MAXIMS or A MERE MAN p:-:- fpad, aotdrlvs. 3, carrier: Charlottetown, lusnmsnlda h 53.1. 39.00. other Provinces 815.00 per anniun. llaswhuo and U.S.A. 312.00 per uuuun.) CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, APRIL 21 1953 1 The bird flies to its own. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN 4 PAGES The Guardian, Five Cents Morning Dally Founded 1881. EIX AIEMEN KILLED WHEN SEARCH PLANE CRASHES IN NS. Exchange OF POWS Continues Without Hitch House Makes Progress With (iovlt Legislation DTTTAWA. (CP)-The Commons swept through a variety of gov- ..-nnienit bills Monday, getting yoga in the bottom of the admin- lxii'aiion's legislative program for the session. The House gave third and final mining to five measures and pcnnd reading-approval in prin- ci;le4(n another. rue of the. bills getting final r-irling was that abolishing the 5250-a-year radio licence fee, as proposed in the budget. It now goes to the Senate. Other Bills l.Amendments to the Can- ada Shipping Act tightening the requirements for Canadian ships carrying ship-to-shore communication facilities. 2. Extension of the Veter- ans' Benefit Act-which ac- rorda Korean War soldiers the ' (Continued on Page 13 Col. 7) Coming Events "Farmers. now booking clover seeds. McGuigan and Boyle. "Rummage sale C. W. L. Hall this afternoon 1.30. "Try the -FAIII-E0-Pep finance plan for chickens and hogs. Grove Hiiclliillian. Covehead. "Watch for the regular Friday night dance at Gordon Lodge. "Come to the cord party, New Glasgow School. Thursday. April 2'! at 8115. "See Hampton Variety Concert in Hartsvillo-.1-loll. April 24th. Aus- pices Springton W. I. "To arrive car double reclean- ed Albeirta oats. McGulgan and Hoyle. "Card Party for blankets and locks, Tracadie April Tlith. "Dance every Friday night at south Ruatloo Hall. Music by the Ohsrlottetonians. Canteen service. "Dancing every Tuesday in st. Peters Legion Hall. Orchestra. "Farmers. ask about the Bhui Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part iculars corotact your local feed mill "SPO Kinkora Dramatic Club present. tihelr play in Kinkora ball. Wedmesdsy. May 6th. "See "His Irish Dream Girl" by l-lmerald Players in Long River Hall Thursday. April 23rd. Specialties. "Sea Indian River 3-act play in Emerald hall on Wednesday. Mull 22nd. Good specialties. dance after. Admission 50 and 25 cents. Curtain at 8:30 sharp. "Opening dance. Stanley Bridge rink hall. Tuesday. April 31!). Music by Monroe's Or- rhestra. "Three One-act Plays and Spec- ialties. North Ruatioo, Wednesday, April 22, if p. m. Admission 50 cents. sale of candy. .,n.. "I-lazelbmok B. Y. P. U. will pre- sent. Minstnel Show in Bridgetown liall. Friday. April 24th. Sponsored by Dundaa Y. P. U. "Unloading car Quaker Pul-O- POTI Foods: Bran. Quaker Enriched "Our: Data etc. Excellent prices Li; car. Lord and Howatt. Carle- ”Nollce. Will be weighing out need oats at Bayview Wednesday Ind Friday this week if days In fine. Mrs. Walter Weeks. Hunter River. . , 1 "Grand Scottish concert by End: and Leslie: Pipe Band in W91! .'haI. sponsored by Eldon Lomana Institute. Friday. 24. unches sold, "The three Cherry vllhy not play by the Players has been Postponed until Friday. April 24th. Curtah time 8:30. "Burma pin in Market Square "Wily forenoon. Paying 32800 pair vi" ivhme over so pounds. Also um”! "Flt Tuesday at. railway 19:01 Penn. Willard Prowse, Brack- .. ton Attention: r'ai-mars of Carle- "ld Viiiinii-V. We are pressed hrrinounc the appointment of 0.? and I-fawstt as exclusive Pul- mhfiig delier for Carleton and t 3- We solicit your pqtron. "0 on beh x Q 0”: of this dealer. The 00. at Canada but Hall, Monday. Chai.sson's is Member Of RCAF Conlingenl To Coronalio The R.C.A,F. has announced that LAC. H. W. Acorn. (above), of Charlottetown. P.E.I.. has been selected as a member of the RC. A. F. Coronation Contingent. LAC. Acorrn is the son of Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Acorn of 37 Orleba.r St. He was born and educated in Charlotte- tovln and attended the Prince Street School. LAC. Acorn Joined the R.C.A.F. in 1951 and is pre- sently stationed at R. C. A. F. Station, Summerelde. where he is engaged as I safety Equipment technician. MINER KILLED NEW WATERFORD, N.S.. (OP)- William C. Williams, an 18-year- old coal miner. was killed Monday when he was hit by a fall of coal and stone in No. 12 collier. In the pit two years. Williams was due ' to leave Friday to join the R.C.M.P. on way From lied Stoekardes PANMUNJOM, Korea.