. . . Maxims of ll, More Man -' d-egm-rogue always suspect! l M 12 races KILLED. IN PLANE. CRASH AFTER SURVIVING cnsn on SATURDAY: CHABLOTIETOWN FAMILY srnnvro Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew P P "mum Read byEverybcdy g i cnanoormmwn. causes, MONDAY, ocroaaa 4,1954 3 PRICE be P””m"”di Nations. Sign Agreement 9 . windows popped and merchandise -'nseeday. 3th and n-iday After surviving the crash of a jet plane which occurred near nangor. Me., on Saturday. no Peter 1-Iawkes. a navigator with the R.C.A.P'.. was killed last even- ing along with another airman when an llixpediter aircraft which had been sent from Montreal to pick him up crashed at St. Hubert's. Quebec. while coming in for a landing. The distressing news was receiv- ed here yesterday by his widow. the former olive Downs of this city. daughter of Mrs. Downe and the late Percy Downe. The late Fm Hawks had just spent two weeks visiting with his wife here and had left Summerside on Saturday" after their second child Peter Wakeford had been born at the Prince Edward Island Hospital. A native of Duncan, 15.0.. where his father survives him, he married Miss Downs over three years ago while he was stationed at the 11.0. All base in Summerside. They have one other child. a two-yesr- old daughter. Catherine Dora. shortly after leaving Bummer- side on Saturday word was receiv- ed that a jet training plane in which he was travelling had crashed near Bangor. Neither ne or the pilot were injured at this time and W0 1-iawkes phoned his wife. assuring her of his safety. The news of his death received last "Chins brings great sorrow to a ll-mlly bereaved only last spring. Arrangments are being made to have the body taken to the Island for burial in Charlottetown. Upon receiving word. the falher of the airman left British Columbia yes- terday for this City. . By PETER. BUCKLEY Canadian Press Staff Writer ST. I-IUBERT, Que. (CP)-Fly. lng Officer Peter I-lawkes of Char- lottetown. P. E. l'.. who escaped injury Saturday when his plane made an emergency landing negr Bangor. Me., died Sunday in the crash of an RCAF plane at St. Hubert airbase. One other unidentified man was killed. and two were seriously in. lured. when a two-engined C-45 Expediter 'aircraft overahot the runway. clipped the roof of a con- demned pump-house and rocketed to earth. All four were servicemen. WIFE RECEIVES WORD Mrs. Peter Hswkes in Charlotte- town said she received word her ausband was one of the men killed in the crash. Montreal newspapers identified the other dead man as George German singh, 23. believed to be a native of India. They said the injured were F0 Jack Desbrisay of Ottawa and a man named McKenna. F0. Hawkes whose father live; at Duncan, 3. C.. and F0. Jack Desbrisay of Ottawa made an emergency landing at the United States air force Dow airbase near Sharp '0uake In Alaska ANCHORAGE. Alaska (AP)-A sharp. swaying earthquake rated close to ” A intensity-rocked e. 1.000-mile area of the lower Alaska mainland early Sunday, uullne near - penie'snd minor diguage. but no reported casual- The quake was followed by five brief aficrshocks spaced over I. period of six hours. Oontrein building walls cracked. plaster showered down. plate glass toppled from shelves here. Broken electric wires flashed and crackled in the night. but set no fires. Coming Events "Raul Dan .3 mam” Sink ce onshaw Inn. "I-Ilular nanoe Wednesday night. "Tea and basaa: at Y. M. C. A. Tue-d-v 5th. 4 till e. soc. by o.a:.s. "3lD'lnl and cleaning 30? Crapaud suns. timothy daily. Mcdulgan 5 1., "Vernon Legion l t Him in I-Islon Homo'.msii.n:ibio: s o-emu. "Dance C dig it 11 Oct. 4th. a';onu::ua' .;,”'i:-24?: Turner's Orchestra. "We are but 11 if daily. Paving iri::kut';l-'ieas'." J. Itacbougall. Vernon. "Kensingto hall Tuesday. Oct. 5 at 8:30 pm. Texas -Ralph and his Augustine Cove skyllners. Ad. mission 40 and 25. "us Mscooweli will be hauling gum in Wtltshire Factory on mltdnaeday only starting October "Notice - Custom t 39- Folk. uwlasnoxu; sxiiut down reed