- IIlioolGlrisisnee . cart in craneud lull, December Christmas can Award Tile T. Eaton, company trophy was presented to Ian MacArthur and Gloria Jenkins. Millcove Calf Club at a meeting at Dunstaffnlzt school, Friday evening. December 17. Mr. s. s. Carson. Manager of the new Eaton store. Charlotte- town. made the presentation. He .-ongrstulsied the winners . and stated he was very pleased with the report of their trip to Toronto. Mr. Carson hoped that his Compsnw would be able to assist at various limes. the club work in Prince Ed- ward Island. This trophy is presented every year to the winning team in the dairy project in Prince Edward Is- '.and. It was first presented in I928 -.0 North Wiltshire Calf Club and unce then has been in many com- munlties throughout the l)l'0Vln09- The lvlillcove calf Clubhsswon the trophy three years. 1951, 1952 and I964. Mr. 5. c. wright Deputy Minis? er of Agriculture introduced Mr. Carson and praised the Mlllcove Calf Club for their fine showinz- speclsl praise was given to the club leader. Aeneas Maclntyre for the excellent work which he has given for the past eight years. Mr. Wright also praised the reports given by Miss Jenkins and Mr. MacArthur. Morris Deacon. Klns's County fleidman. outlined the 4-H Club Coming Events "Crapaud Christmas concert, Dec. 21. "Meyfieid School concert to- night Dec. 20. "Concert, Flat River Hell. Dec- ember 20th. "Concert. Tracsdie Cross Hall, December Ilst. "Card party Dunsteifnege school tonight. "Concert Glen Valley School. December 21st. "Wheatley River concert. mes- iiay, December 21st. "Hampshire School -' . P ember 20th. "Johnston's Rlverrschool con- cert. December 21st. "Pownal Christmas Pownal hall. Dec. 20th. "Cherry Valley Christmas con- cert. Tuesday. December alst. "Anglo Rustico School concert. Thursday, December 28rd. "Souih Melville Christmas Con- cert, Tuesday. December 21st. "Next Card Party, West Royalty Institute. Monday. January Ioth. "Christmas Oo i. He.mpah' -- School, Monday. December 20th. "Yo:-k Point School Concert. North River Hell. December 20th. "south Milton Christmas con- cert. Tuesday. Dec. 21. "Harrington Christmas Concert. December and. "Concert and.)-Slims. Springfield Hall. Wednesday, December 22nd. "Nine Mile Creek school eon- eert Dec. 21st in Afton Hall. "Bingo Hopi River Hall Mon- day. Dec. 1).. Prlses. turkeys and geese. "Ebenezer school concert In Wheatley River hall, Tuesday. Dec. :1. concert, concert in "Re 's Cross Christmas Con- cart. sdneadey. December 22nd. Tune I.II. Dance after. "last Wlltshlre Christmas con- vert, in North River Hell, Tues- day. Dec. 31. "Winsloe North Christmas Con- mt. Winsloe Road I-fall. December "Sroekvels uhlistmss looncert. Monday. December-20th. Mb p. In. Dance after. "Reserve 'Wednesdey. Dec. 22 for school concert in Iforell hell. by Mai-ell school. i "come in-the 'Olsristsnes,Concert It. Mme-seam. December my a . . ' v - 'ED;lI::l,'Y. r. vsrmyoan. I'Ql' DOW ms. Oilrtaisit:-3 is. at "0!-e.peud coa- 2m'. see p. as. - --aeurve, 'mesda ill":-I. gglaool concert. . . p. in. "Come to Card Psrty at Stanley mgr! on wedno-4&1. December "lingo. cage and Chicken. Nil!-II ltustice thislsondsy. I p. In 50 aims for i slnsue amid Tm- "! linso l0 eonIa.- . "Christies lingo. It. Andrew's Hill. Mount seevsrt. Meassy Dec- ember seats. 1! lat. Christmas candy. "st 3!. December Wst Royall! . S o u i h School t In St. Seter's i seats V Presented policy' and reorganized the club for 1955. The foliowig officers were Aw- pointed: nesident. Thompson; vice president. Georgina Gloria Jenkins; secretary-treasurer, Ian MacArthur. Mr. Aeneas Maclntyre was en- thusiastically reelected club leader. - New members joining the club were: Frances Hill. Elizabeth Hill. Merrill MacLean. laelth Dover, end Billy Arblng. The club had a sale of lunches. films of "Junior Farmers of Tor- onto" and "Andy! Alphabet" were shown. Following the films the prize money won at the local achievement day was distributed. The meeting closed with the Nat- iinai Anthem fills People's Paper Covers 'Prinos