-fCP) - One hundred more sick and wounded Allied soldiers cast off the ahapeless garb of prisoners to- day and returned to freedom in exchange for 500 Chinese and North Koreans. It was the second day of the historic trade, the first exchange of sick and wounded since the Korean war began more than three years ago. The trades will continue daily until the Communists have turned over 600 Allied disabled and the UN command returns 5,800 Com- niunista. Allied prisoners are being re- turned at the rate of 100 a day. The first. day. Monday. there were 50 south Koreans and 50 others. including one Canadian. Paul Dugal of Quebec City. 20-year-old lance corporal. who was semi- paralyzed. In addition there were 30 Americans. 12 Britons. four Turks and one each from South Africa, Greece and the Philippines. The Communists announced that the fourth and fifth convoys of Allied prisoners were due at near- by Kaesong today from camps deep in North Korea. The last of the repati-iates should be in Allied hands by Sat- urday (Friday night EST). The last Reds will be repatriated by May 1. Presumably, all disabled captives will have been (Continued on Page”1a'cioi.'.'iI- Report French Trawler Abandoned HALIFAX, (CP) - The crew of the B50-ton French trawler Vic- toria was reported Monday night to have abandoned ship in the Gulf of st. Lawrence. Marine radio here said the ship sent an S.O.S. at 10.48 p.m. EST. but. gave no details. Later another unidentified French trawler said the Victoria reported its crew was evacuated "on a look.” Officials said this may have re- ferred to St. Paul's Island. 20 miles out of Dingwell on Cape Breton Island, or Bird Rock. off Allied the Magdalen Islands. By EDWIN s. BOSENTHAT. LONDON. (Reuters) - The Duke of Edinburgh will hand it bouquet of carnation: to the Queen and raise a glass of champagne to toast her 2"lth birthday today. It will be the last quiet family party for the Royal Family before the Coronation June 2. It will also be the first time the Duke will propose a dorlial toast for the Queen's birthday. v the Queen's uncle. performed the function as the "first gentleman" in the Kingdom. Philip received this title last winter. The party will be the first of two birthday celebrations for Eli- zabeth. She was born on London's fashionable Bruton street April 21. 1020. when her late father, King George VI, was Duke of York. Like her father, she has selected June ll. for her "official" birth- day ln Britain. The weather is usually better then for parades and other public observances. May 18 In Canada Canada will Ol)SEl'VE the Queens birthday this year on Monday. May 18. It will be I legal holiday J ap Gen.eral - By Sydney Brooks TOKYO. (Reuters) Political manoeuvring has moved into high gear as final tabulation of sun- day's voting made it clear that Japan's voters had failed to re- solve the country's political di- lemma. But there was no clue Monday to the possible make-up of the coali- tion which will have to be formed to give Japan any sort of effec- tive government. No minority re- gime could be expected in last more than a few weeks. Premier snlgeru Yoshlda. head of four post-war cabinets. receiv- ed a sharp rebuff when his con- servative-minded Liberal party Q1-oyped to I. strength of 100 seats in the House of Representatives. The Liberals held 35 Mail. 1 Lsst year. the Duke of Glouct-stein, Quiet Party To Observe Queenis Birthday Today with banks and government of- fices closed. Today, there will be no public celebrations. Royal birthdays are normally ob- served with theatre parties in London. but because the court is in mourning until next week for dowager Queen Mary, the Queen will see a. movie at Windsor Castle. A few friends and the Royal house- hold will attend the private show- ing. probably of a. new film. Family Luncheon The birthday party, in accord with tradition, will be a family luncheon in the luxurious state dining room of Windsor Castle. Elizabeth" seated on a gilt chair, will preside and h two children, Prince Charles a Princess Anne, will sit with the grownups. Besides carnations. the Queen's favorites, the Duke is