ammo. xunm.' 1"” "Texas Ralph and is A Bangor when their T-33 Silver Star jet trainer got into difficulties Saturday while on a flight from Chatham. N. B.. to St. Hubert. The RCAF did not indicate what field the C-45 came from but said two of the men aboard were pas- sengers. The two injured service men stumbled from the wreckage and were taken to hospital in Montreal. but authorities there would not comment on their condition. An eyewitness to the crash. taxi driver Jean-Paul Brodeur, 35, of Villa Lemoyne. Que.. said he saw the plane "catch a roof." "One motor shot out, then the plane started to turn. It flipped over and over. One wing came off and it (the plane) burst into flame." ' BAD-WEATHER. CRASH The wreckage was scattered for 200 yards through the field and onto a road opposite the Aviation Hotel. The fire was put out by RCAF personnel and the wreck- age was quickly carted away. The crash occurred in bad weather-a combination of lower- ing clouds and a fast-gathering dusk. The pump-house. about 800 yards from the end of the runway, was to have been demolished within a short time. A new pump-liousc had already been built on the base. An RCAF spokesman at air de- fence command headquarters at St. Hubert said the communica- tions plane was returning from a routine mission to Canada's east coast. The RCAF denied earlier reports that four persons were killed and that the plane might have knifed through a house on the nearby Chambly highway. KILLED BY TRUCK HALIFAX. (C13)-John Archibald MacKay of Faimouth. N.S.. was killed at nearby Lower Backville Sunday when he was struck by a er Sackvllle. A coroner's was adjourned until Wednesday. truck driven by Samuel Cox. Low- inquest Col. Cameron B. Ware. 41. of London. Ont.. Commandant of the Canadian Joint Services College at Royal Roads, B.C.. has been pro- moted to Acting Brigadier and head of the Canadian Military Mission in the Far East. Brig Ware. who won the D50 in Italy in 1943, will leave for Tokyo to take up his new post early this month. tCP from National Defence) P. E.l. Man Is Injured In N. B. ST. GEORGE. NB. (GP) - A Camp Utopia soldier and a Prince Edward Island man were injured in a head-on two-car collision sat- urday afternoon five miles east of here. Under treatment at the Saint John General Hospital with a broken leg and a smashed wrist is James A. Moore. 39, of Bradal- bane. P,E.I. I-lis condition was re- ported fair. ' . Joseph Landry, 20. of Camp Utopia, suffered several cuts and gashes. He is a patient at the Black's Harbor hospital. With Moore were his parents and Mrs. George Mayhew of. Kinkora. P.E.I. MONTREAL (CP)-RCMP have arrested 11 more persons in their second sweep through southern Quebec since breaking open. a multi-million-dollar smuggling ring in this province. Inspector Raoul Carriere, in charge of the investigation. said the 11 men, including a Montreal doctor and four eastern townships farmers. were taken into custody Saturday in early-morning raids similar to those that resulted in 14 arrests last week. Inspector Carriere said members of the latest group will be charged. as were the first. with conspiring illegally to import. receive or pos- sess United States cigarets. mar- garine and other merchandise. AIIRAIGNMENT TODAY He said they will be arraigned this morning. The ring. reported to have netted five gangs some 80,000,000 during the last 15 months and deprived federal and provincial govern- menis of s20.000.000 in tax revenue, was broken open last Wednesday, Inspector Carriere identified the men arrested Saturday as Dr Jean - Paul Godette and Benoit Girard. a cook. both off Montreal; Luc Routhier. service station at- tendant. Raymond Dubreuil. Glac- trician. and N111 Bouiet, salesman. all of Sherbrooke: Alfred Paquette, Henri Beloin and Percy Gendreall. all farmers from East Hereford: labor. Shortage In 1-IOUUION. Maine (AP) - A group of Aroostook potato farmers Saturday expressed fear that "a great part” of the 1954 crop would be lost unless.they can get more harvest labor quickly. ' More