Tbl. . OIOI. AI”"”' L OFA A MERE MAN Iu-::- x . my valiaataevsr tube of death but once; eo.warda dlc many tinsel. . no ducal:-. rm Cenla. Morning Dally Founded 1001. VITAL RAI Read by Everybod Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARIJQTTETOWN, CANADA. SATURDAY, JANUARY 6. 1951 Suggests Comrnionweaililr A Troops .Quit Asia Hamilton Steel Plant 0 To Double t Capacity; Supply Situation Tight (By The Canadian Press) The steel Company of Canada. Ltd.. has announced plans to doub- le the capacity of its big plant at Hamilton. I-mid. indications that a tightening steel supply is causing anxiety to Canadian industrialists. A Canadian Press survey showed yesterday that the difficulty of ob- taining steel has led to a few lay- offs across the country, although these have'been offset to some ex- tent by efforts of steel manufactur- ers to increase production workers Laid Off As a result of a scarcity of steel. 200 workers were laid off by Gen- eral Steel Wares of Iondcn. Ont., some 600 by National Steel Car. it fabricating plant in I-Iami"ton, and 20 at Standard Tube Limited in Woodstock. Ont. Elsewhere. Crane Steelware Ltd.. of-Quebec lass cut its working force to 40 from 00. Eastern Car of Am- herst, N.-8.. plans to drop 300 men from its payroll next month be- cause lack of steel is holding up the start of an order. Since Jan. 1. Federal bans on the sale of steel for non-essential bulld- ing have been in effect as a means of coping with the shortage. They forbid use of steel in construction of dance halls. theatres. breweries, to- bacco factories. outdoor advertis- ing shoe and other specified types of structures. However. steel may be used in building houses. com- mercial office buildings and most manufacturing plants. The restrictions are tied in with similar measures in the United states, introduced to divert steel to defence plants. Even defence contractors must wait their turn to obtain steel un- der another order which created is Coming Events "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Dance. Vernon 1-fall. Monday, January 8th. Vernon Driving Club. "Lucky and his Eastern Rhythm Boys, Sunnyside Ballroom tonight. "Crapaud District Lodge meets in Prince Arthur Lodge. Crapaud, Tuesday. January 9th. at 2 P. M. "Reserve January Rummage Sale at School Room. 7 P. M. "Meeting of the Clyde River Manse Committee in the Church, Monday evening. January 8th. 20th for st. Peter's "Annual meeting New Will- shira District Lodge at Brook- fleld, Wednesday. Jan. l0th, 2.30 pm. "Laughs. Laughs. Laughs. see Bob Hope in "Sorrowful Jones" at MacDonald Bros. Theatre Friday. Saturday. Show time s P. M. "The Annual Meeting of Mur- ray Harbor Presbyterian congre- fialicn will be held in Church on January 9th, at 2 P. M. A "The Annual Meeting of the Crapaud-Victoria Board of Trade will be held Monday evening at I! P- M. in Crapaud Hall. The offic- crs tfor the year 1051 will be elected. .','if70tice to farmers Eldon and ”i"'llly. If interested in pur- "ha-tin: Cockshuu machinery ace ".7 or our local dealer. msdon E11111: Eldon. Weeks Farm Equip- N1 . "Monthly Meeting of Mt. stew- 'lI't Branch Canadian Legion will be held in Legion Boom. January 8th. Guest speaker will be Mr. Pear Pate. civil defence organizer. All veterans welcome. R. 1!. Fur- nm. secretary Treasurer. "Loadin f-fogs formguzgda, Packers Ltit. Charlottetown. each Monday until 2.!) P. M. inni -1-mm: am. at xinrm. 1 roads ones will pick up by truck. 1: not you are mad to bring your hogs '0 the station. Alden Corr. Phone 7r-13. xfnkora. for Canada T::rTd.:.! L "ui 2 1- -Tinuaailaiihn It Cariagn. iPh6nA;so-1.11. 5.-an; .- 1-, ,y W - ..i.'.7.i5i"' "'1.-".3'Y'.?.l'.; " ch! 10 . 1 . P0. l'.i"i;m...',fr”.... (Fred- Shook- ” investigation into fall But! N0 a”m"'”"n' Tm: Jeffrey of Nlpigon. Ont. that he and others had heard a system of priorities for delivery of steel for defence production. '- To Require is Months The Stelco expansion program, expected to take 18 months to com- plete, will cost about 545,000,000. Plans call for it to increase pig iron production, now 'l50.000 tons a year. by 460.000 tons and to step up the steel ingot capacity of 1,080,000 tons by 660.000 tons. At Hamilton works. stelcois basic steel producer, 8200 persons are employed, The expansion will add several hundred persons to the pay- roll. The other major basic steel plants in Canada are those of the Algoma Steel Corporation in Swult Ste. Marie, Ont... and of Dcmlnlon Steel and Coal Company in Sydney. ma. W. F. Holding. president of the Canadian Manufacturers Associa- tion. said the Stelco expansion pro- gram will beneflt all