expected to give his wife a. small piece of jewelry but nothing as elaborate as is normally given for public anniversaries. Any birthday gifts from persons unknown to the Royal Family will, by precedent, be returned to the donors. No Clear Decision In Election sligiit majority in the 4o8-mem- ber chamber. before internal dis- senslons rocked the party and caused Yoshlda to dissolve the Diet. , other parliamentary groups fared little better. The only ap- preciable gains were registered by the left and right-wing Socialist factions. Even if they can get, to. gather. the two socialist parties can muster only 1” seats. far be- low it majority. The Progressive party, furthest right. of the Conservative group- ings, dropped from 80 seats to 76. while the Liberal party rebels. whose personal row with Yoshida broke up the previous adminis- tration, won only 35. one com- munlst and 17 Independents were returned to the Lower House. released More iionvoys N.S. Mother Learns Son Believed Dead Is Alive HALIFAX. (OP)-A mother who learned heir presumed dead soldier son was a prisoner-of-war in North Korea. said Monday she "knew all the time" he was alive. "I always clung to hope that El- mer would be coming home some day,” said Mrs. Rod Mclnnls of George's River, N. 8.. when told that her son, Pte. E. J. Mclnnls, was alive. His name was included among those of 15 Canadian soldiers listed as prisoners of war in Korea. by L. Cpl. Paul Dugal of Quebec, first Commonwealth soldier to reach Munsan in the exchange of sick and wounded. "I listened to the radio all day. I knew his name would be an-. nounced sooner or later. Then I heard it. I am so happy. I am too excited to cry. and I don't know what I am saying. "Elmer was only 20 in April 8. and he was steady and quiet boy. I knew all the time that if anyone would come through, he would. He Joined up last January and I was told he was presumed dead in Nov- Lancaslgllas Returning To Greenwood Base HALIFAX, (OP) - An R.C AI. four-engined bomber carrying seven men crashed Monday in a farmer's field near Centrevilie in Nova Sco- tia's Annapolis valley and only one 'ived the following explosion and me The survivor was identified as Ont. He was listed as "seriously iniured." The lmicaatcr was returning to its base after seven hours of searching with :1: American and Cniiadiaii miliarv aircraft for a twin-engined ember." George's River is near Sydney. Soviet- British Trade Talks Begin GENEVA. (AP) The Soviet Union offered substantial ship- ments of timber, grain and food- stuffs to the United Kingdom in direct Anglo-Soviet trade talks which opened here Monday. it was learned. The talks were held with- in the framework of the cuirent 26-country conference convened by the UN economic commission for Europe to revive trade between East and West Europe. ------- -1? .-. Churchill Sees Hope For Talks To End Cold War LONDON. AP)-Prime Minister Churchill told .1 cheering House of (lommrihs Monti.-iy he hopes Russia and the West will soon sit down in a conference to end the Cold War. Giving Britain's backing to Pre- sident Eisenhower's peace declar- ation of last. TlllJrS(lri,V. Churchill said ”I hope l'lCiillinf: will be said here nor olseivht-re which will check or chill the prriccsses of lZ00dwill iihich may he at. work. "My hope is that they will even- tually lcnd in conversations on the hiszliost level, even if informal or pi'iv.itc. between some of the piiiiripnl powers com";-rnerl." in ii'.Isit)n;:ion, iiriivover. U, S, State Secretary Dullrs indicated at it press conference that he opposes any idea of a Big Four conierciico in Sf'iil(' the Cold VVar without careful prclinilnaigv pre- pzirziiiuiis. Boosi Buying of Coal From N. S. Mine OTTAWA. tCP) s.zTrans'port Minister Chcvrier says the Canad- ian Nntioniii Railways will buy an additional 1,000 tons of cool a week from the Intercolonlal mine at Wcstvillc, N. s., pending a study of co.