l MAXIMS 01A. MERE MAN All inventive ssslnst s mm lsll trial ls disgraceful. > Fill Guardian, Three Cents llurnlng Daily Founded 1887, Read by Everybod Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARI-OTTETOWN. CANADA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 14, 1950 NEW MILLION DOLLAR FER 16 PAGES Russians Quit United Nations Council Again Li’!!! SUCCESS, 11.1., Jan. 13 - The Russian delegation today nalketi out of the United Nations Security Council for the second limo this week after failing to oust the Chinese Nationalist dol- cqation. This time, Jakob A. Malik, Sov- iet Deputy Foreign Minister, said Russia will not participate in the Council until it expels Dr. Ting. in T. Tsitmz. we Nationalist del- agate. High U.N. quarters took a ser- ious view of Maliics declaration that Russia. will consider illegal any Council decision taken while Tsiang participates. The United States and France were quick to state, however, they believe the Council can go ahead with busin- ess without MalilCs presence. The Council rejected Russia's ouster demand by a vote oi 6 to 3, with Britain and Norway abstain. lng. Russia was joined by India and Yugoslavia in backing the ex- pulsion proposal. To Discuss Cheese Contract At Ottawa OTTAWA, Jan. 13 — (CP) - A British dairy expert William Rodlben -— has arrived here to assist in negotiation oi s new Anglo-Canadian cheese contract, it was learned today. A member oi the United Kingdom Ministry of Food, Mr. Rod-hen will assist ‘Sir Andrew Jones, head of the permanent. British Food Mission, in negotiations wiith the Federal Government. lt is expected the U. K: will buy all of Canada's sur- pius-bei/ween 80,000,000 and 100,- 000,000 pounds -—- at about 26 cents s pound. Last year the U. K. Purchased 50,000,000 pounds st 30 some s pound. ruuun $18,500 WINNIPEG, Jan. 13——(CP) Magistrate D. G. Potter yesterday imposed a $16,500 fine on Freder- ick W. Li-isiikow, former Winni- peg lumbcrmnn, for illcgnl use of more than $50,000 in American currency to build n homo in Flor- ida where he now in living. Leis- iikow, also assessed court costs, entered n pica of guilty. It was one of the largest fines ever hand- sd down in Manitoba. ‘Coming Events ‘ "Mail your Films to- Gamhum Photo studio, Charlottetown. "Whlst and Dance. Belfast H-all. Monday, January 16th. "Don't miss skating tonight at. lluiltcr River rink. Good music. "Unloading Old‘ Sydney Coal to- day st Milton. Vernon Gillespie. "Opening skate at Long Creek rink tonight. “Unloading car of (lid Sydney coal nt Mount Herbert. Saturday and Monday. Arnold Burhoe. "In stock. Oiicitke. Bran, Dairy Ration. flog Grower. Barley Meal. W. I. Bcwlnan. "Vnriciy (‘0ll('\‘1‘i and box social llampton Hull, l-‘riiluy, February 3. If not fine, follcnving Monday. Gassldy" in st Bonshsw by Jim "See "Hopalong ‘lanai Masquerade" tonight at 8.30. Also soil-gs Austin, "Opening hockey match in New Glasgow rink tonight, Hope River versus Glasgow Road. Game- itarts at. 8.30. Vernon soon, car Did Sydney Coal (Princess). Book ‘our orders now. Russell JenkiM- hons 1809-3 Charlottetown. "To arrive "Auction Forty-fives. Pownal Hall. Monday. January 1601- D00" Mien 8 P. M. Admission including eirashmnits 40c. Prizes. Canad- n Legion. I Glas- pleas! the n as D0!