MAXI MS OIL MERE MAN muse-um. Qeln uonmpcnled by ill-report "Qt" cut-sun. Founded usv. pbulottetowl Guardian. DOMINION - PROVINCIAL RELATION S IIIT N EILSNAG flwo 0min. Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the cnaltnorrsrovvlv, CANADA, TUESDAYiJANUARY 1, 1941 Dew 12 PAGES D. 0. Stewart Leads First Days Fox Pelt Judging At S"side Death At Windsor 0i Rev. llr. Ryan O Yesterday morning at the High School auditorium in Summersids, Douglas Bell judge of the P151. silver fox pelt shUW began the long and difficult task of Judging llhe largest entry of pelts in the hoe- tory of the show. Good weather end clear sunlight favoured the open- ing and the judging was begun up, del- a. special curtained-orf section of the auditorium facing the north- east direction to facilitate the Judge in his work. Even to one not familiar with the immerse amount of work coin- nected with a show of this nature, it was apparent that the pelt show‘ committee. consisting of R3. Hum- phrey. Ernest Mill. Ed/ward Bur- lelgh and L.W. Hancock. had done its work well. The task of preparing the 1150 pelts entered in the show in the proper order has kept the committee busy for the past several days. Mllch credit is 8180 due l0 the classification committee. Theirs was the task of tussltyint the large mlmber of pelts in their re- spective divisions. As each class was completed the first and second prize winners in that section were hung on display On a specially constructed stand and a cfimplete record kept by the secretary of the PEI. Fox Breed- ers and Exhibitors Association Mr. Walter R. Shaw, capably BSBlSIBd b)’ The Late Rev. Dr. Ryan WINDSOR, NS. Juli. 6 -(CP)— Rcvnwofford Meredith Ryan, DD, widely known in the Maritime Provinces where he served in sever- n‘. United Church pastorates, died at his home llcre today. lie was 75. .\ graduate of Mount Allison Uni- lvrsity. Dr. Ryan sewed at various time: at Halifax, Truro, N.S., Sack- Viilr‘. N. ‘B. Saint John, N. B, ttlsrlottetown and Winriflr. He n- lirtlfl in 1934. i Dr. Ryan succumbed to a severe heart attack followed by pneumon- ia from which he was unable in his weakened condition to rally. Tlhere were with him at his bedside his wit‘, the former bliss; Martha Wright of Charlottetown, his daughter Marion also of Charlotte- town, and his son I-‘red of St. John. (Continued .2; Pat; s Col. l) Prospects For More Sugar Loek Good ()'I'I‘AWA. Jan. 8 - (C?) -- In- itlrlllcll 50111098 Sflld i0dfly lll? prospects for a lliflhvf S0831‘ 1'8" non for Canadians lll ‘.947 "looked tout" but added that lt would de- pclld largely on the pPOZIBS-S 0i crops ind on international alloca- ilOTl. Fire At Chatham Steel Company Plant (lllAlllAM. Ont... Jnll. 6 -— (C?) demolished plant » l<‘.l*c tonight N-l ‘J nf the Cllatco Sicel Products I-llillI"4I wltl-l a loss unofficially r13 innit-ll i0 run into hundred; of t‘ ‘l\ lvrls of dollars. i-‘lalncs worc Lqillz lllmzlg thc debris nt a lnlc ll m fed by hundrds cf gallons of psilllt inside the building. Coming Events _"Hookey last Royalty Rink ic- Yillllii. Bf. Avards vs. Royals, 8.15. Skate after. "Dance PlaTRiW-l‘ Hell. Fri- dlu‘. January 10th. Lunches. "Gleqow Rood ‘venue Win- 1100 It Milton rink tonight. Game Itertl et 0.16. "Poultry - Buying daily live and dressed poultry. Paying top lnerket nrioe Davie ll Fran: Ld. "Dance. Mount ltewert lngicn I811. January 8th. Rollie Mec- Ienlll’! orchestra. ' "Hockey at New Glasgow Rink ‘ilnilht. New Glasgow vs. Hope fiver. out. start! no. Skate ef- GI- -.'-.-- “Dome. Lot Q Hell. ‘hleedey. “owl levmth. "Show at Cnpeud ‘rueedsy and Wedneedsy. January 1th end MI. at I o'clock. 