-il- haulage costs. Mr. Chevrier was asked in the Commons Monday by Clairie on. lls ICCF-Cope Breton souihi about press reports of a propoggd new subvetition system that will enable the C. N. R. to buy more coal in the Marltlmes. The West. ville mine rccciitly has lost. a large share of its C. N. R. market and was tlircatciiml with closure. Mr. Chevricr said the Dominion Coal Board and the Board of Transport Commissioner-s' econ. omlcs branch are making a study of the C. N. R's costs of hauling fuel from the mines to cooling points, on which subventlons are based. "Dependent upon the result of that survey," Mr. Chevrler said "it. may well be that the policy of the C. N. R. with reference to pur- chases of coal will change some- what." Nazi Signs Sun In Austrian Town GRA. Austria. (Roiitgm) - Graz. Austria's iiP('.0ild biggest town. was flooded Monday with leaflets commemorating Adolf I-m. let”! birthday, April 20. 1339 Police said they found thousands of leaflets urging ac;-nun, to "remember Adolf Hitler's birth- day . . . fight with us for it new great Germany." area was a Nazi centre during Austria's incorpor- Boaril Manager Comments On El Marketing Situation Potato movement from this Province has been very heavy during the past week with 355 cars being shipped for the week ending April 19 h.. states Mr. I). A. Mac- Donald, manager of the. P. E, 1, Potato Alarketing Board. While the present market is slightly bet- ter than a week ago prices are still very low with producers receiving 40c-50c for '75 pounds bulk at various centres tlimiiglioiit the province. If the present volume of ship- mcnts is maintained for the next. month most of present stocks will be cleaned up and there is always a market for Island potatoes until the first part of July. So far about 9.000 carloads of this year's crop have been sold. twice as many as was the case a year ago. if it. were not for the fact that values in the State of ylamenre so low. around 75c for 165 pounds. there would be no excuse for the present loiv pi-ices prevniliiig here. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 7): Prisoners Tel Observanl BALTIMORE. (AP!-Just take it from a golden-haired Italian girl- American men have "it" when it comes to eye control. Thalia why they can walk down the street with their wives and look at other women without their better half knowing about it. says Illlria Pomplili. Miss Ponipilli, a Rome fashion model showing off her figure for a living in the U. S. temporarily. says the men back home don't know that little eye trick. When an Italian walks down the street, "his eyes are going quickly in all directions," the 23-year-old model explains. "lie never looks at his wife. He just stairs with ad- miration at. other wnninii.” Tlils. of course. makes the Italian wives furiotls. "But. the American male." says Miss Pompllli. "he looks only at his wife--she tliiiik ” Increased Cit-eese ilalion For British LONDON, IRmitei'si - Britons will get an extra half-ounce of cheese weekly for the eight weeks beginning May 17. the House of Commons was told Monday. The extra linlf-ounce will raise the weekly ration in two ounces ti per- son. Liner's Passengers Put Ashore By Tender PLYMOUTH, England. (CF) The Queen Mary anchored off this south-coast. port and put ashore her 307 Britain-hound passengers by tender Monday. A tugmen's strike prevented the 81.000-ton liner from going to her usual berth at Soutliamptoii. The tugmen voted Monday to go back to work 'l'uesda.V. accepting an offer of twopence an hour more in wages. They had asked three- pence. The Queen Marv will sail for Cherbourg and return to Smith- ampton later to pick up DIJGNP gera for the voyage to New York: K-l;LwED-BY TRUCK ANTIGONISH. N. 8., (CP) - Nlne-year-old Margaret MacDon- ald was.killed Sunday when she ran mm the path of a truck while chasing a kitten in front of her atlon into the German Reich. home at nearby Heatherton. private piane missing since Saturday on .1 flight from Gander. Nfld, to Ottawa (lalled For Radio Check 103 TPS4"ii9 unit at Greenwood. N.S. led Greciiivnnri tower for a check. It was in Nova the air Scotia fourth in ed as: Ft). l-'i'ic Lewis of Ottawa wlinse widnw Middleton, N. s.: F0. Douglas Hamilton, ' Joliii D Curznn of Toronto: Neil Mr-Cai'i'oll, Toronto. widow lives at Greenwood air base LAC. li'ill:aiii D. Fifield. lialifnx. The Air Force said of the reniaiiiing victim probably Sill day. Heard Explosion Front, an explosion. ”At first I said that's a plane Cl'a5l'l.' We ran out (Continued onVPaszc 713(Co'l."5i' I Varying Stories Of Treatment By ROBERT EUNSON FREEDON VILLAGE, iAPi -- The first 100 came back frnni Communist. ra.ptivit.,v to Free- dom Village Monday with tears. with