than to Heulton arel lr0W' ers, meeting with F P 0! COHJHICTCV officials. described the situation as "a near emergency" and recommended in a resolution that: The area's schools my 61025 through October. rather than re- open Oct. 11: The Canadian labor import sit- uation be clarified; and Iveryono in the county set out and help dig the spud: before lull- ing frosts eorne. ONLY 805 DUO ltainly weather hos so delayed the. harvest. the resolution said. that only 80 per cent of the crop is out of the ground. Last year at this time many growers had fin- inmate said that many Cana- wbo came over the border to II), it! 001; It tine cm lkyli :..e'”.::. ls:..”:"l"."5'i:'- ........ as see u. HNMW . ...i,..... Asoeeteok have gone home of the rain. Under-exist 11 More ArrestslMade in Quebec Smuggling Ring Henri Plante. ougier of a drive- yourself company in Beauceville; Lucien Bechard, a farmer from North Hailey. and Paul Paquin. salesman from East Angus. FIVE OTHERS BOUGHT Inspector Carriere said RCMP are looking for five other persons belonging to the same grourh HE said if they are not picked up. their names will be announced to-- day and warrants issued for their arrest. ' Another man. Adrien Leblanc of Montreal, who was arrested early Saturday morning pleaded guilty here to a charge of illegal pos- session nf U. S. cigarets and was fined i200 and costs. An RCMP spokesman said last week the force has the names of 60 more persons involved in the ring. The first group arrested pleaded not guilty to the conspiracy-charge. Ten were granted cash hail of 5050 and four were ordered to deposit ball of sl000 in "immovable" property. succlcssrui. srzsircu DALHOUSIE. N.B. (CP) - Most of the 10.000 cords of pulpwood swept'to sea from Dalhousie when hurricane Edn hit the Mariiimes hat been recovered in one of the largest wood salvage operations on Fields; Growers Fear Loss of Crop '1at-tons. they said. it's im- ih get replacements. The record. The work took four days. Maine Poiaio cluding wealth. have used the quota sys- Solidp Front Against Reds Wool Dealer - Says Britain Discriminaiing g OTTAWA (CP) - A Canadian wool dealer says Britain has opened her doors to imports of wool cleaned and combed in Uru- guay but has shut them against a similar product from Canada. Leslie Biggin of Toronto told the tariff board Saturday that he re- ceived a British wool order. but his request for an import licence was rejected by the British board of trade. Mr. Biggin is a member of the Dominion Wool Dealers Associa- tion which is supporting the bid of the Canadian wool textile industry for higher tariffs against compet- ing wool cloth imported from Brit- am. QUOTA SYSTEM He said that some countries. in- some in the Common- tcm to protect their textile indus- tries from unwanted imports. When he received the British wool order. he said. he asked the British board of trade for permis- sion to import the item. but the board turned him down on the grounds that a similar product was available in Britain and that Brit- ain had no dollars available for ”non-essentials." "Wool tops combed in,Uruguay have been permitted to enter the U. K. while at approximately the same time tops combed in Canada were refused entry.” he said. Tops are ihe balls of cleaned and combed wool used by the spinner for processing into worsted yarn. PARTICULAR CHARACTER "The tops which were combed in Canada, and for which the British board of trade refused a licence were made entirely from Canadian wool which has a particular char- acter of its own and does not com- pete with tops produced in Eng- land or other countries.” Mr. Biggin, who is vice-pres- idcnt of the Wool Combing Corp- oration of Canada with plants at Acton and. Gait. Ont. said the plight of the Canadian wool textile industry is such that demand for wool by the mills has dropped sharply. "if this trend is allowed to con- tinue. unemployment in the wool textile industry and the wool trade in general will continue to show a radical increase in the very near future." . Special