MAXIMS 01 A MERE MAN Mn: with the head with the heart: Ill!!! and woman to oboll fusion. 5! P. U .m-... . FIVE and woman to commend all else eon- rs OIIIIIOHOIOWII UIEIITOIIIGID III.00 pop ""1 ll” II... E";"i p.oo. other r'museeu and v. s. A. ei:.oomoor- uTm.. BRITISH TROOPS SEIZED I IN SOVIET TERRITORY Read by cpvcrr Prince Edwaird Island -Like the Dew Eveybody CI-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1952 The Potato Marketing Board has been advised that the Sept. ist. potato crop for the United States has been estimated at 337,685,000 bushels. This is 2,264,000 greater than the August 1st. report but still iar below the 350 million bushels which governs the amount which Canada can export; to the United states at the low tariff rate. '1-hr, lteneva and Torquay trade azrrrniriits allow Canada to ex- nr bushels below 350 milllon'bssed an the Sept. lat crop estimate. In other words Canada can export some l2 million bushels of table potatoes in the United states at the regular tariff of 37l,&c per l0il tbs. instead of the one million if their crop was placed at or above 3.50 million bushels. It is very unlikely. however, states Mr, S G. Pcppin, technical advisor to tho Potato Marketing Board, that advantage of this condition will be taken inasmuch as the Can- adian crop may actually be less than Canadian consumer require- ments. As a matter of fact Canada importcd from the United States from August of last year to May of this your some .3500 carloads of table potatoes due to the fact that the rmp was relatively email all "Randy Killer for potato tops in stock. Dillon & Spillett. "Klini.ora Hall. see l'mkce", Friday night. "Dam. .slnnctt.!s Road School. Friday. September 12th. ' "Biuivig and cleaning iimoihy mil daily. McGulgsn and Boylc. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for feeding your hogs and poui- . ivy. Dillon and Spillett. "Ilntive, Elmwood School, 'Tlllll'vln.l'. September 11th. Good iiium: and canteen serylce. p "Sandy's Drive-In Theatre, xhnws Tuesdays. wednesdsys and Frlllars at 9?. M. "Rcgillar Thursday night Dsnr-. ln Mt Stewart Legion Hall. Good music. "trance. St. Charles Hau, every Tliiirsday, 9.30 to 1. Chaisson's Or- chcstra. ”llnllce in St. Ignatius School, .lln.Vllvld. September 16th. Lunches 5tl'l'"d. Music by Doiron Bros. Tiilancing at usual tonight, Win- 5100 Station Hall. Good music. CZIIIIEEII. "Billing and Cleaning Timothy 5'” dflllv. Paying top price. Elmer MacDonald. Crapaud. . "ilcscrvc Wednesday, October in for chicken supper in New Glasgow l-loll. L :tSiiow. New Glasgow Thursday. T1qlllllcl' Current". Starring Robert i ,' fir. r"'l'i'fIi'l'l'iPl”S, ask about the Shll! ..nllfl Feed Financa.Plan. For parl- .cli1ars contact your local feed mill ”l-lot chicken supper at Dun- gall MacIntosh'a. Bprlngton, Fri- lif- September 19. Serving from 0- 50 and 16 cents. W"53l1fly'e Restaurant will open Wk days at 4 pm. and neon ::l:I'l7i,Vl for remainder of the nu- d"Dance. Emerald I-lsli. Thum- Ray. Sc tember. llth. Music by Russell an-en and Blue Haven umblers. canteen service. . ”M0hlhLv meeting Kingston gmjllch Osnsdisn Legion will be hm mnllhlr 1-Onion Home. Chat- lawn. at no pm. M:i"I'hers wlu be a iienent Dance Ni Elnizo in st. Peters Bay Holy Dime Hun. Friday. September 12th. late; for; gags.) ati ago. 1' ng a . . Muso y Cheluonb Orchestra. "I"lddllns and stepdancing Cin- lieat in st. Mary's mu, sourir. Fri- ,:Y- September 12th. Winners will PI""9llt lllterlf Kings at the V nhggvllailltl Contest. commencing at .nm. Naomi: town Judges. Admis. IIY h.:& no Oil! Swift Egg Grading Ste- knl; lm Street have excel- mmllcllllvlsrmr handling your "1 ml. It will you to try y with your nex rrect Grading. Quick service and Ferment in can, , . port in any one year the number' "Southern t shipment. U.S. Potato Crop Estimate Placed At 337, 685,000 Bus. Hunted criminals SECOND BREA -Edwin Alonzo Boyd, 31-year-old master-mind of an alleged gang of bank robbers, escaped from Toronto's Don Jail for the second time in less than I year. With him in the getaway were Steve Suchan and Leonard Jackson, awaiting trial for murder in the shooting last March of Det.-Sgt. Edmund Tong, and Wil- liam R. Jackson, facing trial for bani: robbery. .