classes of in- dustry. H. M. Tamer. president of the Canadian General Electric Comp- any, saw it as beneficial Va all manufacturers using steel. includ- ing his own firm. He said the steel shortage had already company to consider curtailing pro- ducltlon i.n the second quarter of 195 . Report 30 B. C. Residents Await End Of Vhirld A KERIEIMIIOS. B. C., Jan. 5-(CP) -Thisrty members of a. religious sect, who have sold all their world- ly goods, today await the end of the world. In a locked and shuttered house. the group, all dressed in wh , has been in self-imposed confinement for 11 days. .. They are members of the "Church of God" who broke away from a Pentecostal Tabernacle in this British Columbia. interior town of 1.000. 150 miles east of Vancouver. Behind the barred doors. the elders stand apart from the world. have made no public statements. but friends report they are waiting for the world to end. basing their belief on Biblical prophecy. These friends did not say the date on which the "Church of Ciod" expects the end of the world. Grouped in the small house are men, women and children. includ- ing eight students of the town school who have not returned to class rooms alter the Christmas holidays. Before entering the crowded dwelling. all worldly belongings were sold at sacrifice prices. it was reported to police. Police. school and health auth- critics are watching developments at the house. Health authorities fear congestion constitutes a pub- lic health danger. The "exiles from the world" are mostly farmers and fruit growers in the--district.---w -- -- --.. ...,., ,....,..... .c.. towed at the house the day after L..irisi.nll.s. Police removed two teen-age girls from the house a few days ago at the request of their parents. The only other person to leave is a wid- ow. she told neighbors she left when asked to surrender her wed- ding ring. The reason for this was not explained. Immigration OTTAWA. Jan. I - (OP) - Im- migration Minialer Harris said to- day he would order a d trhental on: that displaced persons rna e yrnents to Canadian selection b can in lamps in order to be allowed to come to Canada. Mr. Barrie said he would launch the investigation on the basis of a orted statement by Dr. A.!f. Dr. Jeffrey was quoted as saying ill The Minister aai , laints ad ravioual been heard about the saith o some of flaunt. loung- roots to canon. this III I M. M . E8 a'tygP:s'i'.,aliiiit"r'a,diieaii no- "1. '?''."'?'''''v . P forced his ' Prime Mhisler Nehru Of India Gives Views Study of -A-s-ion Proli- lorns To Be Con- tinued At London. ....1 DONIDON. Jan. 5 - (CP) - Prime Minister Nehru of India to- day asked British Commonlwedth leaders to withdraw their military forces from Asia, but to continue to help raise living standards there. Qualified sources said Nehru dominated talk among leaders of the eight countries represented here on the topic of restoring peace to Korea and stability to Asia. The study was inconclusive. It is to be completed Monday. Nehru'a formula provides: Communist China to be ad- . mitted to the United Nations; A Korean cease-fire as a pre- lude to creating an independ- ent, united and democratic Korean state; Formosa to be turned over to the duly-recognized Gov- ernment of China, as provided in the Cairo declaration of 1943: . A peace treaty to restore independence to Japan; France to consider quitting Indo-China and Britain. in time, to pull out of Malaya in the face of those couniries' risinng revolutionary move- ments: and The advanced countries of the west to help the under- developed Asian peoples to raise their living standards -- but without strings. Foreign Secretary Bevin of Bri- lain was atoms have led off the discussion by "reaffirming his view that Britain was right in' re- cognizing Red Chine. .Bevin's rea- soning was that if peace.could be preserved a policy of friendship with Red China might pay off and might weaken. if not break. the Peiupinvg-Moscow axis. Opposes China In U.N. Prime Minister R. G. Menzies of Australia was said to be against admitting Red China to the U.N'. at a time when her troops are fighting American and other United Nations soldiers. .He argu- ed American public opinion could not be ignored on this score. New Zealand and South Africa were reported in broad agreement with the Australian view. The invfonmants said there seems to be a general feeling among Commonvwealth leaders - so far it is not a set attitude - against supporting the United States pro- posal that the U.N. declare Red China an aggressor-. - The "freedom bell" presented by the U. 8. A. to the western sector of Berlin has much the