Edward Island Like The Dow llesri lay Evervlleiiy snoozm swrrox A I DECEMBER 20; 1954 Froderioion Hoiol Raidod FREDERICFON (CF)-A police squad of is man conver ed upon a downtown hotel Setur y after- noon and marched out. jars hour later, with 870 battles of liquor. beer and wine. two women and four men. . Charges under the New Bruns- wick Liquor Act and the Criminal Code of Canada are expected to be laid against four of the six in city police court this morning. Facing liquor counts are three men. all of Fredericton. A woman is expected to be charged with prostitution under the Criminal Code. The other two persons were released on 810 deposits. after be- ing charged with vagrency. In the first combined raid ever to be made on the hotel. six mem- bers of the Fredericton city police and I3 RCMP struck the estab- lishment at the height of Christ- mas shopping. Accompanying the police were members of the fire marshal's of- fice and the department of health. who examined the building to see if it was "safe and unitary." Rec- ommendations regarding the sur- vey are expected to be made this Bsrter's Film Lab. week. TOKYO. (AP)-Red China raised a new legal argument Sunday night against American charges that im- prisonment of captured U. 8. fliers as "spies" violates the K0- rean armistice. . Peiping quoted a legal authority who once set as a judge of Jap- anese war criminals as saying the Korean armistice does not pertain to the ll fliers because: i. The armistice terms for re- lease of war prisoners applied on ihe Red side only to those can- tured by North Koreans and the Chinese "volunteers." Red China has insisted it took no official part in the Korean war. '2. The uniformed fliers "we're captured by Chinese pedsants'with- in Chinese territory west of Antung in Linoning province (Msnchuria) and apprehended by the Chinese public securiiiy authorities." The legal authority quoted was Mel Ju-ao, who served as Chinese justice at the Japanese war crimes trials in Tokyo during the U. S. occupation. Mei gave his opinion to the Peoples Daily. the official newspaper of the Communist party New Argumenf In U.S. Airmen's Case The United States has insisted from the start that the fliers were shot down and taken prisoner within Korean territory, then pack- ed off to China. One of the U. S. arguments has been that spies would not be sent out wearing U.S. uniforms. To that. Mel said: "In determining whether a crim- lnel is a spy, the court obviously does not make its judgment on what he was wearing but what he was doing and the motives and pur- poses behind his actions." New Temperature High Al, Calgary CALGARY. (GP)--The mer- cury zoomed to 62.5 degrees above zero here Sunday beat previous high for Dec. 19 in this southern Alberta. city by ll 1-: points. The previous high was set 25 years ago. At Lethbridge in the south- west the mercury reached 61.1 or 5.1 higher than the previous- Dec. 19 record established in I in China. 1910. CLEVELAND. (AP) -- The first- degree murder jury of Dr. Samuel Sheppard was given a night off Sunday night and was sent to its hotel at I! p.m. The jury will try again today to reach a decision. No inquiry was made of the jur- ore and they gave no sign of how they stood since they got the case to ours ago on Friday morning. Common pleas Judge Edward Bllvthin merely told thorn that they must be tired, that the weather was bed outside. -and that he thought they would "appreciate the rest of the evening off." He or- dered them back into the jury room at 0:15 am. today. As the jury retired to its hotel Jury In Dr. Sheppard Case Deadlocked Third Night jury disagreement faced Sheppard,- chsrged with the July A murder of his pregnant wife. Mariwn. A deadlocked jury would nullify the costly. nine-week trial for the 30-year-old osteopath. The prosecutor's -office did not officially concede such a possibil- ity. However, a state source said the prosecution is determined to retry Dr. Sheppard if the jury dis- agrees. possibly as soon as the next term of court beginning Jan. 3. N0 INDICATION ' A rare Sunday of deliberation brought the panel back to its jury room at l0 a.m. EST. There was no indication the jurors were any ngarer a verdict than when they for the third night. the threat of Appeal Court Glasgow Man HALIFAX (CP)-A New Glas- gow laborer was saved from the gallows Saturday by the Nova Scotis Supreme Court which ruled that he must instead serve life im- prlsonmont for heating to death the women with whom he lived. A panel of five judges headed by Chief Justice James L. llsley up- h d the appeal of James swin- e or against his conviction on a charge of murdering Harriet Skel- ingisfier a nlnit of drinking last So .13. . I-lowever. use Mi bench reduced the offence to rllllllttllhtsr and or- dared-ether” I error spend the got the case at 10:13 a.m. Saves New From Gallows Eugene T. Farker of the Supreme Court. had misdirected the jury. They also argued that Swinsmer was induced by police to make a statement at a time when he was in no condition to do so. that Mr. Justice Parker had not made clear io the jury the theory of the de- not consistent with the evidence; Swintrner was tried and con- fencs art! that the convictloniwes ' - VATICAN CITY. (Reuters)-The Pope. gravely weakened by nearly a. year of illness. will not broad- cast his usual Christmas Eve ad- dress io the world, according to present plans. The 78-year-old Pontiff. who slept badly Saturday night and was still wrecked by hicoupis Sun- day. will instead appear for a. few moments at the window of his bed- room at noon on Christmas day, to salute crowds in the great col- onnaded square below. This program was disclosedlby suthoristive Vatican sources. but it was not expected to be an- nounced offlclelly until Christmas Eve. END OF TRADITION Prelatcs and laymen in the Vati- can regarded the disclosure as marking the end of 3. great tradi- tion. For 16 years the Pope has addressed himself to the world on Christmas Eve, delivering a series of speeches-nearly all of them impassioned appeals for peace. At the beginning of this month the Pope was reported to have be- gun work on his address for this year. It was believed that in vit he might announce the names of six new cardinals to fill vacancies in the Senate of the Catholic Church. But it was assumed that the Pontiff. who will be '19 in March. had finally acceded Sunday to the pleas of his doctors that he ovoid overtlring himself. BUFFER!-ID INSOMNIA The Vatican press service an- nounced Sunday morning that the Pope "suffered from some insom- nia" Saturday night. "The Holy Father slept little. but in general passed a fairly restful nlghi." it added. Sunday afternoon. soon after a lunch of broth, rice and fruit juice. BRITANNIA BEACH. B. C. (CF) Foul play is feared in the disap- pearance of John Black, 42-year- old postal assistant who vanished about the same time a 544,000 payroll was reported missing from the post office here. The theft came to light Friday morning. The money was in a reg- istered. fully-insured package con-' taining the Christmas payroll for employees of the Britannia Mine and Smelling Company located in this centre of 1.500 persons. Both police and post office in- vestigators emphasized it was not known if there was a connection between Black's disappearance and the robbery. one of the biggest post office losses in Canada in recent years. v Disappearance of the money was discovered Friday morning when I bank em loyce went to the post of- fice to p ck up the parcel. Records showed it had been received by Black at the post office. RCMP refused to say whether they had any leads to any ails- pects and postil and company offi- cials kept a tight lid on details of the theft. However. police said Black was last seen about 8:30 Thursday night when a number of residents Si fT Al Saint John . SAINT JOHN. N. B. (CP)-Dam- age was estimated at about 520.000 after a Saturday afternoon fire de- strayed an old, two-storey wooden building on Station street. The for- lner foundry building had been used as a warehouse by -Thornc's Hardware Limited and the loss