laughter. and tales of viny- ing treatincnt by their captors. An Aniericnn officer among the first 30 United States sick and wounded snicl Communist treat- ment was "unbelievably poor" un- til the armistice talks began. Then it varied with the fortunes of the talks, good when things went. siiiootiily and bad when negotia- tions went sour. Over them all hung the shadows of the comrades they had left. he- hind in the distant stockadrs near the Manchurian frontier. Few Outspoken Only a few were outspoken in their criticisni of the Communists. The rest obvinuslv were thinkin: of the safety of close friends lcfi behind and were unwilling to say to convert them. But. it was obvi- oils that. most. if not all tliose men had refused to be converted. fnanswered Questions The full story remains in be told Mniiciavs story was only an inter- cstlng fragment. Here arc some un- allsWPl't'(l questions: 1. What are the stories of the soldiers that reporters were not al- lowed to iii'ci'vicw? 2. Why n:r so low of these re- turnliig disabled prisoners icallv serious medic i Mes, which w 5 r7iize'i;TC61.':i1- (Oontinued o F0. Kenneth Benson of Brantfordi ' The buniber, which belonged to the l left base at 5:45 a. m. EST and was ,last. l1PillTl about noon when it call- . radio crash l0 days. Three. naval planes crashed April 10. two in mid-air and the other in the An- na polish valley. Two men were kill- The Air limre listed the victim. livcs at RR. No. 3. A . whrisc l the name would not he released until Tues- "-s that. thund- ior?' to niv liusband He said tnn,i Korea. anything that imght jeopardize? them. . , 1 E" , , . .- . - .. . i 0I'I AWA, ICP) -- Ioi't3-eigiit 3.40” imm ii 0 Y? lute” mwd Dutch lllllsiclalls have been ar- agicerl i.ie Cnnimuiists had tried lmpmd mm mp Cmmdmn Army isix British civilians, Irish Priest Released From North Korean Prison (By Eddy Gilmore) MOSCOVV, (AP) Six British civilians and an Irish priest ar- rived horn Monday aftnr long in- iinrmcnt in North Korea. They re- pnrinri that three Americans held with them during part nf their two.-.xr'ar. t-ighl-month imprison- nioni. had died of liiTIOS!P!. i Sun-tarineri, smiling and in tip- fpnreni good health. the Britons innit the Irish priest nnded a long ii”lli'I trek .'l('l'tlSS Silwria with .1 urirm greeting at )ir):cow's Yar- nslnxsky station by Britain's am- lnuarinr Sir Alvary (iasnigne and ;Brilisli embassy personnel. Flying Home Today 'l'li--3' (HP st-licdiilcti tn fly to ,.l'iiiii 'liilcsti.'i.v in a special R. F. transport plane brought in thrir final trip to freedom. s l ' A for llnlt, Brilisli rlmrge ci'aff:iirt's to lllP South Korean government: Rislmp Cr-vii Cooper. Rislinp of Korea: Vice-consul (Er-rirzn Blake; Norman Philip (iii:-ii. logntion clerk; Herbert Ar- iliur l.ni-ri, Salvation Army com- lllii5lI'lll”i'l Philip Deane. corres- pniitlwiii of the London observer. -Iilifl l-'-nilicr Tlinnias Quinlan, Ro- nisiu (':ithnlic priest. of Ireland. N 1 Two Died In Captivity Tun others, a priest and a nun. . rliml in l'FipllY.ll). The North Kni- ',o-ins sairi they knew nothing: 1.'tl1i')lll A third priest reported iiiissmp. Those who returned Monday were released by the North Kor- nan nuilmrities April 8 after the Soviet lfnlon agreed to a British Mrs. Jnlin Hiizertv, of ,v(on,.(amlnnilins.xv appeal to use its good of- iioar Ccnircville, said slielii""5 was in the kitchen with her hus-.'”l"- band when she heard a roar and "mi in rihiaining their repatria- Tlicy spent several days. sever.-il stopovers, on their way tlirriiigh Manchurla before they t'I'(lSSECl the Soviet frontier. l-liiiirti-en French civilians also il'lLPll'tPfi hy the North Koreans i .- are (iiie licre early next week on their Vi ay home. Snow Plows Busy In Norlhgi N.B. FREDERICTON, (GP) Plow cic-ws remain-ed busy Monday night. cicariiig northern New Brunswick roads after one of the heaviest snnwfalls since. the advent. of cold weather five months ago. Depths iiieasured from it. few inches up to two feet Saturday before melt- ing temperatures shrank the un- seasonal blanket. Trunk highways were cleared in the affected counties but plows still worked on secondary mods and branches. Farther s o ll t h gravel roads were soft from rain. News In Brief KARACHI, iAPi . Pakistan's iilt"W prime ininisier, Mnliammed iAli. iii an iiiterview Monday cast iihe lot. of his regime behind the iwast in world affairs. VVVP. just do il1f)'. have much in common with line Soviet Union," he declared. and the first group of is will ar- ritc in Canada bv air about April ;35. the army aiinoiinced Monday. WASHINGTON. iRPutt'rsi - lPresidont. Eisenhower is preparing to ask Congress for authority to ship hundreds of thousands of ions of wheat to fa.mlne-threaten- led Pakistan. 