- The commission's T Q. L v Maxims of a More Man A growing youth has a wolf in his stomach. 16 PAGIB i lieu -Mile-Long Gave-in Ba . ties Alberta Farmers FALHER. Alta.. (OP)-The trad- ual shifting of tons of earth near this Peace river town 276 miles iorthwest of Edmonton ls threaten- ng to gobble up farm land and dam the Little Smoky river. Fissures could be seen at least six years ago but a marked move- ment began two to three weeks ago at the top of the gradually-slow ing north bank of the Little Smoky. The earth has fallen al- most straight down for depths ranging up to 60 feet over a stretch about four miles long. No reason for the strange move- ment has been determined but residents believe heavy rains this year, draining underground into the river. may be the cause. At one point the movement has started to block the Little Smoky. Jack Merchant, who farms nearby. said earth appears to have been pushed up from the river bed. Allan Merchant, another farmer, says markers set in the ground showed the earth fell 18 inches in 12 hours. At another time observ- ers saw the ground slip away about three inches in two hour. WHOLE FIELD DROPS The biggest drop is on a 14-acre farm field owned by null Ray, 11 miles south and two west of Fal- her. The entire cultivated field has dropped almost straight down. leaving a smooth clay cliff about U. S. iimiis Oat imports DENVER. (AP) President Eisenhower Monday limited im- ports of oats into the United States from all sources to 40,000,000 bush- eis during the period Oct. 1, 1964 to Sept. 30, I955. Eisenhower decreed that vir- tually all of the 40,000,000 bushels may be brought in from Canada. His proclamation said that of the total. up to 39,313,000 bushels of :2 pounds each "shall be imported from Canada.” The balance, 888.000 bushels, may be brought in from other foteign countries. ' , The proclamation setting forth the restriction was based on a re cent unanimous report on oats sub- mitted to him by the tariff commis- s on.- A commends- tlons were based onothe Agricul- tural Adjustment Act which auth- orises import limitations when for- eign slupplles are interfering with -or threatening to interfere-with the domestic price-supportor mar- kcting- programs. To TRAIN GERMANS PARIS (AP) -- Field Marshal Lord Montgomery. who played a leading role in defeating German irmies in the Second World War, will be in charge of training West German soldiers when the new European defence plan is adopted. Officials at supreme Allied head- lunrtcrs in Europe said Monday. Coming Events "Regular Dance Crspsud Rink. Wednesday night. "Buying and cleaning timothy daily. McGuigan & Boyle. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Lot 65 Hall, Oct. 7. Doiron's teen. "Holy Redeemer C. W. L. Sub. Division Cake Sale, S. A McDon- aldts, I p. m. Saturday. October 9th. "Harry Weeks will be hauling Cream to Wiltshire Creamery on Mondays only. "We are buying dance Thursday. Orchestra. Cati- Island grain dilly. Paying market prices. E. J. MscDougsll, Vernon. "Dance south Rustlco Hall Every Thursday night, music Rol- lie MacKenzle's Orchestra. "Kensington hall Tuesday. Oct. 5 at 8:30 p.m. Texas Ralph and his Augustine Cove Skyliners. Ad- mission 40 and 25. "Regular Danes, Stanley Bridge Rink Hall every Tuesday night. Ego. Rollie sssexenslrs orch- a. "Hot supper and bazaar Cherry Valley United Church hall, Oct. 6, serving from I to 0. Spon- iored by,1.sdlss Aid. "Annual Chicken supper. Im- maculate Conception Parish. Wei- ligngton. October llth, Thanksgiving sy. "Dance, Card Play. Parish lisll, Souris, hidsy, October lth. in std of 0'Hallorsn family who were completely burned out in June. "Reserve Thursday. Novem- ser nth, Chicken supper, st. Mary's Parish. Montague. Qeaver Club Hall. t . "Hot Chicken Supper and Dance, In Mt. Ryan Hall, Johnston's River. Monday. Oc ” ilth. Supper ggimsncing at I10. trust's Orch- a. "District Sunday school con- vention North West Qussnts will 50 held in New Glssgow Chris- :I;-ta Church wesngaany. Oct. sun. moon session and gv ping 7-30. Box lunches. . 