in- cluded thred trucks and hardware supplies. The structure had hcen condemned and was to have been ollshed soon. The former foundry was estab- lished in 1835 by Fleming and Hu- bert. who manufactured the first victed in late October after a three- dsy trial. . A Vast Changes In locomotives built in Canada. Defence Set-Up Poniiii Breaks Tradition ' Pope's Chrislmas Talk Cancelled the Pope was driven to I secluded corner of the Vatican gardens for a brief outing. These outings, which he etartaid Saturday and plans to continue as long as the present bright weather lasts. represent a daring effort by his doctors to halt the Pope's in- creasing weakness. The physicians also hope the fresh air will help to eliminate his occasional hiccups. Boy Aoquiiled Of Murdering Aged Farmer ST. JEROME. Que. (CP)--A 14- year-old boy was acquitted Satur- day of the rifle slaying of an aged farmer. He is due to appear again today on a charge of murdering the farmer's wife. but it is believed this charge will be dropped. Young Gilles Bolsjoly, son of a Montreal homicide squad detective, burst into tears when the I2-man jury brought in its verdict of not guilty without leaving the court- room. He had been charged with the slaying of 63- year- old Josaphat Therrien, found dead Oct. 18 along with his wife in the couple's Lau- reniian mountain farm house at nearby Val David. They were killed with a .22-calibre rifle. Another youngster, 15-year-old Guy Desrochers. is being given a mental examination and is due to on trial Jan. l7. It was considered likely that, unless new evidence is uncovered. the charge against Des- rochers also would be dropped. The jury's verdict came after the presiding judge, Mr. Justice Claude Prevost. ruled a statement al- legedly made by young Boisjoly to provincial police following his or- Posial Worker, S44,000 Vanish; Foul Play Feared rest, inadmissable as evidence. saw him walking from the posh office towards his home a mile away. He never reached it. A theory expressed by many citizens here was that Black. mar- ried and the father of a six-month- old boy, could have met with foul play after being forced by bandits to give them the money. Five Soldiers Hurf In Accident FARMINGTON. Maine (AP)- Five Canadian soldiers, including a prospective bridegroom. were in- jured Saturday when their auto- mobile failed to make a hilly curve and rammed a stone gale post. The five were en route home for the Christmas holidays from King- ston. Ont. The car was demolished. Michael Doyle. 19. of Halifax suf- fered a sprained ankle. George pMori-ell. Most of his life. however. The late Mr. Morrell Died Suddenly In Amherst Saturday The death occurred suddenly in Amherst on Saturday of Mr. W. A. Morrell, F.O.A. at the age of 64. Mr. Morrell was well known in ihls province where from the middle thirties until 1040 he conducted ac- countancy offices at both Char- lottetown and Summerside under the name of Morrell and Company. In 1949, he sold his interests to the firm of H. R. Doane and Com- pany. but still remained with that business in an advisory capacity. He was born at Tryon. PI-1.1., the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. J. A. was spent in Amherst. He was a member of the three Institutes of Chartered Accountants in the Mar- itime Provinces. s former vice pres- ident of the Canadian Institute and in 1948 was named a Fellow of the Canadian Institute for Chartered Accountants. Mr. Morrell served overseas in World War One. and took an act- ive part in the work of the Cana- dian Legion. He was a Past Master of Alexander Dodge A.I". It A.M. at Amherst and held other high of- fices in the Masonic order. He is survived by his wife and three daughters. The funeral will be held on Tuesday afiemoon from the Bap- tist church in Amherst and it is expected that members of the Prince Edward Island Institute of Chartered Accountants will attend. Find Ea-dy or Missing Airman PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE. Man. (CF)-The body of PO. Dennis Grahn. 