same tone as Londonls "big Ben". OTTAWA. Jan. :ida.'s only active cruiser. the On- for exercises with the Australian fleet. the navy announced today. The 15-week training cruise is being made on the invitation of Prime Minister Robert Menaies the sister Dominionyand will mark the first such trip ever made Australia by a Canadian warship The 8.000-ton cruiser has been Dept. To Probe Bribery By D. P."si Great takes Paper Company near Nipigon. ' "A full investigation was made at that time and in most of the cases." he said. "the illness was of a tem- porary mature and such that would not have been sufficient to refuse their entry as immigrants." Reports to the Department have indicated that paper company of- ficials are pleased with the calibre of displaced persons, brought from liropo to work in the mills. More than 61.000 displaced per-. sona have beentbi-ought to Canada in the three-year period from 1011 to NIC.ffIHdIelol last -year. They came in under agreements with various industries in which the DP umall undertook to remain in the specified industry” for at least a Many have done work for various Says Dobbin Beats Car 4.. 5- CP)- 7 -year- GUELPH. 0nt., Jan. Tom Kennedy. (above) old Ontario Agriculture Minister, says Dobbin beats a convertible any time-any time you're court- ln'. that is. i He told a group of students at the Ontario Agricultural College last night: "I courted my wife in a horse and buggy-it beats a Car a mile. Wish I could do it again!" WASHINGTON. Jan, 5 - (AP).- Senator Robert Taft (Rep. Ohio) declared today the United states is making a mistake "butting in" in Europe and challenged President Truman's claimed authority to send American troops there without first asking Congress. Launching an attack on the ad- ministration's foreign policy. Taft toldithe Senate: "We have no business going over there and trying to prod them into a. great military program -which. in my opinion, is certain to produce war. "I doubt very much that the Russians contemplate any military conquest of the world. I do not myself see any conclusive evidence that they expect to start a. war with the United States." g Instead of sending American sol- diers to Eunspe, Taft said. the U. S. should build up its sea defences and develop an air force "more effective than the world has ever seen." would Limit Force The Ohio Republican said he 6-(CF)-Cam in the iiurio, will sail for Australia Feb. 19 1' would go along with committing Canadian Cruiser To Sail For Australia On Feb. 19 dockyard at Esquimalt, British Columbia naval base. for a eiit. she is due back there June 7. The announcement came shortly after Defence Minister Claxton raid the Defence Department's aim is to double naval operational activit- of ies -this year. The cruise indicated the Govern- to ment is not anticipating a general war will break out at this time and indicated. too. that the navy wants to get ready to operate in the Pa- cific. with Pacific fleets, if and when major war does come. The great bulk of the navy's fight- ing in the last war was done in the North Atlantic. " The Ontario's cruise marks an ex 'on of the system of train- ing Canadian warships with British and American fleets. This is the first time this system has been ex- tended to include Australian units. Naval officials said the cruise will not denude the Canadian Pacific coast of naval strength. Three de- stroyers from ilhqulmalt now .I.rc, in Korean waters-where they. have served with Australian warships- bu-t they will start coming back. one by one. next month and be replaced by others. There are two frigates on that coast and two destroyers. the Crus- ader and Algonquin. are being brought out of rnothballs. The Ontario is commanded by .CoinInodore Hugh 1'. Pullen of Oakvilie. ont.. and Victoria. she is to join the Royal Australian Navy in early April in combined exercises somewhere in the south seas. The navy said it is intended that the Ontario will visit various Aus- papor companies in tstarn Canada and another large segment hu- gona into the garment industry and theiatotbohard-roohaiinaa. . ' -. l traiian porn "but details of her U. S. Table Stock Quota Mounting Up To Limit The American to-ble stock potato quota of 1000.000 bushels was seventy-five per cent filled on Dec. 30. according to a telegram re- ceived yesterday by the Provincial Potato Marketing Board from the Commercial Councillor of the Canadian Embassy at Washington. The American quota calls for the importation of 1,000,000 bush- els Canadian potatoes with the dut of 37 1-2 cents per cwt. Duty rate on any additional table stock potatoes will be 75 cents per