I - ' MAXIMS ' orA MERE MAN :12..- iato us in thought of It. -11.” General Iharinus lived on ihpm, he never said wbs rliolllllff Charlottetown, In r.a.l. 8950- Other usuasnids and 0.3.1. lltoogoor osmosis.) Ill.0o per canon. llaowhard A Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1953 4 PERSONS DEAD AFTER CROSSING CRASH NEAR HALIFAX v New Low-Cost: Air Sir Noel Bowater New Lord Mayorllf London (By Walter Dlvla) LONDON. (Reuters)-Sir Noel llowater. G0, a director of the huge Bowatcr Paper Corporation. was chosen to he the 631st Lord Mayor of London. Llverymen of the old master guilds stood in the 15th-century Guildhall, Just as they have since 1191, and cried "all" when Sir Nnei's name was presented. The ancient hall was strewn with sweet-smelling herbs "to keep away the plague and evil smells of the city". During the days of the great plague the herbs were supposed to guaran- tee health. ' r' In six weeks, the lord mayor- elect will drive in a 200-year-old black-and-gold coach to assume the office. He will not he lord mayor of the 8,000,000 people of greater London-only of the city of Lon- don the bustling one-mile-square district which in medieval times was politically significant. Sir Noel will not have the rest powers of some of his pre- qcessors-for instance, the rags- .-,-,t riches orphan Dick Whitting- who did so much for Lon- on's poor in the 14th century. will supremo But within the city- itself he will, in all matters of protocol. reign supreme. When the Queen visits his domain she will have to walk behind him. And he holds the ancient right.to ar- range interviews with the Queen st. Buckingham Palace at any hour of the day or night. But the pomp and honor of the office are expensive and the mas- ter guidsmen are careful to put up a candidate who can foot the hill. The Lord Mayor gets a sal- Coming Events "Dense Grshdtvisw "Thursday. Bumsi Orchestra. in Morell Rear I-Iail, "Dances d iscontinued. "Dance in Vernon I-Isli, Thurs- day. October 1st. ."Ds.nce. flowa's Hall, Brackley Beach. Friday night. "Dance. Mermaid School. Friday. October and. Fraser's orcheatrs. "Dance. Forest Hill Hsll. Wed- nesday, September 30th. "Dance, Caledonia Hall. Friday evening. October 2nd. "Rink Dance, Belle River Legion Hall. Friday. October 2nd. "Dance in Millvlew hail every Friday. j "Coronation Lecture At what- ley River postponed .until October 6th. "Lads snd Lassies in Morell Hall, L Wednesday night at 8.00 PM. spon- iored by Poultry Club. "Dance in Millvala School. Wed- nesday, September 30th. Dancing .'rom it till 1. Canteen service. "Dance. Covehead - Stanhope Community Hall, Wednesday, Sept. loth. ' "Barn Dancs..Eugens liioQuil- :an's. lilmwood, ihursday, Ocobcr lat. Canteen service. "Buying young. pigs. '.Plying market price. Pius MacDonald. Mt. Stewart. "Weekly Dance Winsloe stction V!-fall, Thursday. October lst. Dolron Bros. jorchestn. Canteen service. "Hot , Dinner. Turkey. Plum Pudding and Ice cream. tonight at Aubrey cut4:iiffs's-warehouse. serv- ing at rive. "Come to shur Gain Amateur Cavaicsds Itsgs show. in Your full. Friday. October and. lponoorsd by York Wblnenb Institute. "We do custom grinding and mixing dstlv. union 5, Meoltu shur-Gsin, nod service. Wlaoios. P. I. I. Dial DIM. - "Haul fuel cod nose for your fowl and obiclgn. N1; no cutting prices.-Weighed and paid for in your own yard cr'- at my stores. call. write or drop in and sea A. P. Gallant, south and North Rustico. "Come to Marahllsld Hall. Thimltr. October in. I p. M. to hear Ir. sud Psroars dus- Brtgu: and I of trip to Oct- On and luroposn 'lbur. Ad- millim Iftbsuts including refresh- Dumtsffiisgc woamvs in- ary of about 534,000 a year. but sometimes the job costs him as much as s,l'l0,000 in the course of 12 months. Sir Noel is'a director of one the largest paper corporations the world with large interests Newfoundland. of in in Need Rare Blood To Save Woman DETROIT. (OP)--A 22-year-old mother of two is dying for want. of an unusual type of blood. doc- tors said Tuesday in issuing it plea. for donations from anyone who can provide the correct type. The woman. Mrs. Dolores Baker. is suffering from Stsphlococcl. a blood disease commonly known as staph infection. To survive she must have a. transfusion from a donor with Rh negative. blood type 0 who also has recently recovered from a staph infection. Of some 600 persons who tele- phoned the hospital to offer blood, only two had correct type but neither had suffered the disease. Monkeys. Bcboons Loose In Ontario BOWMANVILLE, Ont.. (CP) - Monkeys and baboons swung through