2 Lil at 60 feet high along its border. The strip of subsiding land is gashed with crevices. Fissures also can be seen developing farther away from the river, possibly in- dicating additional cave-ins. A call owned by Mr. Ray was lost in one of the numerous crev- ices and was found accidentally by a dog which fell into the 15-foot- deep hole. The call was pulled out with a block and tackle. Falher, located on a high pla- teau west of Lesser slave lake, is well drained. There has been no mining activity in the area, which is devoted to mixed farming. Planning Opens Convention At Saint John ssrrrr JOHN, N.B. (CF) .. 1-he Community Planning Association of Canada, aimed at stimulating community interest in town plan- ning. opened its thrice-day sixth annual convention Monday with a panel discussion on "pitfall; or me unplanned area." S. H. Pickett, director of plan- ning at St. John said planners were well aware of wornout homes an.l slum conditions. It was ”clsar- ly the duty of any planner to get people rehoused." J. I. Mevittle. director of the institute of public affairs at Dal- housle University, urged planners to "look ahead to anticipate basic trends." He said Maritime com- munities hava "an inborn resis- lanes to selection of sites for in. dustrlal purposes." .The Saint John trwri planning director. P. R. Fowler, saw arrival of trailer communities in the Mari- ttmes as "one of the main prob- lems we must face." There must be "hard and fast rules," with properly supervised mobile court sub-divisions and payment oi nor. msl taxes by promoters of mobile homes. RAILROAD PROBLEM I. A. Willis, Moncton, chairman of the OPAO New Brunswick divi. sion, said the "railroad problem" was one of "major significance" in Moncton. where the tracks had "become less a public service and more and more a barrier separat- ing one portion of the town from another." Most municipalities cannot live within their annual tax budget, said J. Phillip Dumaresq of Hall- fax. "They are forced into a capital budget. mortgaging the future tax- paylng ability of tgcommunity and mortgaglng values of property." Fortlfirm In Wage Dispute WINDSOR. Ont. (GP)-Ford of Canada Monday night repeated that it has "no more to give" its 5.700 employees. A 1,500-word statement released by Rhus M. Sale, president of Ford, slid the company had reach- od ”tha absolute limit" 'of conces- sions it could afford to make to Local 200, United Automobile Workers (C10-CCL). "We have reached the point at which the ability of this company to 'compete successfully has be- come vastly more important than a few months of dearly-bought industrial peace." Princess Margaret (By I-Eddy Gilmore) LONDON, tAPl- Pretty Prin- cess Margaret, who likes to dance, sing and stay up late, is going to visit the West.lndles early next year where they do all these things in abundance. An official announcement on Monday night from Clarence House. her London home. said the 24-year-old princess would stop off at Trinidad. home of calypso music, and other of the British islands in the Caribbean sea. Margaret will travel in the roysl ynbt Britannia and another of her halls will be at the Bahamas, 150 miles off the Flor- ida coast. Stops will also be made at Grenada. Barbados. Antigua and Jamaica. With her ship sailing so near to the United States there was speculation in London that as might make a surprise visit o the United States. a country she has privately expressed a desire- to visit. No DITATLS "The announcement did not say when the princess will start. her trip. Details, it explained, would be announced later. Margaret. who plays a fair jazz piano and adores doing the rhumba and samba, will unques- tionably find a lot to interest her at