cwt. Officials of the Board here be- lieve that the double duty rate will be imposed shortly in view of the fact that several shipmerrls are on route to the U. S. A. by water. About half the seed quota of two and one half million bushels of Canadian potatoes has been filled, it was estimated. The duty rates for the seed quota. are the same as those for table stock and will be dou-bled as soon as any ad- ditional seed is shipped across the border. Diamond-Siudci-ed Bracelet Stolen OTTAWA. Jan. 5 -(GP) - A diamond-studded platinum brace- let valued at s8.000ihe.s disappeared from the downtown Henry Birks and Sons jewelry store, police said tonight. store officials would not comment but police said it is be- lleved to have disappeared Friday or Saturday of last week. Republican Senator In 16 U. S. Air-I-iorce Halls Flights To Wonjil Fall of City Would Threaten Retreat .Of Allied Troops. AN AIRBASE IN JAPAN. Jan. 6 - (Saturday) - (AP)--The United States air force today suspended all flights into Red-threatened Wonju, Korea, except for the emer- gency airlift of wounded. Wonju is a vital rail-highway hub 55 miles east and slightly south of the abandoned uth Korean capital of Seoul. Chinese and North Korean Communists are dI'ivim',' on wonju in an effort to out off the Allie.s' retreat routes. The makeshift airfield just out- side battered Woniu had been a scene of busy airlift activity as late as dusk Friday. Today air drops and nnn-evacua- tion landings were stopped. a com- bat cargo command spokesman said, Threat sharpens Virtual suspension of traffic into Wonju apparently indicated the North Koreans' flanking threat against the lmperilled communica- tions centre had sharpened during the night, Air Force ground crews had been under orders to keep the field open until the infantry ordered it closed. TOKYO. Jan. 6 - (Saturday) - - (AP) - Communist armies thrust southward through frigid mountain passes of East-Central Korea Friday in a. sudden shift of power that in- creased :1 flanking threat to Un- ited Nations forces pulling back (continued on Page 15 col, 4) Rubber Co. Boosts Attack of. Truman Policy "some limited number of American divisions" to Nort-h Atlantic de- fences. Europe must lead off in es- i-ablishing such a force, however. he added. Senator Joseph o'Mahoney (Dem. Wyo.) retorted that Taft keyed his speech to an assumption "not borne out by any facts revealed to me" that U. S. military leaders are plan- ning "to raise an army of American boys to defend a Europe nct will- ing to defend itself." 0”Mahoney said that as a mem- ber of the senate Appropriations Committee he had talked to all the top military figures and "defin- itely did not receive from tliem" any such plan. Taft declared: "It's a startling thing to find our-” selves getting ready to send mil- lions of troops to Europe without (Continued on Page is Col. 3! Flu Epidemic In Germany HAMBURG. Germany. Jan. 5 - (Reuters) - An influenza epidcinir: which -has claimed 20 lives here spread near-panic among Ham-burg citizenry tonight while many other parts of western Europe reported widespread attacks from a less vir- ulent fonn of the disease. The greatest number of cases was reported in Britain. A wave of "three-day flu" hit one in five per- sons in Belgium. and Paris doctors reported a "mild epidemic" in France. An epidemic which started on Britain's northeast coast and spread from wmtem port areas - taking in Ncrthcrn Ireland on the way .- was reported moving through the industrial Midlands Friday. Absenteeism in industry. trans- port and mail services was wide- spread and thousands tool: the germ to bed with them. In Liver- pool. 80,000 were listed sick. London waited anxiously for the lgteaiim to spread throughout the cup- The National Institute of Medi- cal Research in London identified theftorth-Country influenza bug as. the some as had already swept Sweden and Denmark. It had not caused any direct fatalities in Brit- ain but doctors say it is putting victims to bed for a week at least. Industrial chiefs fear substantial production losses. May Take Cruiser Out of Mothbolls VICIORIA. B.C.. Jan. 3 - (CP) -serious considerations is being given to the re-commissioning of Canada's first cruiser, i.'he,Uganda. it was learned today. The 0.000-ton ship now is in mothballc at nearby Fequimalt naval base. Correspondence on her return to active duty has been exchang- ed between Victoria and Ottawa but the navy here would neither "confirm nor deny reports of her my have not yet been con- impendlng return to duty. Price Of Tires 'IORlON”ID, .lan. 5 -(OP) - The General Tire and Rubber Company of