the countryside near here Tuesday and Ontario provincial police with ropes and nets searched the district to round them up. The animals escaped from a. circus trailer near here. Raid. Warning Being Tested McGill Fen-ce , May Supplement Radar System OTTAWA, . (GP) -Canada. is testing a low-cost device to give warning of approaching aircraft and it may be used to supplement the defensive chain of radar sta- tions in Csnadd, Dr. 0. M. Sol- andt. chairman of the defence re- search board. announced Tuesday. Dr. Solandt said in a. statement that a number of stations with the equipment, known as the MoGill Fence, have been installed experi- mentally "to determine their op- erational capabilities." "Trials have been going along all summer and have shown that this equipment can be used to pro- vide a warning system that can be installed at comparatively low expense in terms of money, mater- ials and manpower." U. 8. Interested Dr. golandt said the United States authorities "have been in on this from the beginning and have shown great interest in the results achieved." - ”Both development work and further trials are still proceeding. "It. should be emphasized again that even if this equipment proves to be as effective as would appear likely, it is not a. substitute for a radar chain but would provide an early warning of the approach of aircraft. "The indications are that this is likely to constitute a considerable advance in our capacity for pro- tection against air attack." He -said 'the devise has been under intensive development dur- ing the last 18 months. labor Shows Trend For More Socialism, BY FRASER WIGHTON MARGATE, England, (Reuters) -Rank-and-file members of the 1-Ibor party Tuesday went on rec- ord in favor of more socialism by returning militant leftist Aneurin Bevan and five of his supporters to the executive of the party. But Bevan again was left with victory without- power. His leftist forces remain crushed beneath the weight of the orthodox trade union movement. which gives the party its strength and money. More than 1.000.000 members of local party branches returned the Bevsnltes with increased majorit- ies in the constituency section of the executive elections at the 3170? Duty annual convention here. They returned only one non- Bevsnitc-James Griffiths, a mod- crate. - Against this victory, 5,000,000 trade union votes went to 22 non- Bevanito candidates to fill the re- maining executive seats, The unlons.also msneouvred the return of Herbert Morrison. party second - in - command who was ousted by a Bevanits at last year's convention. Both Sides Claim Win Both sides claimed a victory. Orthodox spokesmen said moder- ates in the union section of the executive have been replaced by outspoken anti-Bevanitea. lletortod Richard Crossman. the Welsh lesderls spokearnim: "The conference wants a peace tragtv between right and left but there has been no swing to the right. Dissatisfaction with the forces con- trolling the Labor machine is ex- iprsased in even stronger support for the Bevanites than lasts year.” Though power is still denied Bevan. his supporters can claim continued on page 13 col. 1 ) OTTAWA. (or) --Army hem. quarters said Tuesday that the and Csnadian Highland i Battalion will lssvo Wainwright. Alts.. Oct. 0 for Irtl Princess Potricisb Canadian Light Infantry. ' This will be the first change in infantry regiments in the Korean theatre since the sun Canadian nsfsotrg nrluda vu- stores.- The battalion will relieve "the 14 in Csnsdisa nine UNI: .:Fi1es .Submission... In Freight Rates Case OTTAWA. Sept. 29-Proposals designed to help unravel Can- ada's complex freight rate struc- lure and provide a practical me. thod of arriving at a basic uni- form scale of tariffs were pre- sented to the Board of Transport Commissioners today by the Can- arliun National Railways. The CNR. filed a 54-page sub- mission with the board in pre- paratlcn for the equalization hear- ing which are scheduled to enter tdheir final stage here next Tues- - ay. i E In its submission the Canadian ,Nationai includes among other .things a new scale of class rates based on a survey of actual traf- fic movements and retention of a blanket grouping in Eastern Can- ada within which such polnts as Montreal. Toronto and Windsor would enjoy the same rates on shipments to and from the west. As it has from the outset of the hearings the CNR emphasizes that.