Trinidad. land of the bummlng bird and hot calypso songs. A calypso is a form of folk mu- sic. I sort of provocative ballad sung against the, often violent obllgsts st wglksfdtan rhythms- Founded 1872 OII.AItLO'l'.l'ETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1954 CityOI Trieste Returns Today; Nine Year Dspuie Ends , Marilyn Monroe. Joe DiMaggio Plan Divorce (By Bob Thomas) HOLLYWOOD. (AP)--The nine- month marriage of movie, queen Marilyn Monroe and baseball hero Joe DiMaggio shattered Monday. She will sue for divorce. The news, announced by the blonde star's studio. hit Holly- wood likt-, an A-bomb. There had been no hint of anything but har- mnny in the DiMaggio home. Both the onetime Yankee Clip- Ketch Makes -8,000-Mlle Halifax To Esquimali Voyage In 72 Days VICORIA (OP) - Seventy-two volunteer crew, mostly from the days and 8,000 miles out of Hali- Vl'9;l;1 Cil”5ith Md M b m 1 g g- e ron- u s p was it n fax, the 90 foot, Bermuda rigged & us. yard m 19,”, Is a pm”: ketch I-IMCS Oriole IV arrived at yum. and sailed in the 5,,” E30!-limllt hilfbor Sunday. VJ BGPVE Lakes for many years. The Navy as I trninlna ship in the navy's League of Canada obtained the new Cldli i-"it'll"! D1&n- vessel prior to the Second World Oriole is the only commissionedlwar as a sea cadet training ship sailing ship in the Canadian navy. in Georgian bevy. She will be attached to HMC5 In 1949, Oriole was loaned by Venture to provide basic seaman- the Navy League in the RCN as ship training for the 150 officers-ia new-entry training ship attached in-training. The vessel is under to HMCS Cornwallis. In the fall command of Lt.-Cmdr. E. T. Cog- of 1951 she was transferred to (Continued on page 2 Col. 0 gins, and was brought here by a,Hallfax. ; MEMBERS OF SEVERAL PARTIES PRAISE MENDES-FRANCE Expect: French To Okay Pact, PARIS (AP) Chances for Freneh parliamentary approval of the London agreements to rearm West Germany appeared bright Monday. Members of centre and rightist parties as wall as followers of Gen. Charles de Gaulle praised Prem- ier Pisrre Mendes-France for pro- teciing French sovereignty and re- taining : close partnership with Britain in the nine-power negotia- tlons. The key to the success of the new plan. which replaces the Euro- pean Defence Community plan killed by the French assembly, ap- peared to lie in the hands of the left-of-centre movement Republi- caln Populaire tMRP). and the Socialists. One MRP members, who de- clined to be quoted by name, pre- dicted the premier will swing a substantial majority behind the 118- A cisions to bring West Germany into the expanded Brussels al- liance and the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. CALL! MEETING Mendes-France has called a ses- sion of the assembly beginning Thursday to hear his report on the London talks. The ratification vote, however, may not come for several weeks. When the legislators reconvene. this likely will be the attitude of the key MR? and Socialist parties: MRP. the party of Georges Bidsult and Robert, Scbumsn. is staunchly pro-European. The party strongly backed the defunct EDC plan. and many members are still bitter against Mendes-France for falling to push it through the as- eembly. Mendes-France. who had no part in negotiating EDC, re- fused to stake his government's future on that treaty in a vote of confidence and sharply criticized the plan himself. The Socialists, whose support could give the premier an over- whelming margin on the London agreements. scheduled a meeting of their executive committee for Wednesday night. Guy Mollet, part secretary. said he could not comment on the London agree- ments untli he had studied their texts. Moliet said the Wednesday meeting will decide whether a na- tional council of the party should To Visit -West Indies. London Announcement Says world the subjects and its figures of Prominent events are VEFSEI. Calypso