10th. Ale w. y, "Dance. Mlllview Hell. January "mu steed will be closed vau- PM». Thueedly and Friday. Jen- Medium silvers, three-quarter sil- vers, ligh-t silvers extra light silver! and full sliver classes were complet- ed in the afternoon by about four thirty. At that time the light to fade and in the judge's 01111173" further work was not advisable for the day- This nwrninz 11w 11111111611 silvers. light and 611118 llkhl Will he completed. ‘ Mr. Donald O. Stewart. Suntmer- side took six firsts in yesterday s showing of silvers. Botth in thfillllhi slivers and extra lilht 511"" M" Stewart took hlglhest honors for —i' (Continued 0n E8011- cifl- 4) Would Bar All Portal Pay Suits WASHINGTON. Jan. 8 —-(AP) -Senator Alexander Wiley (Rep.- Wis.) introduced legislation in thc United States Senate today to bar all pending portal-tc-pol-tal pay suits. There has been a flood of suits since the Supreme Court recent- ly ruled that workers are entitl- ed to pay for time spent on com- puny properly changing clothes or ctherulse preparing for work. The total asked now exceeds 33.000.000.000. "It has become completely ob- vious ill the last few weeks." W11- ey said in a statement. "that ii has became absolutely urgent that Congress promptly enact 1981511!" tion which will preserve the very foundations of American illdustri’ by relieving it of the many bil- lions of dollars of portal-to-por- inl pay sllits which have recent- ly been filed." rum IIODTITTIDITCNI-ID mnlmncavlulls. N. 13-. Jell- e-(CP) - Fire of unknown ori- gin this afternoon destroyed the two-storey farm homo of LYD" sflgkney, causing loss cstimntcd at $8000. The cellar contained several hundred barrels of seed potatoes. -.___ PRlDlRIOTON. ml. 0-40?)- New Brunswick tonillii ll "' aligning taxation plenl in vlcw of it; gulpenlion of negotiations to conclude an 06'9"" m“ "d" uni authorities. premier John B. Mohair. in announcing the lulpension ted-av. indicated what line his tavern- ment‘: pment plan: will follow. He gave municipalities the le- nine for drafting of legislation in the personal income it! "Q16- while the Province vvll Drefiflflllll legislation to lm-wll COPPON-ilm time. Beth of these taxation fleldt. along with amusement and galo- llne w: m-lvlleew. were MM t» the Dominion in a wartime elf”- inent. which ended Oct. Si. The Premiere ectlon In suspend- ing negotiations resulted, he said. from “gross discrimination" on the pert of the Federal Govern- ment. A recent Dominion often to f"! 1th. out 1cm took J. and for e Drltieb Golumblg wee en "affront" Wlhtfth Depart- _ _ tliiielltstfilvm-Agrlrl-ugltur: Ceiharlotte “Md 'P'°l°551°“‘*1l"t1°“ °I W1“ town cultural workers. llc pointed out N. B. Considers New Plans For Taxation 0i Agricultural Institute Meet Mr. rrsllliTmlus, llomlnlon President ls Guest Speaker. bfenllbcrl of the Agriculttnl In- l Stilllle 0f Canada (RE. Island branch). enjoyed an excellent sup- Pel‘ 1119011113 at the “Charlotte- tovm" out Monday evolving-special occasion being to meet Dr. ‘Prank E1 Fbulds. President of the Assoc- iation and Director of the Called,- ien Ciilrienehip Branch, Depart- ment of State, who was in the City in connection with Canadian Cit- izenship activities held during the earlier pert of the day. Special guests for the eventing were the Hon. WI‘. Allen Stewart. Minister of Agriculture; Mk. Wil- liam Carroll. Toronto, member of the firm of Canada Packers Ltd., and Andrew McRlae. RE. Island representative to rcceive one of the coveted "first" Canadian citizen- 1 ship certificates. ' m. Foulds, speaking or Institute affairs. was happy to report that tile membership now stood at its highest figure at over 1,700. l l-le outlined closes of member- ship in the Association. in account- ing for this Very satisfactory growth. l In explaining the tendency to- that it was not the intention to wield the "blg stick" but. rather to assure to all that persons practic- ing agriculture in a. Professional way wcre qualified for the position ‘they were called upon 1o fill. He ‘reported the Institute had already rewarded twenty $800. scholarships to assist particularly returned men. in continuing-graduate studies that (Continued on Page 5 Col. 2) Family 0f llelrens Would Gllfllbgfjflllill ~o CHICAGO, Jan. 6 —(AP)—The parents and brother of William Helrens 17, who a year ago killed and dismembered - six-year-cld Suzanne Degnan, today asked court permission to change their name to Hill. The change-of-name petition was filed on behalf of George and Mar- garet llcirens. and their son. Jeraltt, 14. It nlncle no mention of youn: ileirens now serving e minimum of 61 years in thc Illinois Security liospital in Menard. ll. S. llrges llairen ,Be Opened To World WASHINGTON. Jan. o - MP1, “The Unites states prodded Rus- silt and China iOday with a de- nlnnd that the Manchurian P0" of Dalren be opened to the World under Chinese civilian administra- lion and free of Soviet military control. The Sttele Department published t)... text of a lloto delivered Ill! Friday to the Soviet and Chinese foreign offices in Moscow at Nan- klllg. w This we; the first formal reoc- tlop in Washkmton to the Soviet order Dec. 20 which summa lly eroded the stay of a United States naval shiD on a diplomatic mis- sim in Dallen. The veesei was 86111- hurrylng to sea lmder whet w!!! American: called an “ii-immin- to New Brunewlck. New k-unswick was one of five Provinces which had reached the point of agreement in prlncIPIO with Dominion taxation proposals- The agreement we: ewaitmg rat- ification by the Provincial Legis- lelure. Other provinces amenable i0 proposals were: Saskatchewan. Manitoba, Prince Edward Island and British Columbia. There wu no comment from Premiere of the two other Merl- tlme Provinces. Premier J1me: of P.E.I.. declined e. lteternent, while Premier Mac-donut! cf Nova Scotla wee siIII on 'e vlelt te the Ba- hemee. ailme- Tea! Premier McNeIr released this text of a manage lent to Prime Minister King Dec. l1 when some of the terms of the Britten Col- umbla agreement were made peb- tot-amount»: Local Members ' Canadian Citizenship Week Inaugurated At ~ -Ceremonies In Ch’t0Wn “ I MR. FRANK FOULDS head of the citizenship branch. Department of State. Ottawa, who took part in thc Citizenship Week Pfvkrlm here yesterday. Judge 0f Supreme Court 0f Canada Dies OTTAWA. Jan. 6 —(CP) - Mr. Justice A. B. Hudson of thc Su- promo Court of Canada, former member of Parliament for Will- nipeg South. died tonight while being‘ taken from llls home here 00' hospital. Ho was 7-1. A native of Pembroke. Ont., he spent much of his life in Muni- toba, being educated at Portage Ln Prairie and the University of Manitoba. Called to thc Manitoba ' Bur in i809, he was made a King's Counsel in 1914 and in the same year was elected to tlle Provin- clnl Legislature. From i915 to i917 he SPFVCEI in the Provincial Cabinet and from i021 to 1925 rrprcscrlfcd Winnipeg South In the Federal House of Commons. l-Ic was appointcd pl-eme Cnurt in i936. to ille Su- Consider Portal To Portal Demands llere TORONTO. Jun. 6 ~ 1GP) -—Ac- tive consideration to claiming re- troactive pOfiEl-io-POTLB] Day from Canadian employers in the some manner as unions are filing slllt for billions of dollars in thc Un- itcd States l5 being given by the United Automotive Workers (C.- I.O.>, John Eldon, ‘ibronto repre- sczrltatlve of the Union. said today. ‘ Royalty. The significance of the Canad. lan Citlzmshlp Act was Pmpllu- LilZEd at‘ two brief but impressive rercmonles in Charlottetown yes- terday afternoon. opening with a programme at the Armouries and continuing with a special sitting o! the Supreme Court of Prince Edward Island at which Canadian citizenship certificates were pre- sented for the first time, and the iormal oath of allegiance admin- zstered by Chief Justice Thane A, Campbell. The ceremonies opened at thc lrmouries. whore a largo lllllll- ler of citizens had gathered. with he singing of “O Canada." A few minutes lutcr the official party nude its appearance. It comprised Premier J. Walter Jones. Brig. R. J. Colwell Halifax; Mr. Frank Foulds. head of the citizenship branch. Drpnrtlnent cf State, Ot- Fox Pelt Prices Hold llp Well At London Sale LONDON. Jan. 6—(CP Cable) Fox prices lleld up well today nt thr- opelling of the lludsorls Bay Conlpullya first. i947 nur- tion solo with one skin run- ning to £12 15s ($51) in curly bidding with others neur fli ($44). Silver foxes were auctioned todny and will continue io- murrow. Next on the block will be 10.000 mink furs from Swe- den, Denmark and the United States es well as Canada. This will be the first special mink auction sale since before bhe war when prices ran from £5 to £7 p, akin. Rush Repairs To lrlwa; and Capt. Andrew MacRae. l The Guard of Honour from tllo 17th. Reece Regiment under com- mand of Lieuf, Ivan Harper, was then inspected by Brig. Colwcll. Premier Jones, chairman of the meeting. said he considered it a very great honour to have fhc privilege of Welcoming Mr. Foulds to Charlottetown on such a spec- ial occasion. It was important. the Premier said. because it mark- ed the culmination of a series of events which had begun in the historic Confederation chambers of the Province Building in Char- lottetown in tllo your i864. As a. (Continued on Page 57611. 5) Wanted llusbantl Shot And Killed NEW YORK. Jail. 5-—(APl—Ne\v York City police reported tonight that Alp-llonsc Rocco, \Vdl'li"d in connection with the New Yccll-‘s cvc "camera" shooting of lli< lvrfo. was shot and killed today n: Soulll Glllloa. N.Y. Police said Rocco was shot nine times by Detectives James Ne)- lnn and Henry Strauss of the New York City force and by State . Tb-oopcrs. South Gilboa ls lll Schcllzlric County in the Catskill Mountains. Roccols 28-year-old former wife. Olga. underwent an operation last work for rnlnoval of her loft leg, which was splintered by a shot- gun blast from a sawed-off gun. Tile weapon was concealed in a Cilristmas-wrapped package and fired by a woman who said she was duped by a man into think- ing sh:- wus taking a picture of Mrs. Rocco. The shooting was on New Year's Eve in a crowded Times Square subway station. Winsloe Farmers Demand Grain Elevator, Storage Facilities At Ch’t0wn Elects Speedy Trial In Conspiracy Case OTTAWA, Jan. 6 -(CP)-~’I0'lc preliminary heartrr; stage In (‘an- adais espionage probe came to a conclusion today with the formal committal of Dr. Henry Harris of Toronto on two charges of con- spiracy arising out. of alleged efiorts to obtain a false Canadian passport for e Russian alter-f. A middle-aged new-born son of Russian parents and an optometrist by profession, Harris elected 5999111! trial before County Court Judge A. G. McDcugell and was released on $5.000 bail shortly after he WM committed for trial by Magistrate Glenn Strike in city court. His trial was set tentatively for Jan. 16- Nccd of a grain elevator and slorage fncIlitIr-s at. Charlottetown was emphasized at a largely at- tended meeting of loading fami- ers of Winsloe and vicinity, held tn the home of Mr. Roland Boa- ton on Friday evening. Mr. Leon- ard MacKinnon. l-lighficld, presid- ed. The meeting was called original- lv as a “grcup“ gathering, pl-c- lilllinary to assembling for the purpose of forming an organiza- tion for effective representation of the farmers of Winsloe and adjoining areas. The attendance. however. was so large end repre- scniailve that discussion develop- ed along other lines. Present on Invitation was Mr. J. A. Gillies. of the Livestock Mar- keting Board. who spoke briefly and who introduced Mr. D. C. Tompkins. packing company rop- rescntutivc. who discussed thc ~ "teaimusxys:.;.;;nio;..f.F Electric Power Line Into Hamilton, 0nt. HAMILTON. Jan. 6 —— tCPl .__ Ellglllefl?“ Qf the Ontario Hydro- Elifiifw Power Commission worked 191118111 to throw a diversionary ltne around a break in the (lo-cycle Dower lines between this industrial my ofhlorc than 165.000 and t.lle Bencratlng station nl Deccw Falls, llc-ul" Si. Catllaritles. 0m. The lili€. explccled to be in 0pm. ailoll iolllorlmv. is expected to fg_ store to the H-alnllton area its “or- m“ POWET service. almost entirely knocked 0111 by a stverc lcc storm and lllgll Wllllls, Meantime dommtic consumers were asked to cut down their use 0i DONE-r by one-third. The Dower crisis stemmed from breaks in tllr- transmission lines ln the Smlthville area, southeast of llcrc and ulnlcst directly south of Grimsby. More than 150 steel mm“ WWWS Plrryirlg [lower lines were Pulled down when heavy ice form- Cd oll the wires late last week and 111811 wlnds toppled the tcuvers for a stre‘cl~. of eight nlilcs. \Vcl'l‘.nlt~ll have collie from all over the Province for the repair Job. The tiiversicnl is being made with wooden poles which are to wfiy dCIPbIP-Ciwuit lilles. To set thc poles up, holes are being blast- ed ill thc frozen earth. Barflnil further h0t1\‘_\' icing. there Should be no nlore interruptions in power service in tllls district this winttr once the pelt-s are install. ed. s. hydro spokesman said. Need 1o.ooo Additional Men In Lumber Camps OTTAWA. Jan. 6 —- (OP) _. Canada's lumber ca-lrps. despite inbcr increase of i5 per cont over last year. still are in need of more than 10.000 wocd=men. Arthur MacNamara. deputy lviinister of Labor said today. Bulk cf tho requirements were in Quebec. ’l‘llr- labor (I"lll'lll(I in N()’1".llt"i'll (1 Jill llJfI illirtl 0ft’ but VtlCtl-llfi‘! -. still cvistcrl with lllrisl. operator.- "'l'llc~rr~ are orders llllvllls ill all provillc tilnlllillt: oll illl‘ I'm lll(I ill tlle East gets into full so .- very soon, llunlbcrs of additional men will be needed. "High onlplovlllnlt is bound to continue lll the woods indllslry. because of the llcatjy demands for lunlber to meet building programs and export requirements. and also to mect the heavy demands for DUIPWOOG products both st home for rtlplncc- , and as log I and Saskatchewan. Then is no inquisitive person no is not also Ill-natured. ' MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Subscription Delivered 00.00. Mail $5.00, other rrovincee l U. l. A. 01.0! McNair Announces Suspensio n 0E N. B. Tax Negotiations oTTAlv/i. Jan. 6 __ - Dominion-provincial lClflllulll; l’). V: "ew 51188 lllday Wlltll‘: Prelrlcl-“rvtgll N311‘ 0i New Brunswick allnoullccdl that his govenuncnt has suspended , hauxtllttollgili‘ negouauml! with tcdcroll h I ‘e5 bfmflllsi 0f favoritism s own to Bflilflh golumbm‘ The announcement drew no tun. 219111 from Prime’ Minister .\I.'1‘:. Aflégltt hills _0P _F‘lnnllce fdilvpt, r 1 01'. bllt 1i did set nif speculgl. (m m“ 0 T115101‘ breakdown n taxation discussions might 0pc“... T111655 federal subsidies to Dcgotigt. 11g pFOVlIlCfZS are brought in line; wlth those offered British COlU-llh. bill and Prince Eel-ward Island, Mr. McNalr was the first. Premier to amounce that his government had agreed in principle to a new lamlmn Pact with the Dominion on the basis of federal proposal; 1n thc budget last June 27. Shortly at‘. iOP-lll early November-similar ml- muncements came from Manitoba. 4 l l The three provinces. in return for 1419511118 major tax fields W01‘: oi- fcrcd subsidies equal to $15 p(1‘ capitn or to 150 ppr cent of what; t-hey received under the wartime. taxation agreements. I They elected to take thc per oaplta subsidy which would increase as population and gross xtationalj production increased and which.‘ would never drop below a fixed. minimum. l "Fhen British Columbia entered the negotiations picture. Premierl Hart elected to take 150 pel- cent of, what his Province received under the wartime tax agreement. provid- ed that, like the per capita subsidy. it would be hitched to movements of population and gross national production. The Dominion accepted the pro- .—(Q0l'ti.il1119d on Page 5 Col. 2) Carson's View 0f ll. B. Complaint WINNIPEG- Jan. G-(CPJ-Pre- mler Garscn of Manitoba today said that the Dominion Govern- ment harl assured Manitoba, Sask- atclltnvzln and New Brunswick tllosc Provinces which had already concluded an agreement with thc Dominion, would receive concess- ions lf l-t. were thought th-lt all- otllcr Province had received more favorable treatment. Ml‘. Garsoll sai-d the Dominion "in our opinion should call in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, New Brunswick and if necessary Bri- tish Columbia and Prince Edward Island to discuss the manner in which the positron of these three Provinces should be equalized with that of British Columbia, under their new deal wlth the; Dominion." "Any concession; thst the Do-l mininn may make to achieve this, equalization should at once ll!‘ Pllllllflll‘ announced as Il\'llI.'ilII"l oll all vqllittllllc basis i0 all of the; Provinces of Canada." Con. Marshall Called To Report 0n China WASHINGTON. Jan. G -(AP|-- President. Trilman has sinzlllcnccl Con. George C. Marshall to “'£l’\ll-' lllgion lo report on the (lWliifllCdl situation in Cllina. The White House, ill making the announcement. said the President's special envoy probably wlil leave Nonking tomorrow. probably by‘ airplane, and abroad." 0n Visit (By Eddy Gilmore) MOSCOW, Jnll. 6—-t/\P) -F‘Iclrl Marshal Viscount Montgomery. Chief of the British Imperial Staff. told the Russians upon llls alrival in Moscow today illat "I "Al"! 10 establish frirnilly contact. lvlill ill!‘ Soviet Al'lll_\"' from which nlitilli grow mutual \lI'lI‘l(‘l‘li|tlll('lll\'i. and respect "for iIiP rrltlfllal benefit of us all." lie was moi at tho airport by Marshal A. M. Vnsilcvsky. Chief of staff’ for the Soviet Army. The two men shook hands warmly and in less than five minutes Lord Montgomery had, established a warm, friendly contact with his host. lord Montgomery was clad in a white British warfare coat with e, sheepskin collur and wearing his famlller black Royal Tank Corps beret. He looked about the snow- Iwept airport and said: “I‘m very lucky to be here." Montgomery Arriv ‘,5 To Russia their first. conversations tonialii- when lord Montgomery Wiil PW‘ sent Vusilevsky a gift he ‘nrvllglii from London. While thc two men stood on the snclv-slvcpt field they talked \vllh one nnoillcl- lllrolllzh lrflflil-‘iflfi- “Arc you nll artillery-mall?" Lord Mollignlncry asked. "No," Saki vasilcvskyx illfanilgvman." Beaming. Lord Montgomery‘ re- plied: "All the best soldiers are lnf-lntrymen." The Soviet military llnnd play- ctl "God Save the King" and then the Soviet National Anthem.~ All saluted. Lord Montgomery then inspect- ed a guard of honor. walking down e long line of Russian soldiers- Later the guard of honor paraded past the two milltery leaders. saluting them and a group of Sov- int military men. members of the “I'm all llouse Burned At Parkdale Ml: George Stewart. PnYl-nlllle, lost practically all his nlaliollll possessions yesterday morning when the house he was living in, burned to the ground. At the time of the fire. Mr. Stewart. assisted by a nrighbor, was in the barll removing the lllna from llls horse which h-ld (lied tlle previous day. Completing lhc job about ten o'clock, the men left the barn for the house. As they ap- proached they saw smoke issuing from thc caves. They opened the door hut thc- flame and smoke (trove tllenl bat-k. 'I‘lle Pal-kdale fire brigade was rushed to the scene but the small dlvelling was beyond saving end nothing inside tlle llouse was re- covered. While fhe origin of the flre i! unknown the opinion is entertain- ed that the cause may have been an over-heated stove-pipe. British Preparing Palestine Cffensive LONDON, Jan. 6—(AP) -Veter- ans of desert campaigning rolled into Palestine from Egypt today as British Army officers awaited cabinet permission to launch a full scale offensive against Jewish ex- tremists. Government sources said thd offensive. if approved by the Cab- inet, would be the greatest in Palestine‘s model-ll history and would smash underground groups which have killed and floggtd Bt-ilisll troops. bombed public buildings and milled highways and railroads. They added that the reinforce- ments wcre reaching the Holy Land by road and rail, to join nearly 100.000 Tomnlios already on duty there. - FAMM Abbott IS (oltlttflctl (MT (at. ‘fxufu ts A {cantata HALIFAX. Jim. 6 --~ tCl’! ~- Weathcr synqeis and official in- lend forecaltl issued the Do- minion Public Weather Office at Halifax at i115 p 111.. llfondayn Syrltlpisis: Snow flurries are oc- curring in Cape Breton but in the rest of the Maritlmos the weather (‘I"i\l‘ and cold. Temperatures range from 16 above at Yarmoutll to l1 below at Blissvlllc. A storm m W0si8iii Ontario is moving tn- wurd the M-arltimes and it is ex- pected to bring moderating temzp- eratures with snow to the district Tuesday sftonlooll and evening. 7 Forecasts vnlirl Tuesday lllll'l midnight: ' Prince Edward Island: Clea-r becoming overcast Tuesday nits-moon. Continuous snow begin- tlllng in the evening. considerably miller. Light winds imreasing Tuesday evening to south 30. High Tuesday M. Charlottetown 25. High tide flhis morning at 11.15 and tonight at 10.30. Sun sets this eftemoon at 4.34 urd rises tomorrow morning at 73!. Last quarterVmoon January 13th. 10.56 P. M. Sllmtrnersidc tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. ' CAI I-‘EIIIY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND" Dally except Sunday.- The two men planned te hold Moscow diplomatic corps and mill- tery etoeehee. Leave Borden at 9.06 AM. been ‘lumeathe It I I8. I