- ts being "Urgent-Patrons oilNew {ow Dairying Cccnipohy, rinl in cream - tllflifl _ “Ne, on account‘ lestroyed by fire _ ,- "Hoekcy tonight Opeiilnr 88m? if season. South ati Rsnlers versus North stl Legion- nairss st North R tico‘- lnir. Can- teen service. Gsm ‘Ila f at 8 P- m. Sluts after. A_ in 25c. "We invite nights-lea dam res- ponsible buyers o tstrcl t or as- sorted unloads o gro and/or whole sin In ants. " lso car- louls bulk grain. We have many satisfied customers sll over the Island. The Atlas Grain Company. Inns oi mu 31mm. Ibsen-I- iReport Russia Seeks Military Bases Cold Wovo Reported In British Columbia VANCOUVER, Jan. 13- (CF)- The mercury early today took g record-smashing gallop down Bri- tish Columbia thermometers. Van. couver Island and the 10w" mainland shivered under north- east winds and near zero temper- atures. Smlthers, in the interior Blllkley Vflllvy. reported a 12-year record of 47 below. The weather. man says “more extremely cold weather is expected again to- night." See Blueprint For Expansion Handed Russia By J. M. ROBERTS. JR. Associated Press News Analyst State Secretary Dean Acheson, Ql-YYIQUSU’ acting under domestic political pressure, has painted an unhappy picture of the United States‘ ability to d-o anything about the Communist advance in Asia. some aspects oi which might better have been left un- defined. B)’ outlining the areas where the United States would be forced to present s firm and unyielding front, elven to the point of war, s blueprint is also handed to Rus- sia of the areas including practically the entire Asiatic con- tinent —— where penetration can be carried on practically without danger. The Secretary does not say that the U. S. will do nothing in Burma, lndo-China, India and all the other places which are threat- encd as the Communists consoli- date their conquest oi China. But the initiative is left to the peoples ‘of Asia. Help — apparently limit- ed under present concepts to moral and economic — migaht go out on an "as asked" and "as available" basis. Acheson is known to be decip- ly sincere in his belief that the United States cannot “move in" to drive these peoples the way Am- erican policy wants them to go. The unhappy part of it all is that there is little promise of con- crete stipport no matter what they do. The world-wide line of contain- ment a I ' t Communism has a on page 15 oolfb) Federal Surplus Shows Decline OTTAWA. Jan. 13 (CP) The Federal Government ended the first nine months of the i919- 50 fiscal year with a surplus of $299,085,906, Finance Minister Ab- bott announced today. His report covered the period from April 1 to Doc. 31 and show- ed that the surplus was about $800,030 lowcr than at Nov. 31. The fiscal year ends next March 31. Revenues in the nine-month period were $1,893,447,9‘2'l compar- ed with $1,956,2'.Yl,669 in the cor- responding period oi the 1043-49 fiscal year, n decrease of 8119.159,- 942. Expenditures were $1,531,361,- 901 compared with $l.346,442,462, an increase of $190,919,409. At Dominion-Provincial Conference Three oi the four Prince _ vincial Conference at Ottawa Attorney General and Provincial W. Matheson. was‘ Hon. Wilfred $900,000 Loss ln Storage Plant Fire .._,__ KELOWNA, B. C., Jan. 1.'i—(CP) —-An official tonight hiked the damage estimate for this morn- ing's destruction of the Rutland Cold Storage Plant here to close to $900,000. George Fitzgerland, president of the Kelowna (Fruit) Growers‘ Ex- change, said the nmounpincludcs the 144,000 packed boxes of apples and several thousand more loose. Believed tn llnvo been caused by a short, circuit in,the. electrical power line, the blaze defeated flremen‘s efforts, taking advan- tage of a water shortage, cold weather and ineffectual hand equipment. The plant was valued roughly at $600,000 and the apples at $300.