51 congressional com- lmittee was told Monday. The first mayor of London on record was Henry Fit.7.-Eylwin, who held office from lll-ill until his death in I213. Queen Cuts OTTAWA. ICTH The Qiiccii is rediiciiig the sontniicc of prison- ers in Caiiarilan peniit-nliarics and jails as an act. of nirrcy linked with the "historic iniportance" of the Coronation. ri. i'o:.nl proclam- atinn disclosed Monday. Broadly spmkiiig, it will cut .10 of May 29. four davs before thi- Coronation. thus fi-N-lng some and hastening the day of freedom for others. The proclamation was issued in the form of a. special edition, of the Canada Gazette dated April 15 but not issued to the press tintii Monday. There nre various qiialificatinns to the general rule. It won't apply clays off each year of acntenrc as. Sentences Of Canadian Prisoners in people serving six months or less or to those serving life terms or indeterminate sentences. Any- one serving less than a year but more than six months will have one-twelfth of his sentence re- mitted. - A pr-isniier who has forfeited nornial days of remission since ,.lau. 1. N49, for bad behavior will jinn that much time from the Car- onation remission. The penltentlarlaa commission said there are 4.300 prisoners in federal pcnltentiarlea and it is ask- lng the officials to indicate how many prisoners will get their re- lease lJ0t'flllSP of the action In ad- dition. it will apply to others in provincial prisons and jails. In tho grnup were Capt. V)'Vylln; Anglican j ..V.., ..-.. ,,4.....MM Will March In Ecoronation Parade When the six ships of the Rnynl icanadian Navy arrive in the Un- ,ited Kingdom to participate in the Icoronatinn ceremonies and for ithe Spithead Review they will iliave on board in addition to ihPlr ship's companies four officers and 130 men who have been specially selected to represent the R..C.N. in the Coronation parade. Their position in the 18 mile march will be as the senior member of the Commonwealth of Nations next to Great Britsinls representatives. Among those selected is Leading Seaman W. R. Gaudet (above) of Charlottetown, PEI. He joined the R.C.N. in April. 1949. and has since served in the destroyeirs H. M.C.S. Huron and Nootka, at the Naval division I-l.M.C.S. Queen Charlotte in Charlottetown and at l-l.M.C.S. Bytmvn in Ottawa. In sports he prefers hunting and fishing. He is now serving at Alvbro Lake Naval Radio Station. near Dartmmith. N.S.---(National De- dence Phnim. K A VAC: Sm: is, ANY LUCKY CNAP who has i A Joe 9 N. I. TORONTIYW. (CP) - Minimum and maximum tormperatiireuz i Min. Mu. . Dawson . .'il 52 ivictoria . 46 56 Edmonton . .. 36 63 Calgarv 21 fl!) Regina 22 M XVlnli.PtV 27 60 Tnrniitn . .............. .. .13 46 3 Orr an 1 Iii 44 liiniitrr-ril ..... .. Iii 40 ' Quebec 33 e- ) Saint. John. N. B. .11 4.1 Moncinn .'ll 45 Halifax . 35 - Charlottetown . ....... .. .11 .- Yarmouth . 37 -- St. Johns, Nfld, . -- 45 HALIFAX. (OP) -- Rngimial forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Clear. clouding over Tuesday morning: rain in the afternoon. clearing in the evening; not much change in temperature; light winds increas- ing in west ill in the evening. Low- hirh at Charlottetown 32 and 42. Eastern N.l'-i. counties. lower St. John river valley: Variable cloudi- ness with a few showers Tuesday: not much change in temperature: southwest winds 15. Low-high at. Monctrm 32 and 42. Fredericton and Saint. .fohn'30 and 42, Upper st. .inhn river valley, Bay of Ohaleur: Cloudy; widely scatter- ed snmvfliin-lea and ralnshowers Tiiesriay; not. much change in tem- perature: snirihtwly winds t.'i ba- mmlm northwest. 7.0 in aftemmn. lbw-high at. Edmundstnn and Campbellton 30 and 40. High tide today at Charlottetown at 4.54 A M. and 3.28 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 12.04 A. M. and 10.55 A. M. Sun rise: today at 5.19 A. M. and sets at 7.05 P. M.