1g want to be wretched. look not?‘ and fearful, look sround- If you "s? go so peaceful and happy. loo II. , . ‘ MAXIMS OI‘ A MERE MAN e-nii-u u you wont to be distract- Gaardlllbluisdndllfl. tewadusrdlzuhatlsuh. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, MAY 21, 194s ———- MAXIMS j OF A MERE MAN Look anon each day as Isa whole life, not merely s section: and hi...“ "mdis-fi‘ its”; rush one-to another. ‘g2 12 PAGES Subscription Delivered 85.00. llsfl. 84.00; other Provinces I ILIJ. sue. SKILIIEFD-WHEN PLANE CRASHES N.Y. BUILDING .5¥A'I§ie Canadian Press) ih-Hllilfilthe éuem nshina banks oi! lift. Scotis bv 39ml!“ "i4 En‘ Lrucso trawlers was the chief o nversation slons the B ex front todatvmsnd two schooner i g 115111113 geaino! Lurien- 83o Halifax fresh-fiahinl cipts. Clarence Knicltle of th! ‘Thcrtisa E. COMO!‘ Ind GOOXQQ liiinmelman 0d’ the Lilla B. B0“ - flirt‘ said that because d 105565 0d by at least flve schooners q the last month and because r of collisions. most of the Scotia deep-sea fleet. num- c about l0 vessels. 118d b!!!" \d to move to Newfoundland?‘ jrdnntinued on para 5. Col. 8 "Movies at Bradalbsne tonight. "Show - Emerald Thursday. "Moving Pictures-Hunter River "Moving Pictures -— New Glas- gou, Wednesday. 5-2l-2i. "skiow — Canoe Cove Friday. 5-21-21 ' ‘Da nu Grand-view Hall "Two one-act plays. "Palace ls ‘ v "Notice - {Beg-tithing May 22nd this store will close ovary edncs- dav ea noon until further n R611. "To arrive. another ca! choice rc-cieulied Alberta oats. (iuirrii: and Boyle. l-lkbi "Attention Farmers! Mr. S. G. Pr-pnhi will speak _at Mt. Stewart inifill) diseases Tlhursday. Mail 5-21-1 ' show — Mt. Stewart Tuesday, so P. u. Enter Arsene Tu in. Frnsrr everv Thursday. WfitO ms <11 iilicno N. A. Cutcliife. finder- D. 1.. McDowell "Cavendish Y. P. U. will iloninguo .after _ old time. Music by Connie Dolron and his Western lthryttm galls.” Adina u: albeit Giariottctown today. Also cedar Wills- R. A. McPhsll. New Bevan. b-m-Ii "The liclxld School -ofc citations. not. " ~ Y- ti»... “Dance Mount ltswlft Hell $533352 ifibfiaoiifllcocifii Ind old-teifltt. with main Pltsant “‘ “£5 gain)’. May Foreigners Chase Saw ‘Escorts Die ILS. Fishermen Cit tiucro Banks 20—The invas- fraternizing Germans. 5-21-21. rm Missionary Known Otice 5 - 16-71 Compulsory Military M. so» m- Training Demanded -21-1l- tion. ens 3L P t . P I "w. further than a "strong recommen- "My EEC,“ ialonaluayetl; PQO...“ datiofi" and substitutinl for it me llnli, Wednesday, Msy 22114, which "demanded." 5.21.21, The "basis" clause c" addrd. —-—- tomb dl t h htdi "Our Stores will close all day a conlsnctigil teiislv tlilss oivis 555W: iioy 24th and beginning Wed-nss- tgtgnhlpf’ ““~" ‘mm’ m‘ ‘mm “Fina: mm“ That resolution was one of 28 will l . R. L. D k1 . Us Gmw’ 5am which reached tho floor of the gsnisation from "fading away." ls Variety bets. Rose I. Korb. above, War De- partment civilian euiplcye from Gary. Ind.. was in an Anmv Jeep in Nuernberg, Germany. when bul. lets suddenly crashed into it. kil- . linfizu two of th: tlkvilrtzls: Iglmbericag so ers presen. o an two British army women escaped _ from ths attack. believed to have been made by a German sniper who mistook the women for _ M‘? TORONTO. May 30—(CP)—Rcv. 14'». dissolves W- I- 6-91-11 A. Rlllléll Graham. United church _ ,_ , . of Canada missionary in India for _' ‘DR???- lexvggsgérwweglrlce; g9 yxlalgskfidied today at his home. 545w‘ His widow. the former Frances gompton ‘of Moreii. P. I., befall-e.