Canada. Limited. an- nounced tonight immediate price increases of 2 1-2 to 10 per cent on passenger automobile tires and of five to 12 per cent on truck tires. Cost of passenger car tires now You yourself are demoed to have an itching palm. MAXI MS OF-A ' 3 MERE MAN much eon- PAGES L-ROAD CENTRE HREATENED BY CHINE K Subscriptions delivered 80.00; Mail 36.00 other Provinces and U.S.A. 18.00 SE REDS range from 315 to 350 and for trucks from 340 to 3400. By JACK BRAYLEY (Canadian Press Staff Writer) HALIFAX. Jan. 5 - (OP) -- In a relaxed pre-holiday mood before leaving on A 21-day Caribbean cruise. Finance Minister Abbott to- day skirted questions on his bud- get, said Canada's war-preparedness was on solid grounds financially, re- iterated his belief that general con- trols were not an immedate neces- sity. had hopes for increased west Indies trade and had something to say about the future of old age pen- siom and sales tax legislation re- sulting from Dominion-Provincial talks. In Happy Mood Accompanied by Mrs. Abbott. the man charged with raising millions to finance the countryls big defence program was in a happy frame of Good Results In Drift Netting Of Herring In Gulf Of St. Lawrence OTTAWA, Jan. 5 - (CP) Good results from exploratory drift. netting for herring in the Gulf of - St. Lawrence during 1950 were reported today by Dr. A. W. H. Need-ler of the Atlantic Biological Stallion at St. Andrews. N.B. The herring stocks of the Atlan- tic coast constitute one of Can- ada's major unused fishery re- sources, he told the concluding session of the annual meeting of the Fisheries Research Board of Canada. Good catches o-f herrin-g. sonic- iimes exceeding 500 pounds of fish per 40-yard length of net. were made in ihe Gulf. These catches com-pared ”very favorably" with average drift-net caicihes in the North Sea. although the effective amount of flit used oiiien was less ihan one-tenth of that used by some commercial fishermen. Ex-ploralory herring fishing and population studies were initiated by the Atlantic Herring Investiga- tion Committee. formed in 1044 under joint arrangements between the Governments of Canada, New- foundland, Quctbec, Nova Scoiia, New Brunswick and Prince Ed- ward Island. The committee was dissolved in l950, but the investi- gations have been continued on a reduced scale by the Fisheries Re- seamh Board. The Board's research vessel, the I-larengus. carried out exploratory drift-net fishing in the Gulf and on the outer coast of Nova Scene. from June 1 to Oct. 31. Another vessel on loan to the Board from the Newfoundland division of the Fisheries De-parizment was .sim.ilar- ly employed on the west coast of Newfoundland from Sept. 1 to Nov. 15. Hydrogralplhic and plankton in- vestigations also were carried out by the staff of the St. Andrews Station during 1950 year and the heaviest catches of herring were made in waters where certain planklonic organisms were abun- dant Sonic sounders showed that her- ring form dense schools suitable for -purse-seining during the late autumn and winter. but usually are dispersed during the summer. Sees Defence Plans On Solid Financial Grounds El-1Tl.TlI.l1en he boarded the Canad- ian National liner Canadian Cruiser ' for a trip that will take him to Nassau, Jarnaica and Bermuda and . get. him back in time for the open- - ing of Parliament Jan. 29. And he is going to bring down his budget: "At the earliest possible moment after that date." Fellow passengers on the cruiser included Rt. Rev. W.H, Moorhead, Anglican Bishop of Fredericton and Mrs. Moorhead. Mr. Abbott told reporters he was not taking along any budgetary pa- perwcrk. ”I'm going to ther all the strength I can so ll be able to successfully popularize my budget when I get. back." he said with a wide grin. This was about his only clue on taxation and he didn't com- ment when a reporter suggested the fact the budget needed "populariz- (Continued on Page 15 Col. 8) PARIS. Jan. 5--(CP) - Vvcst European Communists, taking their cue from Moscow. slashed at Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower through their controlled press to- day in a campaign to discredit him and his North Atlantic Al- liance command. The French Communist Party. numerically strongest and closest to the scene. had a leading role in the hate drive. Moscow publications disclosed the party line soon after Eisen- hower was appointed Dec. 19 to head a projected 1.000.000-man army to defend West Europe against aggression from the East. Eisenhower is due to arrive Sunday in Paris. where he has temporary headquarters in the Hotel Astoria. on what he has described as an exploratory trip -to "reassure myself that we are not working at cross purposes with anybody." He will tour West European countries in the 12-country al- liance to talk to political and military leaders and return in Washington around the and of the month. Eisenhower will confer with Rene Pleven. French Prime Min- ister. Tuesday. informants said. Meantime. from Rome. It was learned that Italy had taken her first actual step toward joining , the army Eisenhower will com- Eisenhower Is Target Of New AI-Iate Campaign mand by nominating an officer to represent her on his staff. He is Gen. Enrico Frattini. 