singers vie with one another in- making up verses on current topics and there will cer- tainly he vigorous competition to turn out something in honor of this rnynl visit. BRITAIN, FRANCE CALL PROPOSALS STEP FORWARD . Hail Soviet Atomic Co By WILLIAM IIAIICOUIIT Canadian Press Staff Writer UNITER NATIONS. N.Y. (CF)- Brltain and France Monday form- ally welcomed Russian acceptance of Anglo-French proposal! as I basis for a world disarmament treaty and said the Russian move was a step in the right direction. Guerln de Beaumont of France endorsed the stand taken by Bri- tain's Selwyri Lloyd. The British minister 0l' ll-ll-C in his address to the General As- sembly warned that certain ob- scurities in the Soviet position needed clarifications. particularly those dealing with the interna- tional agency to supervise treaty enforcement. In so doing Lloyd reflected other private Wsstem opinion that these obscuritles would be one trouble spot in the Russian plsn. present- ed by Andrei Vishinsky last Thurs- bc called. lines of the London accords with-K "Political observers think Mendes- out committing itself at this time Francs probably will ask the as- to a precise treaty text. This could sembly to endorse the general out- tcontinued on page 2 )Col. 3) Local Business Man Heads Maritime Board of Trade HALIFAX (C?)--Allin Holmnnlappbintments to the executive of tglljiarllottegowzr Mphn diayiwas council are H. L. Hill, Moncton eec res en of e artime and Frank W. Curtis, Board of Trade. succeeding G. W. town. Wilson of Truro. The board will hold its next an- ecutive secretary and deputy sec- nual meeting in Charlottetown atlrctztries are: a, lglatel to! be decided.” t I Miss Joan Fitzgerald, saint John, rov nca voe-prcs ens are: iN.B.: Kenneth A. Ross, Halifax; New Brunswick, I-I. Wfatson A. Walthcn Gaudet, Charlotte- lows: p New Brunswick - R. J. Healer,- Sackville; H. A. Joyce, Moneton; C. R. MacLaggan; Csmpbellton; A." M. Robichaud, Bathurst; P. Mitchell, Saint John; F. Dickin- son, Hsrtland. l l Nova Scotis - G., C. Bkinner,l Amherst; A. A. Dunplty, Kentville; Col. U. G. Dawson, Yarmouth; Victor Coffin, Bydney: D. H. Col-i lins, Lunenburg; Robert J. Dell, Dartmouth. Prince Edward Island - 3. Graham Rogers, Charlottetown; E. D. Reid, Charlottetown: John R. Mungall. Bummerside; G. Max Thompson. Victoria: Arthur Wright Eourisz William Hayward, Bum- marside. Newfoundland directors will be shosen later. ' Canadian Chamber of Commertvel News Briefs From Home Andwlibroad E . l l l Mr. Alan Holman FRERICTON (CP) - Lord, VANCOUVER (CP)- A Domln-A 39.”,-M-ookg ",9 University of ion-provincial conference on taxa-l "W '””"”lc'” "WM "i"l0""Y ltllill-.l".li1lilf.”tif-ilniiiliifii.l;2.?Ji3.;l . . . , chancellor and greatest bencfactnnib). federal Re..',m,e Minister M0,, will formally open the new UNBlc.mn, , N. Y. iongshoremenl Vote To Strike NEW YORK (AI')--The In- ternational Longshoremen's As- sociation Monday night voted to strike the world's busiest port for the second time in six months. The strike was set for mid- night, but its full force on the New York port would not he felt until this 'morning. About 25,000 iongshnremcn work on the New York piers. Eisenhower Hails New Alliance DENVER -- (AP) - President, Eisenhower Monday hailed the new; western European Defence Alliance; as ”what may be one of the great- est dlplomatic achievements of our: time." l the nine-power pact, providing for; rearmament of West Germany and an end to Allied occupation of that country, will-when ratified; by the nations which signed it in, London Sunday - "preserve most of the values inherent in the) original European Defence Com- munity proposal." McCARTHY AIDE T0 QUIT ltion, effective Oct. 31, as staff 5- T- P”k9S- MOHCWI -is ex- director of the Senate investiga-1 trnnomcr Donald H. Menzel by tions sub-committee headed isenatm McCarthy, it was learned lMonday. Carr, one of the princi- lpals in. the McCarthy-army hear- ,ing.