-n BREAKS JAIL-William Russell Jackson, 27, awaiting trial for bank robbery. escaped from Tor- onto's Don Jail with the gang of alleged bank robber: headed by Edwin Alonzo Boyd. Jackson is five feet, 'il,g inches; medium build; has brown hair, blue eyes; medium complexion, poor teeth; has name "Eleanor" tattooed on right forearm. The biggest mali- huiit in Ontario's history is search- ing for the four. Orders to police are "shoot to kill". To Establish Plant in Germany .ST. JOHN'S, Ni'ld.. Sept. 10- (CP) -A Newfoundland fishery firm is planning to establish a plant in Germany to handle cer- tuin species of fish not found in Newfoundland waters. Arthur Monroe. managing di- rector of Fishery Products Ltd., said fish produced by the German plant would be marketed through a subsidiary selling organization in Cleveland, Ohio. Canadian Jet Pilot Has Inspector-Thinks They Are Still In Toronto TORONTO, Sept. 10-(GP)-Pm lice frankly admitted tonight they have lost the trail of the four notorious criminals who broke out of the Don Jail Monday and that it's anybody's guess where they have gone. The' province-wide search went on without let-up as further pre- cautions were taken at the jail to prevent what police said might be an attempt by the escaped pris- oners to free other members of their gang. Despite the absence of definite clues police held hopes that the fugitives-Edwin Boyd. Steve Su- chsn and Leonard and William Jackson-were unable to get far. Inspector of Detectives Archie Mc- Cathie said he believes they are still in Toronto. There were also reports that Jail guards slipped drugs to prisoners prior to the prison-break. Mayor Allan Lsmport said the Royal Commission, appointed Tuesday by the Provincial Government to probe the sensational escape, "will no doubt inquire into these re- ports." Toronto police and R. C. M. P. odlcials, however, were inclined to discpunt the i-eports. Sgt. Doug Grlerson of the city morality squad said "we have never heard of anything like that going on." Meanwhile, Col. 1-ledley Basher, deputy commissioner of reform in- stitutions, moved into the jail to take over its administration from Governr T. W. Brand and Deputy Governor Alexander Noble, sus- pended along with six guards pending the investigation. A doz- en Provincial Police were brought in to replace the guards tempor- arily. l Col. Basher, a previous 'overnor said he wlli retain control oi the Jail i1.this whole mess is straightened out." Judge Ian Mmcdonncil. investi- gating commissioner, said he will free himself from his Judicial dut- tea to begin the investigation as soon as possible. J. W. Pickup has been appointed senior counsel to the commission. Attorney General Porter said the Royal Commission will be on a "no-holds-barred" basis. There would be "no attempt to shield anybody from the minister down." The inquiry will concern all circumstances of the escape, the control and administration of the Jail, the building itself and the sppointmentshdutles and discip- line of the jallers, as well as treatment and discipline or pris- oners. Police belief that the fugitives might try to aid other members of the gang prompted them to double to four the number of policemen regularly stationed outside the prison. Extra searchlights were mounted about the grounds. Ch'iown Girls Are Injured LUNDNBURG, N.S., Sept. 10 - (CF) - Miss Bertha Tweedy and Miss lleane Tait of Charlottetown were injured today when their car missed a. turn on a steep incline and crashed into a house. Miss Tweedy suffered leg in- Juries and Miss Tait face lacera- tions, but hospital authorities said neither was on the danger list. Both were visitors to Lunenburg for the Fisheries Exhibition. - of the Jail, Long Fighting Record OTTAWA. Sept. 10 -(GP Fighter planes have become th stuck-in-trade of Flt. Lt. Glover of Lcsside. ont. He's done much else than fly during his young life. In the second World War he fiow- Hurricuies for the R. A. F. until shot down by German ack- ack in 194: and taken prisoner. Now it's sabre jets in Korea and the 20-year-old R. O. A. F. pilot is on his way to beaming an ace. Reports from seoul say Flt. Lt. cover has me best score of the hslf-dossn R. C. A. mipiiots serv- ing with the U. 5. Air Force :- gainst the Ooinmuntsis to gain ox- ......L....-.-.------- "Buying live and dressed poul- try Monday to Thursday noon at our plant on Fitzroy Street, next to the telephone office. Phone 102'! for prices. Swift Canadian Co Limited. "Swift Canadian Co. Limited. have just received a csi-load of hog concentrate, dairy concentrate poultry concentrate also hog grow- er. Bwifis Levin: Mash and Dairy Rsi.ion.Pick up your requirements at our warehouse 6n Pitarcy Street. Chsrlottetowv ). Ernest never Red Mlll. them shooting. He outmsnoeuvi-ed the lparience. . In two days he destroyed two the first one without Red pilot and forced him to crash his Russian-built jet. In addition Flt. Lt. Glover has damaged three other communist planes in the little more than two imonths he's been flying in Korea. '1-lis score brings the bag of the six Canadian pilots in the Korean lthesire to five destroyed, two pro- bably destroyed. and three darn- aged. other Canadian pilots serving with the U. s. A. P. in Korea in- clude sqdn. Ldr. James Lindsay. Arnprior, 0nt.: Flt. Lt. Claude A. Lawrence spurr, Middleton. N. 8.: sqdn. Lair. 1:. 