- ,, _, er marrs e was a m ssionnry n fieMu-i - and” A Gm“- lgfi Indie for t e Women's Missionary, b YP" " mmwm Society of the United Church. Mr. nnd- "d Thurwly- Graham was designated as miss- 54741 ionary to India at McVicar Mu- morlsl Church. Montreal, in i814. QUEBEC. May 20 - fCPl-The Canadian Lesion demanded com- pulsory peacetime military truin- lrig for defence purposes today in s brief but barbed debate m the ii-iiims Charles Kowin ant; lla floor of its llth biennial convsii- Bitterness born on the bui ‘e- " .' " B Pl .1. . ma; $11221‘. Catrina’, 555:.‘ giggle of Europe made Itself heard 1t in throwing out s 01m- m" FrmamMay 24m‘ 5214"‘ mltte resolution which went no convention from the deliberation: .. of a resolutions committee who. C°“‘°“““ m” 1°’ 9"“ 5‘ started work last week on iooo. In many ways, it and its implira- tlons obscured any othcr develop- 5_1]_15 3 hold megit on this that of four tiloys of l g, outspo en conventcn in “flung which veterans of two maim- wars our-act plays in Harri n us}: are st grips with problems of the Tlltiiifly. MB-Y 31st. 9.00 .831‘. m Vigil-TIME PQAW- h l } n 540- cke into te spac ous -o ——- room of ths Chateau Frcnlcnac. "mince Wednesday. Yen's Hall they haard president Aicx Wiihcr. 511W Maw" Ind 0.532.. of Calgary. Alta. call for an attack on housina and employ‘ meat problems and heard their new grand patron, the Govt-Poi‘ General. Viscount Alexander. call for co .,. onion between you“! and old veterans. to prevent Can- ldl’! premier eat-servicemen‘: ar- Tbe compulsory training resolu- ten was no. n on the report of its comml so. But none of the others rlvslled the impetus it save d1- FOIIIIIlBI‘ 0f City Of North I3ay_ ies Winnipeg Ilian Confesses To iIatchct-Slaying WIIZNNIIPEIG, May 20 — (U!) - Poliee guamda were on druty tonight in the hospital wand of Abraham Goodman. oo-yesr-oid baker. who has cost-famed to the hatchet-slay- ing of Mrs. Harry Herman, 60-year- oon mood." said Police Chief 5111mm “He will be charged ‘Ihemwhitd-Iiai-red Mrs. Hemian was clashed wglléida hstdiet around man was found on the street ne-sr the woman's home. suffering from effects of ieun. Hie condition was reported avorsblm and he is ex- pected to recover. In s, grey-stub slow an Flora Avenue, Mm. ennui was fciund by her landlady. who had heard the woo-tan screaming. Her head had been out and slashed. and her hands amasi by blows. one finger being cut o! - Goodman told gglice his motive for the attack . Herman's re- fusal to marry him. He had told friends the woman had refused to marry him and that he had been caused "a lot of trouble." Goodman. who worloed on the psi-lit shift at a north end bakery. c led m}, home of Mrs. Her- man ear y s . "He called ysnortly before '7 o'clock," said Mn! J. Orystal. the landlady. “I heard Mrs. Herman ‘say ‘close one door.‘ Shortly after I heard screams" Police reports said that he re- turned to the bakery- whom donned a Je/wlsh prayer scarf and prayed for sctno time. A short b11118 later he was found on the street. wriuilns in min NCAWS Bliicis ‘ LONDON. Ml)’ 30-40? Cabin- Prime Minister Attlse in the House of Commons today promis- ed that Britain will’ “endeavour to do the best we can for fascism" such as the Polish troops who fought under British command durin the war and now are home- less. e said he could not._ how- ever, promise ti. .n admission to the United Kingdom. QUEBEC. May 20-40?) V- The Canadian Legion War Services ro- ported to the biennial Legion con- vention today that it had dorm o 838300.450 wartime businwss in altering to the wants of Canudmn servicemen at home and abroid. Its staff leached a peak of 1.848 last year. vamouvma. May iii-id?»- Reieasc of lumber to veterans for completion of homes now lllllifll‘ construction was authorized wdsy by striking wood workers as the walkout entered its sixth day with no indication of any hopes for settlement. . WASHINGTON. May iii-LAP)- State Secretary Byrnes tonight declared the foreign ministers meeting at Paris made “disappoint- ingly small" progress on European peace settlements. but the advance was "infinitely greater" than he had once expected. LONDON. May M-(CP Cable)- The Government bill nationalizlng Britain's coal industry passed third and final reading In the House of Commons today by a vote of 324 to 14d and now goes to the House of Lords. TO HONOR GOV-GENERAL QUEBEC. May 30-(OP-An hon- orary doctorate in social sclusess will be awarded V‘ ‘ Alexander Governor-General of Canada. by Laval University here next Hep- tembc-r. it was learned todl. Viscount Alexander. villticig Quebec for the first time since his arrival in Canada. is scheduled to return in September to receive hll honorary degree. d oitih. Harbor 1' w so II firms] calamity I]. _ w" given dents l! should in coidsmic break cut in ti? “t? foil? tutti ‘it’! ' cf the Osdsdisn 30'9"‘! milk the oocnmflii Mm‘ its rsvlslsd he had Fwfivfi m“ tale throughout W... noon- n” “h; Qnd if the for nur- ‘ ‘u’, th Nd e m“ cnt of 0n lnlgustflsln 111mb‘; Q ‘he moon! short- Iilsortage OE Nurses Described Serious ( Tbs Canadian Pmfli M-rih. o: *~o~...:::.::=..s 2311i ill l ' . _____...____€_____..__ Dc. u...i. sacs-lush. suoflnhnd- mt of ‘Toronto I-loeptal for sub- wootoii. llid nurses in roceivgh s little in; tbsnliw wi room sn - ‘fitfirrzsont the moment o! Veterans Affslse offers 0180 s smith. which o wowzlmtolr and conditions. "E ‘ti’... Omnsbic. swerlnw- dent of Queen Alexandra Benito: tum st landon. said the Ilwt s stage at open ms XI t0 l standstill Ind if I i‘ of tbs 2*" .133. tern‘ smut... s... lntsnslfy Search For Iliscass-Froc Potato ease resistant potato have been intensified at the Seedlings under will be distributed to experi- Csnsda for further tests. Alberta Bill llot 0f Interest iIcr-e EDMONTON, May zw-Attorney- General Lucien Maynard said dalv he had received answers from several provincial attorneys-gener- |.l on the question of their repre- a court reference of Rights. but declined to reveal the the other provincial Last week the Attorney-General queried other Provinces on w-heth- er or not ohcy would wish to Join the Alberta Government in pre- senting court arguments on behalf m of the bill ivhicli will not be de- clared law unless upheld by th The bill would set up an Alberta capital assets account. a monetiz- ed valuation of all the Provinces resources. and a consolidated credit adjustment fund. The fund would ob ted as toflprovidc for tbrdiflsrence in purchasing power and in the prices of goods avail- sible so as to balance these fizurcs. fund would be transferred to the general revenue fund of the Pro- vince ln bh-e form 0d credit to be paid out for pensions and medical and health benefits. formed The Guardian last night he had received a letter from Ai- bertirs Attorney-General asking him if the Prince Edward Island Government cared to support A1- berta in its advocacy of a Bill of Rights. The Premier said he could the Alberta Attorney- Genersl a favourable reply since the Qllddtibrls involved were of no concern to Prince Edward Island). Find Baby’s Body In Box Mailed Overseas MONTREAL. May The body of a baby girl was found Saturday in the customs hero In a box addressed to a Can- adian soldier overseas. police re- Tha box was mailed In Toronto and the sender's name and Address were given as “Mrs. Clark, Jarvis Police said investigation disvlcs- ed there was no such address in Dr. Jean Marie Rousxel. medica- iegal expert. said the borrn aliva but that it was impos- whether she wou d have continued to live, Nor Nihld he determine the cause of death. Custom officials found composed body in paper box on which there were 4.2 e u. George Alialn of the homi- clde squad said he was getting in touch with the Toronto police for a full investigation. Gandhi llrgss India celled upon Con- gress and Mos ey League loaders to for prohibition in India. 0d cocktail Dlrtles lftirwssn manners and customs." and added: “It would be s lad day for In- dil. sndths world if the price w‘: to f ind mo“. Enter-and UITAWA. Ont.. May fiF-iBpec- ial)--On his return to Ottawa this weekend from a business trip to Charlottetown and Halifax. W. Chester B. McLure, Progressive- Conservutive member for Queen's today laid some of Prince Edward Island's wssing problems before senior of icials of Government de- psrtments. Mr. McLure is making reprin- . in- ister MscKenzle. Labor Minister Mitchell. and Reconstruction Min- ister Howe in behalf of the un- employed veterans in Prince Ed- ward lsland. He urges that em- or these men their native Province and if possible in forms c-f employment antatlons to Veterans Affairs pioyment be found which will offer permanency. In his argument before Cabinet ministers and deputy ministers. Ml‘. McLure is stressing the need of employment of Prince Edward Islanders in their native Province on an equitable and economic bas- il. He mentions In particular the project of a drydock in Charlotte- town. a project introduced origin- ally in 1913 but one which nosed owing to the incidence of the First Great War. the depression and the war ended a yttii- ago, Ixport Fae Abollshed Exporters in every section of Canada express satisfaction rhat the $2.00 fee which was charged by the Department of Trade and Commerce with the issuance of export permits has been abolished. The fee which was demanded cn every shipment exceeding $100 in value had been held be exporters to be a restraint of trade and was particularly cumbersome when on exporter was shipping a nun-bar of comparatively small lots of goods at different times. Prince Edward Island exporters bgneflt front the abolition of the export permit fer-s. which applied to shrpmmts of such commodities as lobsters and seed potatoes io points in the United States. Fees charged for ex ort permits have been in force s nce April 24. 1941. and were imposed for the DUTpOS-f‘ of meeting expenses of the trade and commcrce department in ad- ministering the export permit order. Radio Broadcasting Possibility of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation taking over and operating privately-own- ed radio stations at widcly-spaccd portions of Canada was before the Commons today when National Revenue Minister McCanri admit- ted that the CBC had purchased new radio transmitters. It is understood that the cini- mission proposes to take nvcr sin- tion CFRB in Toronto and nnothtr privately-owned station In Calgary. Not only can such action be taken arbitrarily under the Emergency Transitional Power Act hut under two clauses of the Act of 1936 yvhereby the Canadian Broadcast- ina Corporation came into beinw As yet there has been no men- tion or suggestion that CBC has its eye 0n private radio stations in the Maritime Provinces. although this might come as a lnfzlcnl sequence to commandcerinr: radio stations in Ontario and Alberta. On Parliament Hi-il ii is freely ad- mitted that private radio enter- prise in the Dominion is in a nro- rarious condition and liable to seizure by the CBC at a year's no- tice. Stalin Moves To Boost Russian CraILCrcp MOSCOW. May 20 —iAPi — Prime Minister Sralln, Ln an effort to improve the food crop situation, today sairoved a decree by the mirigsterst ordering cgim; isory reeow g o sip ng w es p“ u a a n. wuncil osi land all over the where winter crop: bod perished. A Tiles dispute of the South We. m near Moldavia. TWO BARNB BUBNID MEMRAMOOOK. N. 3.. May 20 IOPw-‘rvro bams and their con- tents were destroyed by lire here llte this afternoon on the form of LeBlsnc. The loss in- cluded livestock and farm imple rrients. {oluntee liters like oeqded in preventing he flames from ding to the LeBlenc residence and other farm btdld- ings. Fsulty wiring was believed to have caused the fire. CANADA essay " EASIER "IO Li" t" on r. miohitz; meanwhile said much-needed rain had fallen in Vinnitse, sugar beet- win refitgn a . Lays Island Problems John Ferguson Before Govt. Officials Arrived At Site With Axe (By The Canadian Press. NORTH BAY. OnL. May 20-.A man who came lo this area in 1881 with only an axe and e grub stake,_ built the first log cabin on the site of what was to become the city of North Bay, roso to be the mayor of the city he had founded and became a legendary figure in the turbulent early life of Northern Ontario, John Ferg- uson. died today at his home. The city immediately went into ofliclal mourning for Mr. Ferg- uson. who served as mayor for four consecutive years and was a member of the city council for l8 years. As a 31-year-old mail carrier who had made a two-day trip fmm Mattawa, Ont, over a, mi]- Wfl-Y line through the bush to de- liver ‘letters to workmen who were lilLl-ldliilfl the Canadian Pacific Railway: he saw that the mileage from Pembroke, together with the possibilities of the site on the shore of Lake Nipisixig indicated that a railway division point could be established at North Bey. He returned to Mattawa long enough to hire a man to drive his team of horses on construction work. then come buck to the little clearing in the bush. The first passenger train reach- ed North Bay on Dec. 2'7. 1882. arid it brought Mr. Ferguson's mother. Mrs. William Ferguson. and brothers and sisters. Later. his father, who I8 years before had settled with his family‘ at Bromley in Renifrew ‘County. loincd them. 011cc the community was desig- nated as the CPR. division point. development went forward rapid- l.\'- mm’ train from the east brought 1hrorigs"of new citizens. Streets were laid out and the set- tlement took on a definite pat- tern. Later. nearby Callandcr was named for his Scottish birthplace. As one of the community's ris- ing men of affairs. Mr. Piergtison married Jessie Fraser McFarland. daughter of another pioneer. The couple‘ sci up hoiuekcopmg ln North Bar's first frame house. FTOII’! 1919 to 102G. M!'_ Ferguson was mayor of North Bay, tho only man ever to hold the office that long. He served as president of ihc Board of Trade and lteacicd the committee of the first Old HOme Week in 1926. Iranians Discount Stories" 0f Fighting LONDON. May zo_i>ispatchcs quoting high Iranian Govemment officials in Tehran todav discount- ed reports of fighting iii separatist Ammilllan Province. despite broad- cast announcements from Tubriz. Azerbaijan capital. that Govern- ment fomes had launched attacks near the Kurdistan border. Prices, 0f Ilcw Cars In ILS, Advancing WASHINGTON. May 20—’APi- Prices of new automobiles in the United States. already boosted ‘io- cause of higher wages. are gcini: up again-this iimc an averagr» nl four to flvr- pet" cont to offset cost- lier steel and parts. One~of the principal factors bo- hind the new increase is the nvcr- agr- hoolt of $6 a ton for steel which the Government allowed last February Whrq thr- indiistrv increased wages 18% cents hourly to settle the stool strike. ILII. Council llcad Alexandre Pa rodi. will be president of that body at the June session. under the month- lv rotation uvsterm. Iranian Casc ‘ Still 0n Agenda utien the Council meets Wednes- day w take up the question again. The delegates still were without definite tniomiation as to whether Soviet troops had left Iran. They were agreed they would not strike the case from the agenda until infoimation was Meanwhile. Soviet delegate An- dred A. Gram-like indicated ttiiitlie boycott Wednesday's available. tCPb-Jus- tire Mi-nister St. Laurent said .0- day- in the Commons that his De- partment has been hill for the redistribution of rep- working in a have the measure considering tho matici", say ihoro is no pros- pect there will hr an available for canning piir- sI-r it was dist-loser! in a writ- || question by T. B increase in Justin-c Minister‘ Si. Laurent said that no action has been tnkc-ii in move Mills-GO", Kurt MPyPI‘. Nazi wa" criminal. from Dorrhcsiri‘. N 13.. Penitentiary where he is scrv- ing a life term. He was replying to n qtivsiiun from Gordon IKTICX‘ 1L- pvtliirll- iinrivs wrist the Government $2 57 a day t-nrnparrd to the per diciii cost of $1.90 20 years ago. according to a l'(‘llll'l'l tabled for Howard Wink- rciurn from ilv‘ Justice Department iiml 78.4 por cent of the prisoners in 1946 worn ro- __ 55 pcnicrs. This compared with .1 rer- . rcnlngo of 7O in 1935. hdnlonton No stops have been taken by tho Canadian Government tho recall of Vltali socrctary rind consul of the R Embassy at Ottawa. it was drs ed in wriitrn reply to a qucs icn (PC-Prince Mmmim‘ Edward bcnnoxi, ' ~ (The nsmo nf Pavlov. was man- Cuaflofuiim“ - tionrd iii tho rcccnl espionage ln- Swill?‘ r Army Ship Smashes Into 58th Floor fog and a visibility of puny building iii Wall An-my Corps. Identified were: - Lleut. Mar E. Bond MRI. Mu all Campbell Capt. Thomas Hall Lleut. lLW. Stephenson Lieut. Angelo Roast available. Police said the name of he was aboard. Second Accident who _lt was the second airplane so- unlaces mnbassado, Hem-i Bon- cident anion me towering bulld- net as France's permanent Xi gate on the rm Security Council. avgrsk-egfielrlgvkflipe? p; 1J1 "Ivy": dole. ings of uttan. when n 13-25 bomber Empre State Build c The plane. identified as s two- " engined 6-45. an all-metal lCWw wing moagiilplane iiequfintly used ad __ < a. staff ‘lp to: 11$ army par- . security Council todfiv indicated in the brick wall 0 the there was only a remote chance ma‘ the-v “mild be able w drop The control tower at Newaril airport reported it was last in Lon- tact with tho plane's pilot at 8:08 pm. after previously giving him T681‘. C859 clearance to land. when the plane circled the in contact with the plane 56k learned it was five miles south- west of the field. That was the lest contact. and 27 . hr- hopod it WOUid be possible to SIN‘ ‘s _ _ _ placed on the BUT P, Mflfiflflbf " ordci paper within the next two oi W.‘ (“ts m Boom‘? I mow YORK, your do _ um Am army airplane. speeding throug 400 crashed into the 50th floor 0f the 77-610193’ Bank of Manhattan Com- SWQM. t0 big/ht.‘ kiiliKlZ “he plane's five 0c. S cugakaln . e known dead were four army men and a mcmbei 0f the Women‘: Addresses were not immediately C J M Oollison had been lnscrilagc on the fuselage of the plane. lead- ing to their erroneous report that tmamed the 79th floor o! the lofl-atorey in . Ami,’ officials informed police tihe plane had left the army sin base at BmJyma, Tie-ma, bound foe Newark. N. ., airport and had five pensons aboard. . I The building was struck from the‘ The tower operator said firs! clearance was given at 7:56 After walling about l0 minutes. the operator said, the tower g The bodies were found piled to- gether in the forward part of the piano and police and firemen ex- I perircit-ed difficulty in extricuting illPfli. The bodies were not huriieri. Continued on page 5. Col. 8 Vancouver Regina . Winnipeg 1.0mm“ Toroiiio M p4unl\fl Ottawa n m Montreal _ Quebec Saint John YHlTIlOlllll ‘Milk Subsidy Cost Gov? 20 Millions ments on w. coffee and or in a move to offset a coniiriuiig risc in the cost of living at UITAIWA. M372? - (or. -’I"he Government subsidy of two cents a (hurt on fluid milk, being dis- con ruled May 3i. has omt ap- iély 820000.000 a year since inc loin in i942. Chairman Donald on cf the Prices Board leld today in a statement reviewing the {iistory and rffect of the pay- BlQfl 1h the last ear, with increased mt oonsump n. the cost of the subsidy reached szmcionoo. said Ill‘. wit, udgigg that the‘ fl use repress-n su l ' pnymen acne and did not lnclu c oprrating costs of more than saooooo vesriy. ‘Ibttl Subsidies of all kinds auth- celled and aid through the Board in the fisca you‘ 1943-44 came to 801,000,000, with the fl ure climb- ing‘?! $101,000,000 in 1 44-45. The 1 total was 890000.000 while the present fiscal year the figure is expected to decline l0 somewhere .000 and 95.000000. ..'bc‘.lL°~u..r-:..iitr"::: The result of “what was admit- csont- ot more than 13.500000 pounds of butter. Mr. Gmdon reminded:- "Canndian consumers F-pflld on milk. In the . where conditions are and ioniaht at 4.11. the snort comparable, the average Sun 5"“ ‘hi8 evening at. 828 8114i price of milk s1 January of this rises tomorrow mornlrfi at 5.25. year nii basis. oi some size quart Last quarter moon e was 19.5 eenw against svefalv 0! 12b cents lmdarisds. both on Canadian funoa.‘ tho utes later then C“ (Bv The Canadian Pres!) TORONTO. Mair 211 — Miillml"! siwwed and maximum trmiperaturcsl Min. MB! 225£3$i8$8é3§3$$ HALIFAX. MM’ N — Welillfl nynopeis issued bit] l-hf.‘ DOminiNl Public Weather Oflloe at Halifax. At i0 pm. A.D.T. Monday: skies cleared Monday and temper- itures soared into the seventies the Mnritimes enjoyed as warm weattlici" as niiywhm": on the con- __..__ tinent except in the extreme o‘; southern United States. As bill ‘Hg Wtbtlll!‘ ares exteridinll over On- that iario and the eastern United Stat- c5 moves eastward increasing cloudiness will Wfltad int/O i-hl W111i’ B" t-‘Xberilfleill i185 cwiplctcly Maritimes Tuesday to be followed "WW9 bv rain in autem ptgrtionaam M recosts, valid unil mi dflultd ‘milk COfiSghdlleféi-ifll hi‘ Clan- “Fgdflv; a a a cs.- year ma nn a - me ‘ ; high and the first three months of Prince Edward wand this year has thtwwn n further iii- crcasc of eight pa: cont. g okctbt for some fog towards dawn. becoming overcast with showers by 000000 evening. Liitlc change in taper- ‘ atui-c. L‘ ht winds will ease mums o‘ mu“ or me equivalent tn southerigt 15 mph. Tuesday af- ternoon. High "hicsday at Char- lottetovm and Moncton 6'1. Oemp< have ro- belllon illph tide this afternoon at 2.11 P y 23, 12.01 M. figures’ Summersida tide e hteer- mine 1 WWI.