . 28 M Yarmouth . . S7 (5 . St. Johns. . .. 24 33 HALIFAX (CP -The Dominion public weathe office here says a largearea of snow and rain over the Great Lakes is moving east ore slowly than was forecast. As a result the wet weather will not reIch,tha western regions until noon. Prince Edward Island: Clelly. intermittent wet snow beginning In the evening; mild! light WIIC. law-high at Charlottetown 88 and 80. New Brunswick: Cloudy with in- termittent wet snow beglnnln in afternoon; mild; light winds. - high at Moncton and Fredericton 20 and 88. Saint John II and 82, IF 0 t I! and 29. Ifigntldetodayatchariottetown atl3ep.m. sunrfaeatoday at 'i.IIa.m. sat-sst4.up.ax , E,NllES-FRANCE WINS FIRST VOTES ....... ...s...e.-. -.l . .-- 4--..-. s.--:..,f"r; i --