60. hitherto commander of the Rome military area. Like France. Italy will initially contribute three divisions. She already has five divisions fairly well equipped and plans by mid- 1951 to have two more completely equipped and a further four near completion. Field Marshal Viscount Mont- gomery. Western Union defence chairman and war-time leader un- der Eisenhower's supreme com- mand ln Western Eunope. said in London today he would confer with Eisenhowechere Sunday. "I can say nothing about any appointment to his staff." Mont- gomery added. The pro-Communist Paris news- paper Ce Solr today advised. "General. stay at home." The Communist-led General Confederation of Labor called on it; members in the nationalized Renault motor 'factory and other big industrial plants to strike the moment the General sets foot In France. The Communist Political Bur- eau threatened man dock strikes to prevent unloading of arms shipments. Communist organs throughout West Europe waged a similar campaign but only in France Transportation Commission Discussesliaies MJONCTON. N. 3, Jan. 5 - (CP)-The Maritime Transportat- ion Canmisslon, meeting in spec- ial session here today. decided to question the estimates made by the Railway Association of Can- ada on which a request has been based for aifive per cent freight rate increase. The meeting also rapped the system of horizontal percentage increases and urged that a propos- ed general rates investigation scheduled for Jan. 15 be postponed until the ruport of a Royal Com- mission is released and studied. L. W. simms of Saint John. N. B.. Commission chairman. presid- ed at the one-day session. The Commission based its decis- ion to questionthe railways' estim- ates on improved financial returns to the lines resulting from present and anticipated traffic volume in- creases. If reasonable increases could be justified, the commission then. would question the fairness of horizontal increases such as have been applied since 1948 and which are proposed in the current ap- plication. The case will be heard by the Board of Transportation Commissioners at Ottawa Jan. 19. The raiiways' request contains an amended application to be made as soon as a study is made of the impact of the 40-hour weeic on operations. The commission agreed to make a study of this phase i.n co-operation with Mari- time industry with the object of submitting evidence of the effect of the increases. . In dealing with horizontal in- creases-rate increases common to all portions of the country-the Commission said the method creat- ed undue hardships on the east.- ern and western extremities. The only ccmmodlty exceptions are coal and coke. It urged there were other ways of meeting revenue (Continued on Page 15 Col. 4) THE BEST Wm , to win on A House. if , Race. is Nor 2 TCRONTO, Jan. 5 - (CP) -. Minimum temperatures observed between 7.30 pm. and 7.30 a.m. EST: maximum temperatures be- tween 7.30 am. and 7.30 p.m.: - Vicioria 36-40; Edmonton 22B- 9: Calgary 19B-15; Regina 32B -16B; Winnipeg 273 . 10B: Otiaawa 7-10; Montreal ii-20; Quebec 3-ll; Saint John 22-20; Halifax 32-34: Charlottetown 24- 26; Sydney 38-38: Yarmouth I- 313 St. John's 36-50. HALIFAX. Jan. 5 -(GP)-offic- ial forecasts issued by the Domin- ion Public Weather office .herq and valid until midnight Saturday. Synopsis: No important weather change will take place Saturday as pres- sure remains high. On Sunday temperatures will show an upward trend. This will coincide with the return-of south- west winds and increasing cloudi- ness. ,. Forecasts: Prince Edward Isla.nd-- Clear and c id. West winds Iii becominif ll lit by afternoon. Low and high Saturday at Charlottetown lo and 22. Outlook for Sunday-cloudy and milder. High tide today at 9.46 A. M. and 8.40 P. M. , sun rises at 7151 A. M. and sets at 4.47 P. M. Sumrneraido tide eigthteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. IOIDIN -- CAPl.'l'0IMlN3l'llNl IQBY BIIVIUI ' P A IUNDA YIIIVICI were there threats of atrikol. laavolatdca Timeout. 0.0!?-IL .4 vl.I'P.I..