-railway revenues,should not be jeopardized by equalization. it then cites figures based on the board's own wayblli analyses of freight movements on four select- ed days in 1949. to show that the suggested scale of class rates ten- i8NV9ly set forth by the board last December is too low to main- Cmlnued on page l.'f.col. 1 KANSAS cmr. variiagonmd parents, frantic for word of their kidnapped son, six-yetar-old Bobby Greenlease. went through hours of waiting Tuesday with no word from the child or his abductors. 'About all we can do is to "VHL Wrllll our hands and hope." said Robert C. Greenlease. millionaire automobile distributor. father of the missing boy. Bobby was taken from the fashionable Nctre Dame do Sion school Monday morning hym wo. man who claimed to be Bobby's aunt. She told the min in charge Highland Unit Going To Korea On October 6 1050. - since then. the rod. int and srd battalions. in that order. of the PPOLI. the Royal Canadian Regi- ment slid the Royal and Regi- must have served with the brig- ; . The 8rd battalions. the Royal an ltcgiinont and the Royal Regiment will be replaced next spring by the and Canadian Infantry Bsttslion and the and 0 ' The long awaited new Main Ex- hlbition Building will be under construction next March, it was announced yesterday by Mr. H. J. Kennedy, Vice president and man- agcr, of the Provincial Exhibition Association. It will replace the one burned in 1945. The proposed building will be of all-steel construction and will be approximately 225 by 150 feet, It is expected to have a seating cap- acity of 4.000 and will be used for exhibits and a variety of other pur- poses. Work on the project will begin in March and it is expected to be completed by the middle of July in ample time for the annual Old Home Week show. Its building will see the passing of the present Horse Show Ring as the structure will be placed dir- l.iver Ailmenl in Cape Breton ISYDNEY. (CP) - Hepatitis, a liver ailment that has stricken more than 1,000 persons in Digby, N.S., is prevalent on Cape Breton Island. Dr. Arthur Ormiston, cape Breton county medical officer, said Tuesday. since then. New cases being reported. Dr. Ormiston described it as a mild form of yellow jaundice, 0 The Digby outbreak. now wan. Hill. was the most ...i'e reported by provincial health authorities al- though they said several other Nova. Scotia. -centres had been af- fected. Ask Israel To Stop Work On River LONDON. (AP)-Britain joined the United states in sskiiigjsvrael Tuesday to stoplwork for the time being on a project to divert the River Jordan. Maj.-Gen. Vagn Bennike, chief of the UN truce supervision mis- slon in Palestine, originally called for suspension or the inlgation project after Syria, the Arab neighbor, state on the other side. of the Jordan, complained that diversion of the river would harm her irrigation works and violate the Arab-Israeli armistice agree- ment. A foreign office spokesman said the British diplomatic mission in Tel Aviv has informed Israel that this country endorses Bennike's ruling. The United States has done likewise after consultations with Britain and France. were still No Word From Abductors Of Millionaireis Son at. the school that the boy's mo- ther had suffered a heart attack and that it was necessary to take him to the hospital. A cab driver told police the - woman had him take her and the child to is parking lot near the school. There they left the cab and entered a car with a Kansas licence. That is the last word police have a them. - Bernard rannon, chief of po- lice, said his department is tak- ing all routine measures usual in such cases, but "otherwise we are sitting tight." "Until the boy is returned alive we'll do what. the family wants us to do," he said. "We 'don't want to do anything that will jeopardize his safety." The boy's father said he be- lieves the kidnapping was the work of professional criminals. He said this belief gave him hope as he felt professionals would be interested merely in oh- talnlng money and would not be inclined to harm his son. Greenlease, 71. has had the Cadillac agency in Kansas City since 1903. He married Mrs. Greenleue in 1939 after divorcing his first wife. He said the first A w in. Juusitais" 'IDe reliant had been affected man New Main Exhibition Bldg. To BepStarted. Next March ectly back of the main grandstand on the show ring site and will ex- tend to the present Cattle Show Ring. When erected it will be in the nature of an all-purpose build- ing ns it will provide an indoor show ring for animals, space for booths for displaying merchandise many other types of exhibits, by merchants and dealers. It will also be available for numerous community activities and thus add greatly to the present facilities in that respect. There is a possibility that it may also he used as an in- door rink in winter. Thousands of exhibition goers will, recall the old building which formerly housed the exhibits. It stood where the present fox pavil- ion and Women's Institutes show- room are. It was destroyed in a fire which broke out the night of Mcontinued on page 13 col.Wlv- Mayor Reuter Of West Berlin Dies Unexpectedly BERLIN. (AP)-Mayor Ernest Reuter, militant leader of West Berlin's fight against communism, died unexpectedly M his home Tuesday night of A heart attack. He was 64. A Social Democrat, who once dabbled in Communist party at- fairs, Reuter was world famed for his defiance of the Russians who surrounded the war-ravaged Al- lied sectors of Berlin, isolated within the Soviet zone. He rallied the people to resistance against the Russian blockade of 1948-49. , W ',dros.,'if 'i 'D.l;Isidegt of the Vyest Ger- TQPUW I Reuter 'worked closely with the conservative Bonn government in trying to re- unite Germany. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer the German cause." The death was announced over tVest Ger- man radio stations, which then played solemn music. The heavy-jowled mayor, who wore a black beret, visited the United States last March and conferred with President Eisen- hower in Washington. Dr. Walter Schreibcr, as dep- uty mayor, assumes Rcutcr's job for the present. Reuter became a Socialist in his student days. He helped or- ganize a pacifist society at the beginning of the First World War but was drafted into the'Kaiser's army. Sent to the eastern front. he suffered a leg wound that left him with a lifetime limp. The Rlfisslans captured and sent him to the coal mines. As a Socialist, he welcomed the Bolshevik revolution in 1917 and helped organize a supporting cell among his fellow prisoners. This work caught the eye of Lenin and Reuters was appointed I commissar of the Volga Ger- man republic. Returning to Berlin at the l"n(l of the First World War, he be- came disillusioned anti resigned from his post as secretary-general of the German party. He return- ed to the fold of the Social Dem- acral. party. llussiansnhave Counter Proposals For Conference (By lllchnrd lilsisrhltei MOSCONV, (AP) --- The Soviet Union came up Tuesday with two countcr proposals to the Western invitation to a four-power foreign ministers conference. at Lugano, Switzerland. Oct. 13. Diplomatic sources here saw scant. prospects of any East-West. agreement on Germany on the basis of the Sov- iet. reply. The Russians. in a 10-page note. hedged their reply on Germany with what appeared to be broad conditions which could prolong the talks into endless fruitless sessions. The Russians proposed: , A Big Five meeting. of the lin- lted States. Britain, -France, the USSR and Red China to discuss a "lessening of tensions in inter- national relations." A Big Fgur parley of the Sov- iet and the three Western pow- ers on the German problem. in- cluding "all proposals introdticerl in the course preparing the con- ference." - The Russians offered no speci- fic date for either meeting, ad- vices from Paris said. Thb United States promptly de- Tl” kld"'PP'"K '3 "'9 7”” l" nounced the Kremlln's offer as K""" C"Y l" "WV" ””" -'9 "evasive and a continuation of years. There were three such dnnmy "cue... m" h". pup crimes then in rapid succeniom, "nu "run, nnjwnt mgmnn said the death "is a great loss for- Another-Vilwoman Suffering from Severe Injuries HALIFAX. (CP)-Three women and a boy died late Tuesday iwhen a train crashed into a car on a level crossing at Timberlea. 10 miles west of here. Dead arc: Miss iZeida 55, Massachusetts; Mrs. Maud .lohnson, 56. Timhcrlea: Mrs. Lorne White, 65, Fort Lauderdale, Fla.: Eric Waiter Johnson. 7, Timberlea, Mrs. Johnson's grand- SOTI. Mrs. Frank Denton, 60. Saint. John, N.B., was taken hospital with severe injuries was expected ' to recover. Private Crossing The Canadi.” National Railways freight rammed into the car, driven by Miss Webb, at a private crossing on the driveway to the Johnson home. Mrs. Hamid Shea, who lives nearby said she heard a. crash. glanced out the window and saw the car being pushed ahead of the locomotive. ' Two bodies were found in bushes some distance from the wrecked car. Miss Webb. Mrs. White and Mrs. Deriton arrived in Timberlea Moxi- day to visit the Johnson family. They were returning home fi'om an afternoon drive when the sc- Webb. of in but cident occurred about 3.30 pm. AST. The train rolled the car 350 yards down the track and into a ditch. Miss Webb's body was