-t, will take an administrative In a statement, Eisenhower Said! ' WASHINGTON (AP) -Francis ' Ch”10”eT . P. Carr has submitted his resigna- , Covers Prince Edward lsland Like,The Dew, PRICE 5.: To Italy (By Webb McKinley) TRIESTE, (AP)-The city of Trieste goes back to It- aly today under an agreement Italy and Yugoslavia Will sign in London. The agreement, announced officially Monday, will end a nine-year dispute that brought Yugoslavs and Italians close to war several times. Th” ll” 9”” at the head ""E1Fh't-without t-KFiHi?t-it. ii??- the Adriatic will give Italian troopsl ever. Lennon has been noted H, A ila3'l”'VmK welmma when meylsmall areas along the southern :take over they will be greeted byyboundanea wmch are expected ya ,red, white and green Italian flag:,gQ to Yugoslavia under me Lung flying "Om wl”d”w5 and by don pact. About 3,000 persons liv- hum harm” 56”” by 50 Vmmen in the area that may change Under the comprom:se agree- ham” They am cxpectgd M hm... ment, zone A of the territory, in-pa Chance (0 accgm m.,m,.,, ;,,, "mdmlz the 9”?" Wm 9” L” 1Laly'llhEll' holdings and move into the while Yugoslavia will get Zone l3.lna1,an area mu. Chou”- Marshal Tli.0'S troops have oc-1 g H, 0 , cupied zone 3 while 1'. S. and! L Y,”g051.a”31uiLugei mag” tin” British troops kept watch OVI-'r1 M) m,”5 7”")- squats "Him" Zone A during the post-war dis- ""3 (""7 pEopIe'i75tooo'. mg Mel. mp Lennon, The city of Trieste, with 280300 D A; soon 3,; the Lmgdon agreeg has far more residents than all the mem is sighed Premier Mam) rest of the territory. Yugoslavia as Ecelba will report it to the Italian Fxpecied 1” Rel mecml Pu" Tish"! parliament and demand a vote of m we City and pmumon mt "5 confidence to back his action. ' lmmm”-l Ming 11"" p mm... Big Meeting At Montreal Today Most of 300.000 inhabitants in M0NTFgEALv (CF)-Th? P3”5lT- the 86-square-mile Zone A havei gfo”Vi;l:men':1:3t;”5bJ:'i: Db.9..:s:n mkmg me..-K oi”; Hm."-l cided today when Prime Minister II II Ikepons Sanger St. Laurent and Premier Dupleasls meet privately to discuss a 10-year Scqfes stuff dispute over taxation policies. Both men have declined to fore- TROOPS RELEASE!) The agreement will free the United states Trieste gl1l'l'lsOl1' force of about 4,000 for duty else- where. The British army will pull out about 3,000 troops BOSTON (AP) -The flyiniz east what they expect will result. saucer scare dates back in from the meeting, hurriedly ar- about 800 B. C. Harvard as- ranged when Premier Duplessin telephoned Mr. St. Laurent last said Monday. Among natural wgdnggdgy. . phenomena resulting in saucer , Exact, place of the mgeunql l reports, Dr. Menzel included: lgchedujgd for 19 am, 1551:. ha, been kept secret, but it is generally.- l mirages, t'cflecl.ions of ice cry- expected here they will meet. in an stals, aurora bnrealis, meta-oril A tcure For Trade Problems By FORBES RHUDE Canadian Press Business Editor HALIFAX (CF)-Tariff barriers 1 are not the answer to trade prob- l leuis, the Canada-United committee on the Canadian and us. Chambers of Commerce dc- clared m a. statement made public Monday night. The statement. drawn up at a committee meeting Sept. 30-Oct. l at Ste. Adele, Que, was released following its approval by the na- tional board of directors of the Canadian chamber. The joint committee, says the lsmiemenh reamrms 1” previously section of the joint committee, and declared belief that the solution of immediate, and possibly tempor- ary, economic difficulties does not lie in creating new tariff barriers. increased protection and new ob- stacles in international trade. Such new restrictive measures, it added, should be avoided by both Canada and the United States. WOULD EASE BARRIERS The committee restated its be- States T duo . 1. p law building at saint John octl 15, UNB president Dr. Colin B. Msckay announced Monday. HALIFAX (CF)-Fire of I.IIIdCi.CI'-l mined origin raced through a theatre and printing plant atl nearby Bedford Monday, causing damage estimated at 370,000., The theatre was empty and there were no injuries. T NEW YORK (AP)-The indepen- dent Tntcrnational Longshoremen's Association threatened to strike the port of New York at midnight Mon- day if its membership rejects the latest offer by dock employers. l The Russian plan follows the Anglo - French proposal of last Juns in its reduction and elimina- tion by stages of all weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear bombs, and in the establishment of the control agency. WANTS MORE DETAILS -But Lloyd asked why was it necessary to have at first a tem- porary agency. as the Russians proposed, to be followed by a per- manent sgency. He asked whether decisions of the Agency would be subject to a vein and asked the Russians to specify at what point in disarmament the agency would begin to operate. Nevertheless the Soviet Union appears to have moved toward the Anglo - French proposals, Lloyd said. and that is a fact. to be wel- corned. "Some people may My thstltbotr grown faster economically since 1046 than any other province, the Bank of Nova Scotia says in its currtnt business review. '-ITW” 74”: Herbert Hoover Jr . Takes New Position - Herbert WASHINGTON (A?) son of the former U.S. president, was sworn in Monday as tinder- secrctnry of state. He succeeds Gen. Wnlier Be-doll Smith, who is cntcring private lift. resolution is put forward solely to confuse the domestic political sit- uation in countries considering a German defence contribution. "However that may be-and I make no comment. on the sugges- tion-tbe United Kingdom is pre- pared to deal with these proposals on their merits ." TFIRST FORWARD STEP" De Beaumont said the soviet proposals "deserve our full atten- tlnn." ”For the first time, a forward step has been taken by the Soviet delegation . . ." A similar attitude was taltcn in- formally by the Canadian delega- tion. Outside the assembly hall, Canada's Health Minister Martin said the Soviet move holds out the possibility of progress in the all- important disarmament field. Assuming Russian sincerity. helTbat would . . . transform nie- ssld, the soviet proposal merited . lief in policies that would con- 10RoNTo (CF) -i Alberta hnstifll-7Ul9 50 the d9V'el0Dm6ni- Oi ffefrlof confetti, their car suitably dcc- call”... iand- expanding trade between free .nations, removal of trading re-. striations among them and deve lopment and promotion of interna- tional investment. It said it felt it was important, at. this time that both national chambers reaff.rm their declared ipoliclu concerning trading prob-1 1 lems between the United . States . iH00VEF JR. 51-.VP&T-Old enilinetfland Canada in particular, andl among all free countries gent-rally. l Both Canada and the United States, said the committee, are go- ing through a period of mild eco- lnomlc adjustment, and at such it every consideration. The first detailed debate on the Although Lloyd had kind words to say about the Russian move in the atomic field, he ripped into Vishinsky-'s speech on other points, especially Russian pleas for co- Otlstence and attacks on US. for- eign policy. Lloyd ssld there is much evi- dence that peaceful coexistence to Communist rulers means "coexis- tence to the extent of avoidance of an atomic world war, but apart from that, the continued support of disruptive and subversive forces working for the Communist world revolution." ”It. lies now merely with the Moscow and Pelping governments to refute this evidence with desds. l world acetic." 'IHcmn Pntiltn of Cobalt, who lives IIIPOII Plan matter will come later this week. in the assembly's pnllllcnl com- mlttee. James. Saint John: NOV S-0?