20. of Edmonton was found Saturday in a farmer's field about rm: mile west of the spot where his T-33 jet trainer crashed and burned Tuesday night. The plane crashed in e farmer's field ll minutes after Orahn was ordered by the Portage La Prairie control tower to "ball out" after he reported his plane had run out of fuel during a routine training EElllEllTilI PLAN STRUING -Bl.llLlll.lP Ill llli0CHlll I May Aid French Premier In Vole agreement with Britain and th opposition blot: yet faced by of the Paris treaties to rearm The announcement of his agree- ment with Stete Secretary Dulles and Foreign Secretary Eden was expected to bolster Mondes- 1"rence's strength for the crucial conference ballot on an amended budget for Indochina operations. Most of the Big Three meeting was devoted to strengthening the south Viet Nam regime before elec- tions in I956 to decide whether or not the divided country goes com- pletely Communist. AID NECESSARY The three statesmen agreed that large-scale military and economic aid must be provided if the anti- communist forces are to stand a chance of winning the poll. Mendes-France called for today's vote on the Indochina. budget after the opposition had rejected a first version by 801 to I01 and blocked passage of the amended version in s nine-hourdebete lasting until Saturday morning. OPPONENTS WARNED - Former foreign minister Georges Bldault is said to have warned Mendes-France's opponents that unless they topple Mendes-France on the Indochina issue now, they will "never get him." The ratification debate on Ger- man rearmement was to have be- gun Monday. It will be delayed for weeks if Iiendes-France is over- thrown. The danger that the Paris treat- ies may be held up will play to the pre.mier's advantage on Mon- day. A solid majority of Hench Assembly members are known to want the treaties to go through, and many may abandon party an- tagonisms to vote for Mendcs- , (Dy Herold PARIS. (Reuters)--Premi plans to try to save South Viet Nam from com through a program of economic and military aid. The agreement was announced as one of the strongesfl Kins) er Mendes-France reached. e United States Saturday. on; Mendes-France prepared to try to topple the premler's government in a vote on Indo- china today. Their success could delay French ratification West Germany. Death of World War Veteran The death occurred yesterday the Charlottetown Hospital Captain Leo MacDonald of More maid at the age of 64. He had been ill for the past eight months. The late Captain MacDonald was born at Glenfinnan. the son ol the late Alexander and Mrs. Mac- Donald. He was a veteran of World War I and received wounds at the Battle of Amlens which necessitated the removal of a leg. After his dis- charge from. the Army with a Captains commision, he took up farming in Mermaid where he liv- ed until strlcken with his last ill-s ness. Besides his widow. the former! Annie Cameron of Summerslcle, he is survived by six sons and one daughter. They are: Leo in Moni- real; Dr. Ian, Kenivllle, N.S.; Athol, Mermaid; Eric. Charlottetown. Ger- ald and Dunstan at home and Anne (Sister St. Gerald Maureen). Congregation of Notre Dame. Montreal. He is also survived by. nine grandchildren. Funeral are rangemenls have not yet been cums pleted. Body Discovered In N. B. Woods Sunday SAINT JOHN, N.l3, (CP)-Th badly decomposed body of an u dentlfied man was found Sunday a wooded section near the Millidg ville area. Immediate ldentlficatio was impossible. An autopsy will b performed and police hoped finger France on that ground. Youth Killed EAST ANGUS. Que. (CP)-A 20- year-ald youth was shot through the head Saturday as he set play- ing cerds in the kitchen of a home here. Police said Sunday they are holding the 64-year-old owner of the house in connection with the slaying. Dead is Gersrd Lemire of Rock Forest, Que.. 21 miles west. of this Eastern Townships Commun- iiy. Employed at the Unemploy- ment Insurance Comission office here, Lemire was boarding at the home of Ulric Ashby. Ashby was under guard Sunday at Ste. Therese Hospital here after he allegedly tried to ssphyxiaie himself in the coal furnace at his home. East Angus Police Chief Emllien Lagueux said the youth was play- ing solitaire in the Ashby kitchen when he was shot above the right eye with s heavy-calibre rifle bul- let. He died instantly. Chief L e g us u x said Ashby's middle-aged son, Gilles. heard a shot and went into the kitchen flight. Welch, 26, Walter Mclnilre. 