Session French Assembly On Thursday PARIS (C?) C Premier Pierre Mendes - France Sunday night called the French National As- sembly into special session begin- ning Thursday to hear his report on the London agreement to re- arm Germany. In London. a high French source said earlier the premier would stake the life of his government on.the new agreements when they come up for legislative ratifica- tion. This informant said Mendes- France had said his administra- ton would be "really guilty if it didn't put all something it had negotiated itseift and which had brought France such important guarantees." its weight behind As he left London, the premier. pale and drawn from the bad cold that plagued him during the cloa- ing days of the conference. said I k merely: "I am hopeful for the izeldiralmnuthbritiammtgrcerelgr go mtmmuon by France” rule-L saves FINGERS Bad weather has cut the 1054 crop by an estimated 25 per cent below the 1153 total of 52,000,000, bushels. - IU. K. Replies Today To Red Plan i' By WILLIAM HAECOURT Canadian Press staff Writer UNITED NATIONS. N.Y. (GP)- In an address to the UN General Assembly today. Belwyn Lloyd of Great Britain will make the first formal reply to Russia's latest proposals toward an end of the cold war. - llnce Andrei Vishinsky Rn- nounced the complex ltussisn dis- armament plan in the assembly Thureday. Western reaction has been cautious and skeptical. Moat agreed that at first glance the plan seemed a step in the right direction but whether it was a wopaganda manoeuvre or a sincere effort toward reconciliation with the west. wee not so readily decided. , .. ...... automatic pared with 20,719 in I952. dicsted doubts as to the sincerity of the proposal. said however it was being given "full and careful study" and that an official Can- adian statement would come early in the to A detailed study of the proposal. based on ' the Anglo-French dis- armament plan made "last June and previously rejected b a hlbitlon of nuclear and all types of ma--destruction weapons. ma- jor reductions in all armies and armaments. and establishment of a control body with powers to Canadian factories made 123.000 toasters in 1053. com- A Canadian mokssmsn. who in- week. Delegates devoted this weekend Russia That plan, of which Loyd was co-author. provides for pro- uarentee its ebaarvanee. OUILI: SPOT As the long-sought agreement was signed. US. State Secretary John Foster Dulles told the dele- gates: ”I believe this conference will go down in history as one of the greatest of all time." Only two weeks ago . Dulles warned British Prime Minister Churchill and West German Chan- cellor Konrad Adenaucr that the United States would have to re- consider its European military commitments if attempts to sal- vage Western defence from the wreckage of the European Defence Community plan came to nothing. He repeated the warning at the conference. The agreement signed Sunday-- still to be approved by the French parliament-was wrung out of six days of bitter negotiations. APPEARED DEADLOCKED At one time. the talks appeared deadlocked because of French fear of Germany's potential military might. which had caused French rejection of the EDC treaty only five weeks ago. Dullesls warning. coupled with a firm British commitment to maintain a strong British force nn the European continent and an im- portant concession about arms con- paih for the pact. The three big points emerging from the conference were: 1. West Germany and Italy will Police Probe Assault On Young Couple BARRIE. Ont. (CP)-Police had little to work on during the week- end in their efforts to find the al.