-llitllown: and H. T. Rcnouf. Stjposition with an east coast truck-, and reflections from spider uptown hotel suite. They will meet. (413119: B&3Y9l!. ldnllilgl Prince John's...Niid. ting company. i webs or bird feathers. alone. unaccompanied by advisers. Edward Itidnd, Frank J st.orey,l - . . Mr. st. Laurent was scheduled Charlottetown. The Newfoundlandl l I I to take a late train from Ottawa. vice-president will be appointedl and to arrive here early this later. i morning. Premier Duplessis was Directors were elected as fol-; considered travelling to Montreal by car. ,ilm!! there was obvlou.s danger that V short-term solutions of difficulties 'vmuld be sought by both countries THE. 5!-i0WcTF.iK ' THE 5KlT?cT5,' through tariff increases, quotas and other governmental restric. tlons. ' Tfl-IE. LQOKS At the same time, there was en-i muraizlng evidence of improvement in the economics of countries over- , ,scas, which were progressively, 'movlng inward removal of war-1 time restrictions and trading bar-t rlers. lCOMMITTEF. MEMBERS - Francis G. Wlnspear of Edmon- ton is chairman of the Canadian l tcontmued on page 2 Cox. 2) ,Wedding Car Gets Couple TORONTO ICPV--Minimum and maximum temperatures L Into Trouble Mm Dawson . . . . . . . . . . .. 2'3 .'i7 l Vancouver as 5.1 COBALT. Ont. iCPt - TM Victoria . on Si bride and groom left in a shower Edmonmn H 21 3.3 it 35 nrated with slogans. Regina g 33 33 At North Bay. :00 milcs toywmnimg g M 44 the south, a reception committee -I-nmmo m 79 awaited the couple. But it was not Qua.” .-,1 72 the sort of reception usually plan- Mnmrml ' so 62 vied for newlyweds--it consisted of Qucbm. H 4- 32 a rlqad block and Ontario provinciatl1.-,.m(,m,Mn H 4- 3,; P0!” lS't.lh .. 4n :4 Tlcforo Irene. lnliberte and Ricky h,;::::Cm?. n 47 gg Sullivan were married Saturday Halifax H 50 57 the groom arranged to borrow a Chanoucmwn 51 6" car from George Sadler of Cobalt Svdmw p g g 5-,- twhlltll the family was celebrating, Y:armim”h p 51 H3 Rickys bachelor friends covered q, Mhr” 33 53 the car uith slogans. ii ' ' ' ' ' ' i ' ' ' ' i ” The couple then headed for HAL”,-Ag; mp, ., -I-hf, ,,,.a,hN, North Bar At about that iimt-lam” hf,” M-VS Hm I”, m a up in: of rltsiiirhances which haw- hecn causing tinsoitlnri wet weather in the Marlilrnes since the first, of the month, was located near the mouth of the St. Lawrencc rivcr Monday night. This distur- bance is moving eastward and in its wakc strong westerly winds will bring dry. cool air in the Mari- timc: today. With sunny Sl(lP!. day- time iornncraitircc will be much the some as on Monday. However. the wcatho-t" will be much cooler this evening and frost is likely in many piaccs after midnight. Rgional forcasts: Prince Edward Island. eastern N.B. counties. lower St. John river valley: Sunny; not much change in temperature: westerly winds '20. gusts lo 30. Iimv-high at Charlotte- town 4! and 55. Mtmcinn and Fred- ncar the bride's home. told police his car llfid been stolen. And Sad- Iler was wondering why the groom had not taken his car. 3 It so happened that Rick"; ,friends had decorated Fauiin's car by mistake. The groom was too .ncrvou.-i to notice anything. Paulin drove in North Bay and -"t'RDDcd cars with the couple . Police said no charges would bet y laid. I Little Johnny May Have Been Right WASHINGTON (AP) - Atomic science m ay have prnvecl what little Johnny has suspected all along--this spin- ach is questionable stuff at Mi.-tr... 45 um .55, aunt John as l'"'”- . and ss. lmwis I. Strauss. chairman ' of the Atomic Energy Com. mission. said Monday atomic tests indicate spinach may not 59 Rood for growing children -that apparently "spinach re- moves calcium from the body." He added the studies are inconclusive. High tide today at Cl'tiit'lnl.loinW"i at 235 a. m. and 4.31 p. ns Surnmerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. High tide today at the North Shore at 11.51 s. m. and 105! p. Rt. Sun rises today at 0.10 s. m. and sets st 6.01 p. In. I v