picked up i0O yards from the crossing, Mrs. Johnson's 100 yards farther on. Both were dead. The other three were still in the wreck when the train crew reached it, hilt Mrs. White hail died. The Johnson boy died four hours later in hospital. Miss Webb was Mrs. Johnson's cousin. Mrs. White and Mrs. Den- ton were her sisters-in-law. rinse. A in -Nahum: Italy TURIN, (AP)-Heavy rains con- tinued to sweep across north lt- aiy Tuesday and sent. the Po and a number of tributaries racing over their banks. The flooding waters have damaged thousands of acres of farm land, ripped up trees and driven scores of fam- ilies from their homes. o.u.n. Laying on Men In Shop: lvilI)NTR.EAl.. (OP! - Canadian National Railways will begin lay- ing off men in its motive power shops this week. it was announced Tuesday by S. F. Dingle, vice- president of operations. Some 300 men across the coun- try, from shops engaged on loco- motive repair wcrk. will be involv- ed. Mr. Dingle said the action was caused by a "falling off of traffic particularly emphasized by current rt-durttions in the movement of wheat to ocean 'poris." Soviet Russia Hos Copied Helicopter il'ASlllNGTON, (AP). - Soviet Russia has copied the Sikorsky S-55 helicopter and slnrtrcl l.1rge- srnlc production, American Avia- ltioa Daily said today. , C ic trade publication said it tho: information that. the Rus- sian version was voplcll by do- signcr Mikhail Mil and that it. uas usrd in exercises last. winter. MAx1Ms OFA MERE MAN Are you angry that others dis- appoint ycu? Remember you can- not depond upon yourself. 14 PAGES The Guardian. live Cents V Morning Dally Founded lllf. MONTREAL. (GP)-A strike of crewmen on Canada's deep - sea ships Tuesday was described by ship owners as a threat to survival of Canada's merchant marine. The owners statement, issued by the Canadian Shipping Federation as the strike moved quietly through its second day, brought no imme- diate reply from officials of the Seafarers International U n i n n IAFL-TLC-. imrgaining agent in: the striking crewmcn. Union Officials Silent Union officials remained silent on their plans. Neither company or union officials would indicate whether any new effort has both made to re-open negotiations on points in dispute. The SIU launched the Monday to support demands strike for higher pay and shorter workmg, hours. Some ships in Montreal. Port Alfred. Quin. and Sydney, N.S.. were immediately affected. In Vancouver, SIU officials Tues- day declined to say whether deep- sca ships there will be affected. In Halifaxt it was disclosed that the Canadian National Steamships vessel, Canadian Conqueror. had by-passed the port on a trip from Montreal to Bermuda. The vessel had been scheduled to pick up 1." 000 tons of cargo at Halifax Strike bound at Montreal are the Beaverbrae, the Canadian Pacific immigrant liner; the Canadian Leader and the Canadian Con- structor. operated by Canadian Na- tional Stcamships; the Seaboard Trader, operated by the Canul: .ina..?u;a;.'r;a As 4 Lion Eats Friend LEOPOLDVILLE. Belgian Con- go, (AP)-The tale of how a native woman hid under the bed in her hut and listened to I lion eat one of her friends was told Tuesday by the newspaper Courrier ci'Af- rique. Three. women were sleeping in a hut. in the village of Bogoro, two on the bed. one on the floor. when the lion broke in and killed two of the women and ate one said the paper. Canada Sending More Army Suppliesmoverseas 0TTA".'A, (CF)-Canadian mili- tary supplies and equipment are to be sent shortly to the armies of France, Belgium and Italy, army iieadquarbels said Tuesday. The three countries received Can- adian shipments earlier this month under the mutual aid agreement of the North Atlantic Treaty Or- ganization. The new supplies will be shipped from Montreal this week. i'hc French shipment destined for Cherbourg, comprised Spare parts for sixty 25-pounder guns. 120 artillery tractors and 84 cases of parts for M-millimetre Bofors ims, The ltaiians will receive 40.of the Bofors guns and 41 cases ni spares. Belgium has already re- ceived 20-millimetre nnti-nircr.1ft., aims from Canada. Now she is to) get 329 cases of spare WI”-5 -'0'-'- them and 300 ualkie-talkie wire-l less sels. LONDON. iluutersi--The British grlvernmenrs first team returns to full strength Wednesday for the first time in seven months. Prime Minister Churchill will fly home from a. vacation on the French riviers, Another plane will bring Anthony men. foreign sec- retary and deputy premier, home from Greece. "Eden, absent since March with kidney trouble, will need time to pick up the threads of his job. De- velopments in Korea, the Middle East and in lzsrt-west relations present problems he didn't suspect last winter. Churchill. however, has kept his finger .-in the poiiticli pulse ever since illness. believed to be mental fatigue through overwork. struck him June Zlishortiy before the proposed Bermuda Big Tlirel talks. He has continued to run the country by telephone and dispatch from outside London. He now is fully recovered nn.l ready for action. still determined to fight for I. top-level conference Both Churchill, Eden Returns To Job Today to end East-Went tension, though: the latest. Russian note is not. t.ooj promising. His political friends sav' they are sure he will press for talks between himself, President Eisenhower Premier Joseph Lan- iel of France and Premier Georgi Malcnkov of Russia. Both he and Eden will attend a. rnhinei. meeting Friday. Their presence will end complaints from the Labor party opposition that Britain has no real leadership. When they are in action again. Churchill and Eden will have their hands full. on the home front, they have few problems. The government's prestige is high. so high that. the Lnhor party expects Churchill to call a sudden general election any day in .-. bid to increase his meagre Parliamentary majority. But. his colleagues believe chur- chill wants to makd progress to- wards his dearest smbition, end- ing international tension and be- coming a "great peace leader” as well as it "great. war leader”. he- Ship Owners Charge Strike Is Threat To Merchant Marine If- Line. All are being guarded H members of the harbor police. May End Mcrchzmt Marina in its statement, Canadian Ship- plril; Federation said the strike imy pi'nvP. the curl of Canariak-s merchant marine. The Canadian flag fleet had dwindled from 300 in 33 vessels since the end of tho war. The federation said the S111 had liuipezi the mvntirs to combat the C')lllfTi'.l - dozmnrlted Canadian Sramchks Union ivhicli called is strike on Canada's deep-sea fleet five years ago. The statement added: "Now at a time when we are again fighting far our survival it is shocking to us to find the sama union that worked with us to save an industry from extinction shou'.d be the one to drive the last nail into its coffin." Wool Manufacturers Losing Money TORONTO, (CPI - The Cana- dian Woollen and Knit. Goods Manufacturers Association was told. Tuesday that many of its members have lost money for the last three years. A. L. Code said in his presiden- tial report to the association's mo annual meeting that the main rea- son for the "depressed state ol the wool fabric industry was the sharp decline in recent years in the share of the Canadian domestic market held by the Canadian in- dustry." Reasons for the decline were low, Canadian tariffs, low foreign laboe costs and Canadian customs regu- lations that were "out of date and not capable of coping with Present- dny conditions." ' No Viotisu - BEi.iF.W.'5 A Man. . win 4e.i.i.s HER Euskvgai N (.1 TORONTO. (CPI-Minimum and maximum tcmpc:'atui'cs: Min. Max. Dawson . 40 Victoria .. 55 Edmonton . 50 Calgary 52 Regina . . til Winnipeg . . 65 'l"oror.to . .. . 62 Ottaim .. . 59 Montreal . . . . . . 55 Quebec . .. .. 40 - Saint John 4:! -- Mohcton . 40 - Halifax 47 59 Chariottetoivn . .. . . 4-3 53 Syrinry . till .32 Yai'innut'vi . .. 45 E6 . Si. John's. Nfid. 43 47 HALIFAX, (CF; -The Weather Office here says a iigh pressurl ai'0:'l over Quebec is moving south- castward and will muse sunny watiier in all regions Wednesday, followed by increasing cloudiness in the western regions late in the day. Prince Edward Island: Frost during the night. W 'nesday sunny and continuing cool: light wfndtt. Low-high at Charlottetown 38 anu 57. . Eastern N.B. counties. lower st John river valley, Bay of Chsleur: Frost during the night: Wednesday sunny, becoming cloudy in even- ings; mntinuing cool; light winds. increasing to south is in after- noon. Low-high st. Moncton 32 and 54. Fredericton 32 and on. Saint. John 36 and 55. Campbell- ton 32 and 52. Upper St. John river valley: Freezing temperatures during the night; Wednesday sunny, becom- inz cloudy in afternoon: continu- ing cool light. winds, increasing '0! south in afternoon. Low-high Ii: Edmundaton 28 and 57. High tide today at Charloii-BIOWIY at 2.50 A. M. and 5.01 P. M. High use today at the North Share at 1.21 A. M. and 1.00 P. M. Summerside title eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. fore calling an election. sun rises todnyot 0.0! A. M: and sets It 3.57 P. M. -. .