- tacker who hammered a young couple info -unconsciousness in their parked car on a lovers' lane a mile from town. The apparently-motiveless 2 a.m attack. on Joyce Ladourcur, iii. and Pte. Jolm Henry Sharp of the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps at Camp Borden. resembles somewhat the attack on Marion McDowell in Toronto last Dec. 6, police said. Officers working on the McDowell case said they might send a detective to assist in the investigation. Sharp told police he was.siiiing in the front seat early Saturday and the girl was sitting in the back. GIRL INTERCEDED "I had my back to the door. The next thing I knew it was yanked open. I half fell out and looked into a gun butt just as it landed on my eye. "As I swallowed my own blood. he hit me again. a sharp vicious crack with a gun butt across my temple. As I struggled. he hit me again. ”I could only see out of one eye and couldn't make out whether he had a mask on or not. I. couldn't see his face. "I seemed to be falling into a big black pit. Then I heard Joyce shouting. "She shouted 'Stop hitting him' and the last I can remember is the man swinging at her." Miss Lariouccur said she leaned over and grabbed the attacker. "Then I got a whack on the head." she said. Police said both victims de- scribed their attacker an "a small man." Officers said the soldier was not robbed and the girl was not molested. Police found a blood - stained hammer on the ground neaxnwhere The likely trouble Enos in the the car was parked. Russian proposal is the provision that initial inspection and control he put under the UN Security council. where the Russians have a veto. and accwtance of final and permanent control only to "the extent necessary to ensure implementation of the convention treaty by all states." At face value. Western observers said. the proposal seems to repre- sent a substantial change in the Soviet attitude toward disarma- ment and even a swing toward Western: views. Russia now concedes, both nu- clear and other weapons of mass destruction are part of the same disarmament problem. Russia no longer insists on immedi to pro- bibition of nuclear weapons and trol by Adenauer. chopped a clear; as an-cw:-we -- ' (By Stanley Priddle) LONDON, (Reuters)-Nine nations united Sunday in a project aimed at marshalling their forces in a solid front against Communist aggression. The United States, Britain. West Germany. Italy. Belgium, Holland. Luxembourg and Canada shook hands on a pact which. for the first time since the Second World War. will permit Germans to raise an army. air force and navy for Western defence. France, be invited to join the l9-AB Brussels Treaty Organization. now com- posed of Britain, France and the Benelux nations. The structure of the Brussels group will be rein- forced. . 2. The eight powers at the con- ference who are members of the sponslble for raising difficulties." North Atlantic Treaty Organization agreed to recommend at the next ministerial meeting of the NATO council that West Germany be in- viied toibecome a member. 3. The United States. Britain and France issued a declaration of in- tr-nt for a speedy restoration nf German sovereignty. expressing their desire ”to end the occupa- tion rcgime as soon" as possible." BUILT FOR. FUTURE British Foreign Secretary Anth- ony Eden told his colleagues: "I believe we have built well for the future of Europe.” He prayed that their work. would produce ”greater confidence and a more enduring peace." The dynamic French prime min- ister. Pierre Mcndes-France. mitting he was "one of those re- appeaied to his colleagues to ”for- (Continued on page 2. col. ti PGGIEOII Hulls New Agreement LONDON, (CF) -- Canada's; Lcslcr Pearson Sunday night hailed the nine.-power agree- ment on German rt-armament. as one of the resounding ac- complishments of postwar; diplomacy. ; "There has been no more im- poriant diplomatic achievement since the Second World War than the, negotiation of this agreement." the external af- fairs minisier. tired but evi- dently gratified. said in a state- ment some three hours after the signing. "I think we have donela good week's work for peace." ad- Prairie Snow EDMONTON. (CPU-An fall snowstorm swept across the; Prairies Sunday night. the cold air leaving. "There is no sign of a chango," he said. "The cold air is firmly entrenched." SNOW REPORTS Grand Prairie. in the Peace River grain-growing district north- west of Edmonton. had 4.6 inches of snow in the 48 hours pmied at 5:30 a.m. MST Sunday and only .07 inches cnmeiin the last 24 hours. Whiiecourt. 