17, George Ward 17, and Joseph Ars- cnault. 19. al of Prince Edward Island. had cuts and bruises about the face and body. They were treated at Franklin County Memorial Hospital. Welch. badly-cut about the face. said he plans in get married dur- lng the holidays. "if my girl will still have me." Critically Ill LONG BEACH. Calif. IA?)- James Hilton, 54. world - famous writer. is semi-conscious and tak- ing very little food. his doctor said Sunday. The physician added that Hilton's condition is getting "progressively worse". The noted author of "Lost Hori- zon" and "Goodbye. Mr. Chips." entered Seaside Hospital Nov. 21 for what was called a general in- feciion. Although the exact diagnosis of Hilton's condition is known. his physician said he promised the rural his life in D... ” A pen- ilanilsry. He currently is lodged in o Pletou county jail. Chief Justice Ilsley took note of the custom of ordering I new trial in such cases but said he and his four associates did not regard this as necessary. . CLAIMED HIIDIIICTION . Swlnsmer had been under sen- tence to be hanged Jars ii at lis- iou.,His would have been Iberia execution in Nova booth since I when a Hill! known as lemnen was put to do! at fen a A. ll. Macin- tools and J. 8. Baker otstelle on see By ALAN IIAILVEY Canadian Press staff Writer - PARIS (CF)-Behind the congen- ial agreements reached at the At- lentic council meetings lurks the uncongenial thought that the push- button ore is eating ready to move out of the science fiction strips. Within the next decade. d6velop- dsst of new weapons and tech- nidues authorised by the M NATO onion ti I Ilsa: n'-5'i'a4l.'lr1'p?.2'i'l'"m'9'pll'.1l. hfu-'ll'i'.'i.ii'z'.i8l.'." 3:. ..' ieseitlioss. and infantry divisions as now known superseded by small mobile groups. Although officials stress that the new NATO planning pattern is ”evoluildnary rather than revolut- ionary." it is obvious that guided missiles. rockets with atomic war- heads. intercontinental b o m b e r s and megeton bombs are going to make a tremendous difference in the defence setup. In visualizing the shape of pos- sible were to come, planners are to sure to place great emphasis on "early warning" systems. This is particularly true in the ease of as family not to reveal the diagnosis. air etiack on North America. The power to create destruction is so unthinkably great that any potential ice of the West will prob- ably be wary of starting anything without first making sure the in- tended victim's capacity to retel- lete has been neutralized. "I will place a fantastic pra- mium on intelligence." said one conference source. "We'll have to know what the other fellow is up A great issue will be how in find a place of -safety for the Ameri- can retaliatory system. i Up Mess Affe BY WALTER. GRAY Canadian Press Staff Writer WINNIPEG (CP)-F r e as i n g winds whlstled around the steel bars and through the shattered windows of Manitoba's I-Ieadingley jail Saturday night as shivering prisoners cleaned up the mess left by a supper-lime riot. Two floors of dormitories and the dininl room were reported I shambles and a store room was gutted by fire after prisoners alaried a disturbance at the supper lsblc. Several inmates were re- ported injured. none seriously. Atiorney- General lvan Schultz and his deputy. Brig 0. M. M. Key inspected the jail damagb Saturday night. In a statement read by Brig. Kay, Mr. Schultz said a "complete investigation" of the riot would take place. Mr. Schultz said the riot started at approximately 4:40 p. m. at the first sitting of supper. FIRE IN STORE-ROOM ' "A relatively small proportion of the total jail population of 350A not more than 50-were involved," C NATO" Chiefs Plan Push-Buiion Era An example of havoc-wreaking weapons in the offing is the me- gaton bomb now balm produced in quantity. The relation of the megeton in the atomic bomb has been described as that of a me- chine-gun to an old muzzle-loader. The picture is not wholly -gloomy. however. Some Western observers feel that the capacity for inflicting a catastrophe is so great that am- bltlous powers will be careful about precipitating such an omlrught. Man's weapons are be oming so fearful he may decide it is time to give up war. K -., where he found his father holding Shivering Prisoners Clean r Riot In Jail said Mr. Schultz. He said the men overturned rim- lnl room tables and set fire to s third-floor store room. By 7 p. In "everything was under control ihenks to the co-operation of the prisoners" and to jail governor E. G. Weeks who persuaded the pris- oners io return to their cells." Mr. Weeks. who refused report- ers edmlttenca to the jail. located 12 miles west of Wimipsg, said he did not know the cause of the riot. But a trusty told this reporter it stemmed from the refusal Friday of a guard o give a prisoner a sedative. The prisoner and another inmate were put in solitary con- finement. Three more were sent to solitary Saturday. DAMAGE UNKNOWN The trusty said the riot was a demonstration for the release of these men. , . Governor Weeks said he was un- able to estimate. the damage done. Some reports said it would be in the "thousands" of dollars. A trusty said the fire fol- lowed the dining room dis- turbance. Ths inmates than rush- ed to tho third-floor store room used as sleeping quarters for two trustees and storage space for screens. mo trustees were sleep- ing in the room when the disturb- ance broke out. They were joined by two others and the four ban ricsded the steel door from the in. side. SMAIII D00! A trusty said lha piisc..L-.rs smashed down the steel door with a broken radiator and rushed in- side. "Boy we were really scared." the trusty said. "The only way we got out was to pretend that we were one of them." The inmates piled up all the screens and furniture in the store room and set fire to it with cigerei lighters. ' prints would identify the mars In Kitchen; . Owner Of House Arrested a rifle and young Lemire duck Gilles Ashby allegedly dlserme his father. who then went down int the basement and tried to clim into the furnace. . Ashby's son then called Chie Lagucux. who said he stopped elder man before he was serlousl overcome. No motive has been found fo the slaying. the police chief said ORE. TORONTO iCPlnMinimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Met g Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . .. l 2 Vancouver . 28 44 1 Victoria 34 42 l' Edmonton . 26 4': Calgary . . 26 62 i Regine .. 22 44 Winnipeg . 15 30 Toronto 24 24 Ottawa 24 21 Montreal .. .14 3.! Quebec 32 34 Fredericton . 40 47 St. John 32 4!! Moncion 38 53 slifax . . . . 43 53 Charlottetown 39 5! Sydney 38 52 Yarmnuth .. 44 a 47 St. Johns . . . . . . . . . . . .. 23 33 - HALIFAX (CP) - The weathe office says a westerly current 03 cold air will blow across the dis- trict today. Temperatures will feld steadly during the day and theres will be snowflurries. For the mnsi:' part these will be light snow but: over an inch may fall near wind- ward coaets. y Regional forecasts: Prisca Edward Island: Closdyl with snowflnrries: steadily felling temperatures; northwest winds 30. Morning and afternoon torn rs- iurea at Charlottetown as an 80. New Brunswick: Cloudy with a few clear intervals; snowflurries enthng by evening: steadily falling temperatures; northwest winds 20. Morning and afternoon tempera- tures at Moncion 32 and 15. Fred- ericton 30 and 20. Saint John S and 25. Edmundsiou 20 and . Cempbellton as and 20. High tide today at Charldtofaqh. at 7.14 s. m. and 0.80 p. re. :1 Summereide tide eighteen selli- utu later than chsrloteotovvm. Sun rises today at 7.! I. sets at 4.1! p. g T r -.-r---as-Rj-n...& -- 't."5?i I . ,.,,..,.,.g p .,.-.. - ,.... i