0: Smith. Navsn, ont., and Pit. Lt: R. I. Lowry, North Bay. out. Another oensdleln. PO. A. Lum- bros. Wisi-ton, om. is on his way to Korea. Pilots who have already served the required six months or so mis- sions and have since returned to Canada include PO. Bruce mem- ming. Montreal and Flt. Lt. Omcr Levesque. Mont Joli, Que. inot. seriously affect Police lose Trail 6F-Jail-Breaking Criminals Mentloning the new course be- ing prepared for Grade XI in this Province, Premier J. Wal- ter Jones at the Sourls Exhibi- tion yesterday said a change in the school curriculum would be designed to promote, in the growing generation, agricultural ideas which would tend to keep them in Prince Edward Island. The big Eastern King's show was attended by His Honor Lieu- icnant Governor T. W: L. Browse who opened the show. He was in- iroduccd by Hon. J. Brenton St. John, M.L.A., and complimented the president, H. J. MacKinncn. and other members of the show executive, on the excellent pro- gram prepared. The Lieutenant Governor said that the Sourls show was one of the major ones in the Province rind residents of the area might well be proud of the cxhlbits. Hs particularly mentioned ilie live- stock. the floral and home cook- ing displays. There were over 1.000 people attending yesterday as the show came to its conclusion. The class- es were all well filled and the judges expressed their pleasure at the quality of the exhibits. In ills brief speech Premier Jones complimented the exhibi- tors and said that Sourls was be- coming an ever-Increasing import.- ant trading centre. The new in- dustries underway there and the operation of the dra889l'!- I" particular, he said. would make the town gradually become one of the most important port! In the Province. The seventeen employees of Am- erican Can Company's Charlotte- town Factory were told yesterday by Mr. P. G. Rigby that the plant will cease operations permanent- ly on or about December 1, 1052. Mr. Rigby read a. message to the organization from W. C. Btolk, President of the Company, express- ing the management's deep re- gret that the shut-down had be- come necessary. and explaining the reasons. The message outlined the steps that the company has taken to assist its employees to "make the personal readiustmcnts that the Company's reluctant move will occasion." In 1015 when the Company he- gan its can-manufacturing opera- tions here, its long range plans called for the building and opera.- tion of a new factory in the Maritime Provinces "wherever it would provide the best, most economical and most dependable service to the area's growers and packersl" Mr. Stalk explained that the two factors which required the Company to give up its plan for a new factory in the Maritime Pro- vinces, were the fact that new markets for containers which had been anticipated for this area. fail- ed to materialize and that some customers who accounted for a portion of the plants original volume switched their business to other sources of supply. Mr. Stoik pointed out that or- dinarily the shifting of even :1 substantial part oi the production of any one of the Companyls fac- tories to another supplier would the plant's VTiIl Noi Remove Canadian Troops From Japan OTTAWA. Sept. 10 -(GP) - Defence Minister Glaxton said to- day there is "no question of with- drawing any anadisn forces .s.t this time" from use: in Japan be- cause of dissatisfaction over negotiations for their rights in that country. "Progress of egotistions for ur- rangements relating to the com- monwealth or other United Nations forces in Japan have been disap- pointingly slow", the minister said. "However, they are continuing with the expectation that satis- factory arrangements will be york- ed out and there is of course no question of withdrawing any can- adisp forces at this time." The Minister was commenting on a. London report quoting the Daily Express as reporting csrisds is considering withdrawal of her forces from Japan unless they are accorded the same treatment as United states troops. An External Affairs Depart- ent spokesman here Illd the I ndon story is without foundat- on. Large Attendance Yesterday At Eastern Kingls Exhibition farmers The Premier urgcd who have marginal land to en- gage in the growing of small fruits and vegetables as he stated the market for these products was increasing at a steady rate: He cited for example the pack- ing of strawberries, cucumbers and green beans. Congratulates Executive Hon. C. C. Baker. Minister of Agriculture, also offered his con- gratulations to the members of the executive of the Fair for their work and made note of