100 miles northwest of Edmonton, rs-ported fhrec inches in the last 2-1 hours hill the hrunt of the storm had niovad nn into southern Alberta anti Saskatchewan. Edmonton had 1.5 inches com- pared with Calgary's 1.8 and Banffls 4.8 and two inches report- ed by Cowley in the Crow's Neil Pass area in Alberta's southwest- ern corner. LOWEST TEMPERATURE The lowest temperature. report- ed in Alberta and Saskatchewan over-night between Saturday and Sunday was 14 degrees at Jasper, 230 miles west of Edmonton. Cal- gary hsd 20. Edmonton 22 and Lethbridge 24. In Saskatchewan the lows all were in the 305. Saskatoon had 30. North Batilefnrd, Swift Cur- rent and Regina. all 32. and Ford Sirike Postponed Week WINDSOR. 0nt.. (CP)- Workers at Ford of Canada Sunday night agreed to postpone strike action at the Windsor plant for one week. Sees Mariiimes Facing Mosi Serious Transportation Problem Since 1920's HALIFAX (CF)-The MariiimeIKay and Mr. Rand. outlined sev- seriousrral factors affecting the Maritime provinces face the most situation since the early 1920's in regard to transportation. A. MacKay of Halifax, chairman of the Maritime Transportation Com- mission said Sunday night. Mr'. MacKay. president of the Maritime Telegraph and Tele- phone Co., Ltd, made his state- ment in a report to the annual meeting of the Maritime Board of Trade. He said the Maritime Freight Rates Act which in 1927 had done so much to alleviate a somewhat parallel situation. today was func- iioning in many instances more to the advantage of railways than of shippers. Rand H. Mathewson of Moncionh cxecufive secretary of the com- mission. replying to questions from the floor, said that since the 1927 act was framed a revolution in the transportation field had reduced it to only partial effectiveness io- wards its intent. Motor trucks and highways had forced railways to reduce rates in such a way as to disrupt relation- ships betweon Maritime shippers customers in central Canada. T0 CONFER IN AMHERST A conference of Maritime ship- pers is being called to meet in Amherst shortly to study the whole situation. Mr. Rand said. The report. signed by Mr. Mac- concedes the necessity of step-by- step armaments reduction before prohibition. Vishinslryls speech also indicated withdrawl o0 any Soviet precon- dition to acceptance of President Eisenhower's atoms-for-peace pool. Vishinsky said it is ”fallacious" to represent Russia as "attaching preconditions" to acceptance and he proposed that the assembly in- siruct the UN disarmament com- mission ic study and clarify the question and submit its recom- fnendations. Saturday a commission began its study of the UN's responsibilities under the U. S. proposal. Ap- pointed by secimry-General Dag Hammarsklold. commission is headed by Dr. Ralph J. Iunehe of the United Butt ' A A ..........- I.-w-i-overrun -are -- ecrmnmy. They included: "Post-war rate increases which have materially widened rate re- lationships against Maritime in- dusirics. inr-truck transportation. lariy for traffic within particu- and be-. ments have already creaied dif- ficuliias for some Maritime indus- tries and localities. i "As the other developments maiefialize and more clearly man-, ifest themselves. the economy oil the Mariiimes stands to be fur- ther restricted and circumscribed. "Whether or not some stability and balancing of conditions in one form or another will emerge from the investigation of the royal com- jmission on agreed charges and the implemcniation of some blueprint of truck regulation in Canada is anyone's guess, but certainly the Atlantic provinces must stand op- posed in any proposal involved which may possibly aggravate an already seriously-disturbed situa- tion. "A better understanding of the end results of the various changes on the Maritime economy calls for a more searching analysis than any that have yet been undertaken on federal level." FEAR ADVERSE EFFECT "i'he commission's examination of class rate equalization. the re- port eontinued. intlcated that class rates between the Mariiimes and Quebec and Ontario would result moztly in.fnereases. and decreases whitening" grain-growing farmers rnuseway. dr-ppest of its the world. the Cape Breton pleiion. charge of the fill span. estimated (luring the neck- lend that the spanned in less than seven weeks. 