- 000 lt is not, believed tho loss will affect the $1,000,000 apple gift to Britain announced by British Columbia growers earlier this week. Those boxes destroyed today Minister of Health and Welfare. Arsenault, Provincial Secretary. Britain Aiming At New Cut In Dollar Spending For Food were of grades and varieties ac- ceptable on ille (lomcstic market with a considerable block of them consigned to American markets. Britain's consignment presumably will be of lower grades. ‘T0 LOAD GRAIN HALIFAX. Jan. 13 -— (CP) The 5,989-ton freighter Monte Saja, first Spanish vessel to load grain at this port this winter, is scheduled to arrive Jan. 1'1 to take a fu-ll cargo. About 1,000,000 busil- cls oi grain are scheduled for shipment to Spain this season. Abandon Hope For 55 Sailors Trapped In. Sub OHATHAM. Kent, England. Jan ifl-tCiPlk The Royal Navy said tonight d’; men perished in the sinking of the submarine Tnicul- ant. Hope was abandoned for 55 miss- ing men, believed ontonvbed in the hulk of the muddy bed of the Thames Estuary. Divers fought time and tide in vain today for a sign oi llie in the wreck about 50 feet below the surface. Ten bodies hsd been given up by the sea. Only 15 of the 80 aboard the 1.- OOO-ton Pacific war veteran es- caped after her collision with the 64-84mm Swedish tanker Divina at 7 pm. last night. The Admiralty placed a.n arrest order on the tanker. She is t0 hi! held until her owners post ball i0 cover the loss of the ‘Pruculent- A statement by the Admiralty, issued about 24 hours after the ac- cident, ssid "no hope can now be entertained" for any further aur- vivors. A spokesman said tonight. tho Trueulent canted six officers. t6 other ranks and is nsvsl dock- greatest peacetime disaster since the submarine Thetis sank in Liverpool my with s loss oi 99 lives- zs addition t» the 86 lost at us. ys workers. This was the five mm perished today in the crash 0i a rescue plane that was to have picked lip divers for the Trucuiont, operation. The plane, a Lancaster, crashed at its take-off from an R.A.I~‘. station in Scot- land. ‘The divers. some conventional rigs weib-footed fiogzmenb ported at least four of the Truculents compartments were flooded by the dirty water of the Thames. Lieut C. P. Powers, tho Tnlcu- lent's bearded commander. was among the 15 mm who were res- cued. "She had no chance," Bowers said. "she went down like a stone She went down almost be- fore we realized what had hap- pened.” , Bowers and the other 14 were all on the conning tower of the sub- marine. which was Cruising on the surface, or in the control room directly beneath the tower. . The Admiralty today recei .-d this message from the King: "I have heard with greu regret of the disaster that» has curred to RIMS. Truculent. P1 use con- vey to the next of kin all those who have lost their liv the deep symqpt-hy o! the Que and my- working in and others In suits, re- self. Trqasurcir, look; on while Premier The other Island I LONDON, Jan. 13~ (AP)—Brl- taln is aiming at. another sharp out in dollar spending for food, tobacco and raw materials to pre- pare for the end of Marshall aid in 1952. This was disclosed tonight in an official memorandum submitted to the organization for‘ Etiropean Economic Caz-operation. The drop in purchases from the dollar areas will be accompanied by the cutback in Marshall old funds expected for Britain in the next two years. British planning is on the us- sumption, the memorandum ‘said, that its Marshall aid funds would be $720,000,000 for 1950-51, and $480,000,000 for 1951-52. In the current 1949-50 period, Britain is receiving Marshall aid help at the rate of $920,000,000 a year. The Marshall aid fiscal year begins July 1. Britain's dollar spending, mostly in the United States and Canada, was $1,544,600.000 in 1948-49. It now is in the process of re- ducing these dollar expenses to $1,389,100,000 for the current year of 1049-50. Ils target is to Whittle these dollar costs to 31.170.700.000 I91‘ 1950-51, and to 31.039.600.000 for 1951-52. While dollar purchases of pet- roleum products will be slashed, Britain plans to increase crude oil purchases from $20,700,000 in 1949- 50 to $44,000,000 in 1951-52. The country has built up con- siderable stocks of raw cotton. Britain expects to spend on cot- ton $118,600,000 in 1050-51, and $133,600,000 in 1951-52. The memorandum said the cro- nomic planning was based on the assumption that U. S. business conditions will remain unchanged and continue to provide Britain with a market for dollar earnings. and the prices of dollar supplies would stay around the icvcl of Oct. 20, 1949. Fisli laStorage OTTAWA, Jan. 13 ~ (CP) -—- Stccks oi fish in cold storage at the start. of 1950 totalled 38,793.01!) pounds, compared with 37,616,000 at the beginning of 1949, the Bur- eau of Slatlsiles reported today. The stocks were made up of 36,554,000 pounds frozen fresh and 2,239,000 pounds frozen salted. In addition, there were 2,145,000 pounds of frozen fresh sea fish and 17,000 pounds of frozen smok- eri ea fish stored in Newfound- lan . TOBACCO PRICES DOWN LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan. 13- (AP)—Burley tobacco prices stood at their lowest level oi the sell- ing season in Kentucky today. A series of dny-to-day declines car- ricd the hundrcdwclght average to $44.11 yesterday, almost S1 less than the previous dolly low re- corded opening day. The average memlbers attending this week are shown above in an inform-at pose. the Dominion-Pro- Hon, Walter E. Darby, Jones pelts a light from l-lon. A. representative, not shown here. Apple Growers Face Problem COBURG, Ont... Jan. 1.1 w (C?) ~- Apple growers in this Eastern Ontario district are pondering the prospects of eliminating many varieties in the face oi dwindling export markets. The annual meeting of the Northumberland and Durham Ap-l pie Growers’ Association was told this week by R. P. Langley oi the Dominion Experimental Farm at Kentville, N.S.. that Canada's growing potential is too great for the available markets. I-le said Canada can produce enough apples tn provide a barrel for every Canadian, but actual consumption ls only one-third of the number oi apples produced. Schoolboy Swipos BO-Ton Fishing Boot ARBRDATH, Scotland, Jail. 13- (AP) - Schoolboy Johnny Guill- rie. who swiped a tin-ton fishing boat Wednesday and sailed away alone, was picked up today some 200 miles out in the stormy North Sea. Crew members of the British trawler Reptonian found the 1-i- year-old lad halfway to Denmark. Ships and planes ha_d searched for him since the 54-foot yaw! Girl Joan disappeared from her Ar- bronth moorings. Believe New . Sino-Soviet Pact (Ionnipg By ARTHUR GAVSHON LONDON, Jan. l3 -—- (AP) information reaching a major Western Power from Moscow says Russia is diokering for new naval and military bases in Communist Ohina. A qualified informant, reporting this tonight, stressed the informa- tion may be speculative in view of the highly secret nature of cur- rent Sine-Soviet Moscow talks. However, officials representing two other Western Powers said there is good reason to believe a defence. trade and friendship pact between Russia and Communist China is on iis way. The informant who new bases said that ii his in- formation was correct, Russia would have much firmer military control over China than she has today. Relations between Russia and China now are governed by s i945 pact entered into by Gener- alissimo Chiang Kai-Shek‘s Na- tionalist regime. lLs l.(‘i'lllS made Russia joint owner of the South and Eastern lVlanchurian Railways, Port Arthur a Joint Sine-Soviet naval base, and Dairen a free port. Many Man- churlan and Outer Mongolian communications were placed un- dcr joint control, too. Moscow radio announced about two months ago the Peiping re- gime intendcd "to review all treaties concluded by the Kuo- mintang (Nationalists) with fer- elgn powers and, according to their nature, revise, snnul or re- cognize them." This review and tho formula- tion of now trade and money re- lations with Russia are prmum- ed to be the purpose of Mao Tze- Tung‘s current mission to Moscow. Communist China‘: top man has been talking directly with Prisne Minister Stalin and Deputy pre- micr V. M. Molotov. Western officials thirfic spoke of sub- ‘jccis which have been studied in Moscow between Mao Tze-Tung and Stalin include: l, The status of Inner and Out- er Mongolia, Sinkiang and Man- churia. 2. Future Soviet participation in- running and developing these and. other areas of backward North China. 3. Provision by Russia of indus- trial know-how Ind whatever capital equipment she can spare to boost Red China‘s program of industrialization. 4. Future of Tibet, which the Chinese Communist regime has undertaken to “liberate? Mr. Justice Archibald Reported Recovering WINNIPEG, Jan. 13 — (C?) -—- Mr. Justice M.B. Archibald. chief commissioner on the Board of Transport Commissioners, is still in Winnipeg's General Hospital “resting comfortably and improv- ing", hospital officials said today. Mr, Archibald was taken off a train Jan. 6 for a medical exam- ination after he became ill en route from Ottawa to Vancouver. where the board will hear an ap-y plicntlon by the British Columbia Telephone Company for an in- crease in tolls. It is not known when he will be sic to continua to VIRGIN.’- Hungry nnd nliserablc, the boy with n ilassion for the son sprawled in tho _va\vl's clasping his stnmarh when Reptonian found him He. said he hadn't, eaten for two days. Ho perked up after a meal and de- clared "I'm okay." Johnny's stevodnrc father in Arbmath told reporters his blond son had always been "mad about the sea" and hung around the harbor day after day. A trailing rope scuttled John- nyis voyage. It got. tangled around the Girl Jean's propeller and lelt the boat wallowing in the heavy swell until the Reptonian on her way to Whitc Sea fishing grounds _ chugged by. Seeing no sign of llfc, Rcpton- ian crew members boarded the Girl Jean and found disconsolate Johnny. _____€_.__ GETS LONG SENTENCE SPRINUFIEID, Mass. Jan. if) -— (AP) -—- A hulking 260-pound, oil-humor repairman who broke into a house, assaulted, almost killed a 13-year-old baby-sitter and dumped live coals in her face. to- day was sentenced to serve 35 to 40 years in Pllson. Rctracting a previous plea. oi innocence. Rah- ert A. Perry. 3i, pleaded guilty to ‘or that slay was 8159A. four indictments. lay l f ishltold 1 tl Ontario Farmers Support l Buy-British-Goods Policy ‘pr-rnillri-s l iilll>\'f‘ iron-ling, (By Lorne Frame) TORONTO, Jan. 1.1 ((‘.P)-- Criticism nl farmers‘ financial coiltrihuiions to the Ontario Fed- eration of Agriculture bildgot. was maria. today in tho closing session nf the Federation's three-day con- vcntion. Discussion resulted in a resolu- tion carried unanimously that the executive study the present sys- tem of financing with a view to increasing contributions. Membership was estimated nt 150,000 farmers supporting a 1950 budget of nearly $48,500. Delegates endorsed a resolution requesting the Canadian Fedor- ntion of Agriculture to urge upon the Federal Government "whatever selective tariff and monetary ad- justments may be required to ia- The poverty of men is safe; great riches are exposed to MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN i-__- danger. Mall $5.00; Subscriptions Delivered $6.00. other Provinces k U. S. $7.00, RY PLANS DISCUSSED l" ¢|1iflai0peration 0f Wood islands Route By C.N OTTAWA, Jan. 13 (C?) -‘ Plans are being discussed for con-i struction of a new 51.000000 Smp‘ to augment lllt‘ it‘l‘i'_\' solvice no, tween Prince l-Itiward island Zilllli Nova Scuila, i‘. was lonrllcd 10-. clay. Under present illans, the P11 I.- N.S. service might be taken over by the Federal Government. The line, operating between Wood ls- lands, PE I. and Caribou, NS, now is run by a prlvilil: concern. Norlhtlmberland Ferries, i.id. A rocolrtmcndation oi the Linn- adian Maritime Commission, it lS understood, has gone to the Gov- ernment suggesting that the ves- sel bc built and that the service ' by lllc Canadian National lizlilu \ lich nov: op- crates the P.E.l.-Nu\v Brunswick ferry link. The proposed vessel would carry some 50 vehicles. l: would be used in conjunction with the S. S. Charles A. Dunning, the larger of the two sllips on the N. S. - P.E.l. route Consideration now is being Ji- P591120 given to the purchase of the Dun- ning by the Dominion Govcrt. mull‘. from the operating com» pally A second and smaller ship now on the scrint-t- would no‘. ha usccl in illc new sci-lip. The suggested liiiv service ha: been under discussion for some time between representatives o‘. the Provincial-Government and Federal authorities. The proposal that ‘the C. N, R. opcralc the ferry system has hot-l opposed by the P.E.l. Government. it is understood. 1t was taker. up this week by Premier Jones and some P.E.I. ministers during their visit for the Dominion - Provincial conference. 'I‘llcy objected, it was under- stood, to the idea of an additional ferry service between the Island and the mainland being turned over to the Canadian National. For many years. it has been a complaint of P.E.I. that the C.N.R. docs not provide proper servic: over ilao route it open-ales between Borden, P.E.I., and Cape Tormen- tine, NB. v Transportation Problems Discussed At Halifax l HALIFAX, Jan. 1.". —tCP) — Protests against reduction in Call- adian National Railways passeng- er train services in the itlaritimes for the reason given were embod- ied in a resolution passed today at a special meeting of the Maritime Transportation Commission The C.N.R. said the 1P5 per oelrt cut- back was due to a coal shortage. The Commission also protested plans for railways to increase special rates on farmers’ livestock shipments to exhibitions. The car- riers plan to increase the special rates I-‘cb. l5. IIICTWISQfl freight rates on a straight. poisoning? basis was again dcplorcil as the Cxrmmisslon preqiared for hearings by the‘ Board of Transport Commission- ers at Ottawa Feb. 2 on the rail- ways’ application for a P0 per cent- increase. Rand Mathemn oi Mnnoton. N B., Commission manager. reported he had not heard of any action taken by the litter-Stale. Osm- meroe Commission in answer to protests of M21111: potato shippers against the reduction in rates on potatoes from Maritime to United States points. The schedule of reduced rates is slated to go into effect- automat- ically tomorrow unlcss there is some last-minute action by the Inter-State Commerce Commission. o The Transportation Commission backed the New Brunswick potato growers in their stand against the- Maine shippers‘ opposition to the reduced rates. The commission also prcp-arcrl to, answer an inquiry made by Call-i adian Pacific ltaiiway regarding‘ extension of running rates to the, C P.R. over C.l\'.lt lilies lW-y tween Saint John NB , and IIlIi-l fax tillat is. operation of C.l‘l>.,i trains over C.N R. tracks). l Ill discussion on the railwulyw. proposal to increase rail-s on farmers‘ livestock fllliillllfilll.» to exhibitions. Mr. blathcsall Kllili more than 40 citrlonds were scllzl to the lvlaritulc Winter Fair at‘ A-mllcrsi, N..\'. ‘filo farmers sluutil to lose lll(lil(’_\‘ which i\\'~~l1 llilll‘ ribbon money could not make up. Provision for stronger Philips for‘ motor vehicles on the Prince Exi- ward Island Car ferry was urpl could absorb and pay for all (‘an- adlrin agricultural surpluses Antoni: 12 other resolution: pass-g cd iln- cnnvcnlioit nskvrl ihni: l 1, Cilrrcncy difficulties lnqvontl‘ the i-nntrnl of the (‘s-martian cc"- nnmy not. ho marl" a lilVifll‘ in dc- irrmlning the hunter's position in any efforts to balance tho national economy, and that 1hr- Agricultural Prices Silppori Act ho nilpliod to supplement produccrs’ priccs whcrc necessary; 2. Stops ho taken to slioilgthcn tltr- Ontario Farm lhlllfiffiliilll'r\l‘l to (‘o-nrrllnnic ii with Federal Mar- keting legislation; 3. The now oxcctltlvo :iscortain improvements to bring pFiPOS of feed. processing and distribution in lino with existing livestock prices; 4 Tho C.i-‘.A. advise tho Federal cilltaie an expansion of British sales in Canada" and to encourage purchase of British goods, The resolution noted that the British food commissioner in Can- ada had slated that if every Cana- dian increased by S30 last year's lpurchase of British goods, Britain Government against any change at present rm methods of calculating depreciation on farm oqilipmcnt. Announcement was mad» of tho election of J. C. Rroilcrlvk of Si. Catharine: as 1050 president, and V, S. Nlilinirn as llTfrflwry-ynan- nger, in another resolution. The 11111116 now handle vehicle; of 20,000 pounds while the stopped-u are designed for vehicles of QM: pounds. Prince Edward Islander-i are scekirnz rssnps_ for pounds to bring them in lino J1 tho supports provided and as- commodato s larger type 9g vehicle. lmDivvornen-to in In lodlltlq of the Wood terry spas» W"! B150 “fled 1n a raoolutlm. The Commission's mmd on freight rates was reviewed. 1t. 1). Smith. Commission simmer g Mr. Matheson will app”;- u w.‘ ~< (Continued on page 1g m; MAN‘! A CRE MAfHEMATlC IPHL,__,. p CAT)’ 301W‘. HS L“ liovcsncdhaouts A TORONTO. Jan. 1S -— (C?) ~ Vancouver 3-11; . Calgary 25113-208; Regina 2011-1513; Winnipeg 24B-9B; To- ronto 35-51; Ottawa 6-33; Mon- treal - 3-1; Quebec —- 27; Saint John 2-36; Moncion 4-13-28; Hal".- fax 11-33; Charlottetown 5-24 Sydncy 10-26; Sin-mouth 13-35; S: John's 21-24. ll.\l,ll<‘.\X, Jan, TTF-(CPF-Ofii cial inland forticasls issued i0- nicht h_\' tho Donlininn Public Wcnlhor Office ill Halifax: Synopsis: l-‘itlc weather ]\l‘f‘\'.'lill‘(i 0U‘! "Hist of the b1:|ritinii-.-= and l-lasl orn Uilvllw; Frlriilv, but sums "mo. “its reporter] in Ncw Brunswick i‘ the nflcvnvmn nnil owning, There was nlsn stint" flTfWlllil rain in tbs Si. John llivvl" V1» iy but tnni iill‘l‘l' have now riser A largo aron of rain and snow r-nvnrs niuvlt of Qllrllcl‘. lnfi 0h tin-in nnrl this woallti-r will cross the hlilriiinlr-s sliillflill)’, liy Sunday iho dislurhanvw c: sin); this precipitation will liv. cast. of tho, district and northwest winds will l"‘Slill in fine colt‘- wrri l llcr. Regional forecasts, valid unit‘ midnight Saturday, with an oul~ look for Sunday: Prince Edward Island: Snou changing to rain about dawn ant‘ ending Saiurcitvv morning. Satur- day mcrcasi. “lot snow or rain lr tho r-vcninc. Temporaiilrcs rising Southeast winds 20. ilnrly mornlm temperature and high in the after- noon at (‘hnriottetntvti I10 and 36, High ildc today at 7.15 A. M. 5B0. 6.27 P. M. Summersidc tide eighteen mil- utes later than Charlottetown. BORDEN-TORMENTINI FERRY SERVICE WEEK DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. (‘spas In; 0.10 AM. 1.40 Lilo us. __ .....-._4 14AM».-