the great improvements to the grounds made this year. He cx- pressed his hearty approval oil the splendid classes among the exhibits and suggested to the owners that those from the dis- trlct bring their exhibits to the Charlottetown fair. In giving his approval of local fairs Mr. Baker left the thought that they go far in the training of the young people of the neighborhoods and because of this held out I hope for the fu- ture progress of the Island as an agricultural Province. Other spcul-:ers heard briefly included Mr. William Acorn. M. L. A., and Rev. A. Cori-(um. Both of them congratulated the fair commitets on the excellent ex- hibition and expressed their hopes for its continued success in future years. A report of the livestock ex- hibit appears on Page 8 of to- day's Guardian. 0 Plant Of American Can Co. To "Close A Down In Ch'Town ability to continue in operation, because it would normally be off- set by new business or by making minor adjustments to flexible equipment for production of an- other type of can. However, the equipment in the Charlottetown plant cannot be adapted for the manufacture of other types of containers. Mr. Btolk said that exhaustive surveys of business available in the Maritime Provinces had been made to determine whether it would be practical to re-equip the plant to manufacture other types of containers, but it was found in every instance that available markets could be more economical- ly supplied from one or more of the Company's present manufac- turing plants. In view of the loyal service of the employees, special arrange- ments have been made-Mr. Stolk's statement to the employees said. whereby every member of the or- ganization who is not eligible for retirement pay will receive a special termination allowance; This termination allowance ranges up to twenty weeks' pay. and the actual amount of termina- tion allowance received by eni- ployees will vary according to wages and length of service. In order to give all employees an op- portunity to seek other employ- ment Mr. Stalk said that any who resign between now and date of termination of employment will still receive these termination benefits. Individual interviews are being held with each member of the or- ganization to' appraise him of his own personal situation. Mccarihy Has' l Easy Victory MILWAUKEE. Sept. 10 -- (AP) -Joe McCarthy's campaign to rid the Truman administration of the Reds he says are in its employ has been given a. rousing roar of approval by the voters of Wis- uonsin. The state's junior Republican senator, seeking his second term, put his Communists-in-goverm ment campaign on the electoral line for the first time in Tues- day's primary and came away with I bulge of better than" 100,000 votss more than the combined total given seven other senatorial aspirants. Elected Moderaior of Uniietllihurch HAMILTON. sent. lo -(CP)- mv. A. A. Scott, a missionary on furlough from india, tonight. was elected moderstm of the United Ohurch of Canada. Dr. lcott. I native of carleion Place. Ont, who has spent so years in the minion lie 1. is the first missionary to be elected moderat- or of the church. Russianshnpose Ban 0n U. S. Miliiaryfulice I c BERLIN, Sept. 10-(OP)-Five British. soldiers are missing in Soviet-controlled territory tonight. Two officers, on leave from West Germany, were arrested Tuesday in East Berlin, the British Army announced today. A second an- nouncement said that three soi- diers, travelling the highway from Berlin to the west, through the Soviet zone, failed to report at the British border checkpoint. A protest demanding immediate release of the men yvss sent to Soviet authorities by Mai.-Gen. Charles F. C. Coleman, British commandant in Berlin. Meanvlliile the Russians reim- poscd a ban against movement of United States military police via the highway from West Berlin to the American sector checkpoint at the Soviet frontier. They lifted it temporarily Tuesday night. The British, American and French commahdants met to dis- cuss the situation, but did not announce any counter action. U. 5. High Commissioner Walter J.-Donneliy, who talked over the case Tuesday with Soviet Gen. Vassily Chulkov, told reporters earlier that the western approach to the problem would be worked out by the Allied commanders. The military police, who report for eight-hour duty shifts at the control point, have been instruct- cd to avoid a show-down with the Soviet tnmmy-gunners who set up a special post in the disputed area. The patrol jeeps used a detour which kept them in the American sector. The normal route crosses less than a. mile of the Russian zone on the four lane concrete super-highway which leads to West Germany. Sorry For Swear Word WASHINGTON, Sept. 10 -(AP) If Dwight D. Eisenhower cussed during his radio speech Tuesday night, he doesn't sBIl'ICHIl.)El' it. But if he did. he's sorry he did it. The bad word: "damn." Eisenhower, here in a flying vis- it, told Republican workers he didn't" have the slightest memory of having used the ward during his Indianapolis speech. But, he said, "I herewith want to apologize to anyone I may have offended." The whole thing came up be- cause of an out.-of-the-manuscript comment made during his talks. Eisenhower was having trouble with his mechanical prcmptcr, a gadget on which a. speech is print- ed and from which a speaker reads as it slowly revolves .The prompter wasn't keeping up with Eisen- hower. During a. round of applause, the radio audience-but not those in the hall-heard something that sounded like "damn it!" Anoiher Polio Death In N. B. F'Rl-IDERICTON. Sept. 10 -(C?) -New Brunswick! seventh polio death this year was recorded today as provincial officials prepared to discuss the possibility of opening schools Sept. 15. Two-month-old Douglas V. Mc- Lean died in Sussex, the third child to succumb to the disease in King's County. Elsewhere, new cases reported sent the total to 217, a gain of five since Tuesday. Segment Of OTTAWA. Sept. 10 -(GP)-The diaper crowd has edged out the grown-ups. Babies aged four years and ,un- dcr added almost 600,000 to their ranks in the last 10 years to take the lead from the 15-to 19-year- old group, leaders in 1941. It was the first time the babies were on top in 80 years. Census- talrcrs, analyzing the 1051 decen- riial census, attributed the in- crease to the war and post-war marriage boom. The census analysis. issued today by the Bureau of Statistics. placed the four-year-old-and-unders at 1.- 'l22,000 in 1051, up from 1,051,000 in 1941. The 1540-10 group. which had 1,120,000 In 1941, slipped to sixth place with 1,055,000. The emphasis was on youth in Canadats population growth in more ways than one. In the 10 years, 1041 to 1051. Csnsdrs population climbed to 14,000,000 from 11,500.- 000 and of that 2,500,000 increase, 16 PAGES !& it washes. evw Zh something new: what done the earnest of things they shall do. , MAXIMS or 'A MERE MAN they have Ilonsing Dally Founded 1881. The Guardian. live Cenin. OTTAWA. Sept. 10 -(OP) -The Railways have launched an up- ward revision of freight rates on exports and imports through east- ern ports, it was learned today. The move is aimed at getting more revenue for carriers by peg- ging Canadian rates to the higher export-import charges of the Unit- ed States railways. It would be the first general revision of the basis of these rates since 1005, though they have been subject to periodic increases. The reshuffle would include in- creases and decreases. But increases would heavily outnumber the re- ductions and would be bigger ones. Increases would run to about 40 per cent and decreases to around 25 per cent. The changes would apply on traffic going through the ports of Halifax, Saint John, Montreal, Quebec, Sorel, Que... Three Rivers. Que., and the U. S. Atlantic sea- board. The rates extendas far west. as the Ontario-Manitoba border. Railway officials said today they have not yet estimated how much revenue they would get from the changes. However,,the bulk of Can- ada's overseas exports and imports -excluding western grain-travels on these rates. One effect of the move, if it is endorsed by the Board of Trans- port Commissloriers. would be to cut down proportionately the size Confederation Of Eui'opeaLNai,ions LUXEMBOURG CITY, Sept. 10 (Reuters)-A draft constitution for a United states of Europe should be ready in six months under a resolution approved late today by six West European for- eign ministers. The new political community would tie in with all the other "United Europe" organizations- the already working coal-steel pool, the European defence com- munity and the Council of Eur- ope. The United States of Europe would be a confederation of six countries-France, West Germany, Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg-preserving their sovereignty in all matters except those speclncally delegated to the common parliament. The supra-national authority is essential if the community is to work effectively politically. This has already been decided with re- ference to the defence and indus- try pools-the European army and the Schuman pool. Self-Help Is Main Objective OTTAWA. Sept. 10 - (CP)-A Toronto school of social work professor said today the main welfare objective in civil defoncc organization in Canada should be to "help the people to hcip thnmselvcs." Professor John S. Morgan oi the University of Toronto, speak- ing to 50 federal, provincial and municipal delegates meeting here to discuss the welfare phase of civil deicncc preparedness. said the sclf-help theme was the backbone of any such planning. He was convinced too. he said. iiiat lln niinck on civilians is lnrgcly frustrated before it trikcs place "if the ordinary citizen knows niiat nrranzcmenis have liccn mode io provide for his many prohicms and trusts ihosr- rcsprinsiblr-, forlhe arrangements." Babes And Tots Largest Population 1,000,000 were under 15. of the total population last year, 4,200,000 were 14 years old and un- der, up from 3,200,000 in 1941. Another 4,300,000 were between ihe ages of 15 and :4, an increase of about 600000 from 3,100,000 in 1941, while the remainder, about 600,000 from 3,700,000 in 1941, while the remainder, about 5,500,000 were 35 and over, a gain from 4,- 600,000 11 years ago. The census also trends: 1. In the marriageabie age groups, say, between 20 and 34. there were more women than men showed these in 1051, n rcversal of the 1941 trend. . 2. Women had the population edge over men in the cities and other urban areas with indications they were leaving farms and other rural areas for the cities once they reached marriageable age. 3. Canada's population of elder citizens were growing. with wom- en having the edge in longevity. I Railways Plan Boost In Freight Rates On Traffic Through Eastern Ports of any future general freight-ntq increase. In (act, the board itself suggest- ed to the railways last January) they might look into the export- import rates-among other special tolls-for this purpose. The railways now have applied for repeal of the board's 1005 order setting up the existing basis, and the board has granted this. How- ever, the board's new order says it will take into consideration repre- sentations from any interest: that feel themselves injured by the pro- posed scales. The export-import proposal 3 one of at number being put forward by the railways in the search for more revenue outside general rah increases. Another major one is an overhaul of eastern Canada's so- called "schedule A" rates, which have not had I. full revision since 1007. The railways have made known. they are seeking to rearrange these rates, concentrated most heavily in Quebec but also extend into the Marltlmes. Today, it was learned the Mari- tlmes Transportation Commission has registered with the board an objection to changing these rate: now. The commission said it would be "most confusing" to have this done while the board is working out a plan for general freight-rates equalization. , Rose Drops Divorce Suii , NEW YORK, Sept. 10--(AP)- Broadway Billy Rose refused to let. the show go on today. He dropped his divorce action against Eleanor Holm and gave her I. separation after 13 years of mar- riage. ., He also gave a. blank cheque for allmony to a. judge with a. Solo- mon-like genius for settling lins- band-and-wiie quarrels. But Billy reserved the right to contest the" figure if it comes out too high. The alimony hearing was set for Oct. 15. The Sayenr-old El- eanor, onetime swimming queen, now gets a record S100 is day tem- porary alimoiiy. She probably isn't anxious to take a cut. Billy made it sound gallant and gave it the big smile as he rang down the curtain on the biggesi:' production of his life.n sensational year-long battle that had Broad- way reeling. His lawyer, Arthur Garfield l-lays, said Rose had neither "the stomach or heart to engage in a mud-slinging contest with Elean- or." Billy said he was convinced by State Supreme Court Justice James B. M. McNally that "a man- has no chance of winning in A nghi. with a girl." Eleanor regarded her triumph as "a complete surrender by him and a complete vindication oi: me." But an air of llngcrctl after the Roses". A (.UY libs to BE it time iootisil. New Aim not to my than (mat; ulillzm crazy 9 bitterness siill "war of tho HALIFAX. Bept. 10 - (GP) -9 Official forecasts issued by thq, Dominion Public Weather office here and valid until midnight Thursday. ' Synopsis: There was considerable sunshine in the Mnritimcs today, although many patches of cloud drifted over the district. Temperatures rose to tho. mid 70's during the afternoon in all three provinces. Continuing fine weather is fore- cast for Thursday, and tempera- tures are forecast to reach 70 again in most regions. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Clear with a few cloudy intervals. Lit- tle-chnnge in temperature. Light winds. Low and high Thursday at Charlottetown 52 and 65 Summary for Thursday-Bunny. High tide today at Charlotte- town at 2.46 A. M. and 4.44 P. M. high tide on the North shore :4 11.40 A. M. and 10.30 P. M. summerside tide eighteen min: utes later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 5.40 A. M. and sets at an F. M. -