0IIl1IlIl.ooLQA Blackens Grain Harvest Picture. earlv- Prince Albert 3-i. another hlou tav uho ll1li8 The snow was the fields but blackening lheibecn buffeted since last spring grain harvest piciure. Wll.l'l wet weather. rust and ha1L . The cold air and snow whir,nlAfler bumprtr harvests in 1953 hit norilyern Aihcrta Saturday land 1953. estimates nf this ye-.1r'! was over southern Alberta anti yields are the lowest in recent: Saskatc-hcwnn Sunday night anrlgvears. m0VlniZ l0lh'il'fl Mil"ll0l38- Th"? The ncatherman said the cold SHOW had 5l0Di!9(l Sund-W Ylllihllvrealhr-,i' would roach Manitobl l" "Uri-her" -Mberla hut lnfiltoday. Manitoba has been enjoy- weatherman could see no sign oiling temperatures in the 405 and -50:. Canso Causeway Nears Completion Candi type in 500 feet at shore and com- SYDNEY. (CP) - The is within engineer in. portion of the William Goodwin. final gap will he Railway traffic. he said. would start across the 7.000-foot link be- tween the Nova Scoiia mainland and the, island of Capt: Breton in February. About 9.000.0(lO ions of fill has been dumped into the strait. some of it in water 203 feet deep. KIL-LEI) IN ACCIDENT LANCASTER. N B.. (CPI - Ed- ward C. Grant.-p40. of Saint John. was killed Saturday when a car went out of control on sand Cove road and overturned. Two othed men suffered minor injuries. New WHAT Do suppose THE WEATHER 15 up To 3 "Increasing competition of mn-lmaximum temperatures TORONTO iCPl ---lllinimiim an. ' Min Max lDausun . . . . . . . . . . . .. 2-1 - tween central and western Can- Vancouver 47 ada " Victoria 46 7:4 ”This competition had crupiccl I-Idmonion .. '23 32 info rate wars and resulted in 3 Calgary '20 28 further widening of raio sprcaris in Regina . .. 31! 37 the disadvantage of Maritime in- Winmpcg 38 7 dustries. iTnrontn 57 74 R a i l w a y dieseliraiinn h a d l Ottawa ll '11 brought curtailment of coal pro-lMrmtrc.1l .. 52 S3 duction, and the proposed St I.aw-lkQu(-bee , 42 M rcncc waterway and power proj-iFrctlcr1cion 39 36 ect might have adverse effects. Saint John 51! 56 Further. roll rate increases Moncton 40 54 would apply on a substantial vol- Halifax .. 52 (ill ume of traffic between ihe Mar- Charlottetown .. 43 55 itimcs and central Canada wiir.s;-dncy 48 SB implementation of class ratoiY:n-mouth . . . . . . . . .. 51 ill equalization March 1 next. St John: 13 33 (Aggy, nu.-n(-('L11Eg HALIFAX (Cl"'--The Dnnnnloll . public weather office here says 1" ill?” 9"''i''-'- "'9 "Pm" '('"'.riisturbances a re crossing tho ”"”9-dv ””””l M ""5" d9V'l"D' Mariiimes in rapid succession. about nne a day. and this is result- ing in unsettled weather. The lalcst in the series of low pressure areas Sunday was over New Eng- land and was causing intermittent rain in most of the Mariiimes. The next disturbance is centred over Lake Michigan but is moving ra- pidlry castwarri. There will be a period of brighter weather between the two disturbsncns. but in Run- eral the weather will he overcast with intermittent rain in the Mari- times Eastern Quebec is far enough north of the path of the disturbnnces to be having only cloudy weather. Regional forecasts: Eastern N. 3. counties. lower st. John river valley: Overcast with intermittent rain; a little warmer; light winds. Low-high at Monctnn 4.8 and M). Fredericton 50 and 00. Saint John 48- and on. Prince Edward Island: with intermittent rain: a little warmer: auterly winds 15: low- hlgh at Charlottetown as and 00. High tide toda at Charlottetown at 1.58 a. m. an 8.8! p. III. Overcast Summereide tide eighteen ad. - utgulgltgrdtelllll charlctutownh , I today at Shore at ii.l1 and tone Iun rises tutu ae..a.ag-3.: