MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN -—-—i y rd the cltileul is the ‘r5801; eacqlevement el e statel- man. ,._ Chorlottflown our-diel- T" W" [pl-plug Gnu-dip. Iolnded Illi- Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew y CHARIJOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1941 , MAXIMS ; OIL. MERE MAN Itlltoolstetorefusetabear the yoke to which one lass already 12 PAGES submitted. lnbsorlptiou Delivered $8.00. IIntllI.0O.ot.herProvincellU.l.l-fl-l\ FRANCE VETOES RUSIAN PROPOSAL AT, u. N. Report Priest Killed By Yugoslav Mob lhree lloukhohors Get Jail Sentences NELSON, l3 (1., Aug. 2i! —<CP) ' Jrln-ee Doukhobors arrested last veek in a swift police drive to quell the outbreak of violence and arson terrorizing the West Kcct- gnfly disirict, today were sentenc- ln to six monthszln jail. Pour mllcrs, including one woman. were bound over to keep the peace. Oldest lawyer In liova Scotla Oles TRUSTS. Aug. 5—(AP)- The Allied Military Government today was infor ed that a sickle-wield- ing mob be eaded a Catholic priest and seriously wounded a prelate from the Vatican during a Sunday confirmation service in a village near Pislno, 30 miles southwest of Trieste in Yugoslavia-occupied Venezia Giulia. An A.M.G. officer said that Msgr. Antonio Santin, Bishop oi Trieste and Capodistra, identified the assailants as Yugoslavs. The dead priest was Rev. Miro Buleslch, and the ‘wounded pre- late Msgr. Giacomo Ukmar. The Italian language newspaper La Voce Liberal in Trieste said the mutilated body of a third priest. missing for a week, was found in a woods. He was identified as a Father Kristian, parish priest oi PORT HAWKESBUIRY, us, Aug, g5 __ lCl-l - George Ormcnd pvlrsythe. NS, ol-lest practising ggwycr in Nova Scotia uld solicitor for this Canso Sira.t town since it n, jnljorpcfPlPd in 1889. died here today at the we cf 92. . A nailve o‘ Greenwich. N.S., he took h‘= law educntlon at Dal- aousle University Law School af- fer graduating from Acadia Univ- rrsity. Coming’ Events "Show - Morell, Thursday. "Show Canoe Oove Wednesday. "Talkies - hialpeque, Tuesday. Night Editor. "Wednesday, Aug. 27, Picnic at m, Carmel. "Dance. seven Mile Bay Hall, Wednesday niglht. "Dance and lcc Cream Festival It Cherry liill School, August 29th. "Talkies - Canoe Cove, Wednes- day. Ni-ght Editor. "Ice cream social in New Lon- don Hall, Wednesday, Aug. 27. "September 1st and 2nd. St. Peter's Annual Bazaar. "Show in Braclalbane Tuesday. August 26th. "Dance, Avondale School, Fri- day. August 29th. Mi-llview Orch- estra. Hall, "Credit Union‘ Dance, Wednes- dal’. August 27th, in Seven Mile Bay I-lall. "lce Creulnl and Dance, Wednes- day nghi at 10113 Corner, in aid 0i school. "Icc Cream‘ and Dance, Kelly's Cross School. Wednesday, August Will. "liancc and Ice Cream. Belfast llall. Tuesday, August 26th. Point Prim W l_ "llazlcc, Gcccgslown l-Iall, Wed- ncsd Webster's Off-first. .1 “Special Doncc. Montague Curl- lng Rink. Thlrsdayz August 28th. DJn .\ll":S(‘I"5 Orclusira. "Sec ‘The Irish Millionaire" in Little Pond, Friday, Aug. 29th. lianrc, "Come to ‘he Ice Cream Social on Pniird Church grounds, Tryon. grin Wednesday evening. August ii . "Don't miss big Dance tonight. Wlnsloe Station Hall. Don Messer's Orchestra. Ice Crelm and Cake. Adml-iflon 50 cents. "Don't forget the big Dance at "is Bright Spot. tonight. Modern 31d 81d Time Music by the Eastern .1‘ m H . D l f 9 ill m” P. Mlcys sncng rom t "Come to Ice Cream Festival “d Mwfllifllt Dance. Mt. Stewart lihocl Grounds. Wednesday. Aul- illt 21th. Proceeds in std of School, ‘Indies served. Amusements. Good music. "Bee St, Peter's Players in three act comedy "Hillbilly Hospitality” in C-ramn mu, Wednesday night, lilsust mil. Sale of cakes. Dance. Curtain O30 P. M. Aulplces Can- Micn Legion. ~ "Loading lin Hogs ‘mursdnv ll follows: snmrnmldo till 1.30 It. xclullnm till s. r. u n . lag-m. mmtu RIYI’ "May all day, nlmer Wlgmsre Tolazzo in Istris. The body, bore marks of "horrible torture", the newspaper said. La. Voce Libero. said Father Buleslch was attacked by men wielding sickles and was “liter- ally slaughtered", while Mslgr. Ukmar, thrown down and tramp- led, suffered a skull fracture and kidney wounds. . The attack occurred at Ianischc. near Pisino. Msgr. Ukmar wss one of the Vatican's “prelati domestlci", (d0- mestlc prelatea) and was sent to the Istrian Peninsula for ceremon- ies which hostile demonstrations had prevented Bishop Santin from performing. He is a native of Trieste. There was no immediate com- ment from the Vatican. In another aspect of the general subject of religious liberty in Yugoslavia L‘Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, declared that the findings of seven Ameri- can Protestant pastors who visit- ed Yugoslavia recently did not meet "the first condition of ser- lousness and authority (requisite) for any judgment." The pastors reported they found religious lib- erty under Marshal ‘Tim's resimfl- ll. S. Legislature To Resume Today HALIFAX, Aug. 25—(CPl -The 28 Liberal members of the Nova scotia Legislature met in caucus tonight preparatory to tomorrow's meeting of the House to ratify a financial agreement between the Dominion and ‘the Province after nearly 21 months of negotiation with Ottawa. The newly appointed Lieutenant. Governor J. A. B. Mc-Curdy will perform his first official act when he gives Royal assent to the bills which give effect to the terms of the five-year agreement. Premier Angus L. Macdonald. who last May I2 moved adjourn- ment of the 43rd Legislature's sec- ond session to meet arzain at. thc call of the Speaker. will introduce the bills. As far as could be learned at Province House today there will ho no other business before the Assembly and it wouid probably Ottawa Visit MhBHmM Stirs Rumours UITAWA, Aug. 25 —-($pecia1) -Presence in Ottawa today of New Brunsw.ck Pram \r John B. McNair and tne fact that he was closeted with Prime Minister King in the east ulocl: this afternoon for upwards of two hours lends color to the report that Mr. King ls seeking a Minister of Fisheries io succeed the late Hon. Frank Bridges in the province of New Brunswick. Premier McNair arri|ed in the capital unobtrusively, and eluding newspapermen made his way to ‘he Prime Minister's suite of of- fices in the east block. It is un- derstood that his conference with Mr. King dealt not only with the general political situation ln New ‘Brunswick but with the choice of u successi- to Mr. Bridges in the former Conservative‘ rid- ing of Yorlt-Sunbury which the late minister represented. It is taken for granted that the Liberal party would welcome Mr. McNair as its candidate in York-Sunbury and that he might he offered the Fisheries portfolio ir event of being elected there. On the other hand R. B. Han- son, former Conservative membe for that ridng and one-time Op- position leader in the House. has - strong following. and unlike. ‘Halifax. Predrlicton benefited very little from government-operated war industries. other reports here are that the government candi- dacv in York-Sunbury is being offered tn Blake Bridges. brother of the former Minister. In the meantime. Progressive Conservative; are not marking time in rebuilding their political fences in tho Marltimes, Opposi- tlon leader John ‘Frncken begins 1 speakuuz four of the coastal vrownces "hlesda" night at Wood- stock. N 8.. and R. A. Bell. na- tional director. Progressive Con- servatlve nar-‘v of Canada. is on his wav in York-Sunbnrv to con- fer with Mr. Hanson and leaders if the nartv organizations in that constituency. "all llllllfiflflfl. i Plan As GOflOWS In addition to the seven Nazis sentenced to death by the U5. war crimes court at Nuremberg was Herta Oberhauser who ‘was sen- tenced to 30 yearn in prison for ner treatnem of prisoners at Ravensbruck, where thousands of women perished, ~ Lands Canada's Food Prices Control System NEWYORK. Aug. 25—(CP)—!11 a newspage story headlined “I-Iow Canada Keeps Food Prices Down". the New York Post today lauded Canada's system of price control and berated the National Associa- ilon of Manufacturers for its rosy predictions of a year ago that once the Office of Price Administration (O.P.A.) "was discontinued prices in the United States would rapidly adjust themselves to reasonable levels. The paper cited rib roast selling for 43 cents a pound in Windsor as against 60 in Detroit, with eggs ‘at’ 53 cents‘ a dozen against 73. Cabinet Considers Emergency Plans LONDON Aug. 25-(AP)—Brl- rains cabinet today held its sec- ond "crisis" meeting in eight days to draft a new austerity program. expected to be announced later this week by Prime Minister Att- KENTVILLE. N. 8.. Aug. 25- (CPl- The announcement inf Ottawa that an agreement had been concluded to support the prices of apples from the Annapolis Valley's estimated 1.250,00fi-barrel crop was good news tonight to I,- 200 people who earn a livelihood in valley processing plants during the fall. The demand for harvesting labor in the valley this year will be less because the 1947 crop is estimated at 1.000.000 barrels less than last lee. Attlee and other Ministers in- terrupted vacations for the four- hour meeting, which reliable in- formants said was called to dis- cuss emergency plans for curtailed food rations. increased hours for miners and reactions to Britain's sudden sterling "freeze" last week. Silent Cabinet Ministers waved to crowds of curious spectators as they left No. 10 Downing Street. but brushed aside questions about the year's when 1,100 workers were brought in from Cape Breton. __._ii | SOMEIHING yaw m SAMPLES - i QUEBEC, Aug. 25 — ICP) A Somcthlig ml: in the lizlr- of sch‘.- ples is being given at the Queblc Prnvlnmul Exhitiikin -ivh'ch opezs here Fri-day - free lung X-rys by be prorogued Wednesday.‘ Lived Eight Days 0n One Squirrel, Fish By Wlllie Willa: Canadian Press Correspondent GOOSE BAY Labrador. Aug, 21 -lDelay=di --I.OP) - How he lived on ,i.lie wild North Qllebflfi shore for eight days without food z-XCOPO for a squirrel and fish he caught with his bare hands was lnln today by a Pickering. Ont., flier from hi5 hospital bed here. The pilot. Jack B. Mutton, was flying a light Fox Moth plane on a photographic mission out of Rap- idc Lake, Qua, Aug. 10 when he landed on a small nameless lake B0 miles south of this huge alr- lass. Taking off next morning one pontoon was punctured and start- ed to fill with water. The aircr t tilted and s lust of wind n08 it over. Mutton swam ashore the icy water. The plane, battered and wreck- ed. washed labors later. Ho managed to salvage a small tin of matches from the wreck- pgc, But again his spirits fell when he found the matches too wet to light. He tried to ignite |omg gun 110N601‘ but thll O00 failed. . For food be bad only I Kill"!!! through ‘hm ill-be, Thursday All train - "ma"! ""100 when NOD alcohols and Ouch. and one fish caught with his bare hands from the chill waters of the lake. . the Provincial Hcath Depnitmr-nt. But it war another piece of wreckage winch Mutton believes saved nis life. "The only thing that saved me." he said, "was a sheet of alumin- um carried for emergency repairs on pontoons with which I signal- led to the Catalina flying boat. which performed the rescue." The Catalina. an American air- craft searching for Mutton, sight- ed the wreckage and Mutton Aug. ill and landed on the lake. Mut- ton was flown here to hospital. During-his 10 nerve-wrecking clays on thc olcak lake shore Mut- tqn said he saw "several" aircraft pass over but his attempts to sttsct attention were in vein. When asked the cause of the long delay between his departure from Rapids/Lake and notification of his planned flight at Goose Bay Mutton said he had only given s verbal flight plan at Rspide Lake. "I should have waited and fil- ed a regular one but I was in too much cf a hurry." This probably accounts for the fact that the search for Mutton was not started until two days after he left the Quebec bass. The above wireless dispatch was delayed in transmission from Goose Ba! to Halifax by poor re- ception due to atmospheric con- ditions. meeting that had brought the?" together. There was speculation that Parliament might be (‘filled into special session. Communal Rioting Flares In flew Oelhi NEW DELI-II. Aug. 25 --(AP)—- F-our persons were stabbed to death today in the first commun- iii rioting to flare in New Delhi rince spring’, while Hindu-Sikh and Moslsm groups continued their bloody warfare in both In- dlan and Pakistan areas of the Punjab, " The riot in India's capital oc- curred at a cloth mill, where Hin- du and Moslem workers clashed as a new srlift was coming on. All the fatalities were Moslems. and seven others were injured, police said. The fighting was reported un- officially to have broken out when one of the Moslems in the minor- ity at. the mill, assaulted a Hindu boy. ' There was speculation that the border guerrilla warfare, stem- ming from dissatisfaction with the new boundary which left religious minorities in ‘both East and West Punjab, might continue for months York-Sunhury Bye-Election Set For Oct. 20 UPTAWA, Aug. 2b —(OP) _. Following a cabinet meeting to- w)’. Prime Minister Mackenzie King announced the data of the Federal by-eiectlon in York-Sun- bury, N.B., nas been set for Oct, 20. The seat was left vacant by the death two weeks ago of i-Ion. If. F. G. Bridges. Federal Fisher. xes Minister. Mihoush won by the Liberal Party in the 1945 general election. the seat was for many years held by Hon. R. B Hanson, former Progressive Conservative House 198K191‘. Wno first was elected in 1921. The York-Sunbury seat is the only remaining vacancy in the 245-seat Commons. Present stand- ing in aha House is: Liberals, 126; Progressive Conservatives, 67; C. C. F., 28; Social Credit, 18; In- dependent, four; Bloc Populalre, two, Independent Liberal. one; In- dependent Progressive Conserva_ tlve- one; Independent C. C. F... one. and Union des illecteurs, one.[ Vancouver Banker Shot By Bandit VANCOUVER. Aug. 25 _ (cp) -A lone gunman mot and fatally wounded 3.5. Petrie. manage; or a’ branch of the Canadian Bank of Jllmmelifl during a.n attempted noldup nerc today. The bandit es. failed "lmhout loot. A suspect was taken Into melody q halt-ha“;- af- ter the shcotrg - The suspect was released later and police rhported that no new arrests have vet been more. The gunman escaped on (not, dodging between houses. rnd head. ed for KltSllGV-O Beach, which was lmmed-l-Pely surrounded bv police. His gut. was found eight blocks from the bank. Masked wl-‘h n newspaper. and carrvini: a sncrrrlnl; bag, the ban- dit emercd the bank three minutes after the ClOnlhg hour, and im- mediately apfiroached the man. ager. i"lt was all over so quickly. I really don't. know what happened except that the manager was shot." said a lzirl lzerk, "The rest of us got on the floor. The gun- man fled as 5-1011 as he fired the shot " Tnero were five customers and a staff cf four. including three girl workers, in ‘.311 bank. Pctrlr. who_ was about 50 yI-urs old. riled in hospitll shortly after‘ admittance. Chevrolet. Oldsmobile Prices Are liereased TOROWTO. Aug. 25 —— (C?) _. mobile automobiles, ran-ring from S61 to $288 h'gher wcnt into ef- selecting a cabinet made up ti. . ll l l New PIPES for iihevrolet and Olds. grslzphgfiie: g5? flonfparumenb Columbia Top Salaries In ll. S. Last Year WASl-IINGTQN, Aug. as -_ (AP) -The ‘leavywclght corporation sal- ary of ‘.945 aent tn the-vie finan- cier Charles P. Skuuras, the Un- lied States Teasury Department repoved tlllllrlllflwhllfi Bctty Gra-l ble’s $208,000 was the imp figure mong women. ‘ Skourns received $568,143 to lead the Iis- of more ti an C00 persons‘ who took motf‘ than m coo in prlyi from norpcrahons in I945 or in business fiscal years ending in, 94-6. I He nosed or? another California entry — Chews if, Strut». execu- tive vice president c: the Los Ang. eles Turf Club, Inc., whr earned $551,412. I Thir_l iTlOlKf; wen: vto Thomas Ju Watson. presldcnt of International‘ Business Machines Corporation New York $425,548 l-Icllrwood was sparsely repre- sented among the top nzoneyllvln- ners, by past years’ sta-lclards, but producer-rlirecror Thomas Leo ("Going My Way") Ml-Carcy was fifth on the list. with 335532661 from Piramcurt He was first last year with earrflngs 0f $1,113,095. Blame Oriver For Fatal Accident SAINT JOHN, N. B.. Aug. 35 ._ (OP) - Ralph MacMorran. 41. St. George, was driving on the wrong side of the road and under the influence of liquor Saturday eve- night at Prime of’ Wales when a head-on crash caused the death night. MacMcl-ran and two other per- cons are still in hospital as a re- sult of sue SVTIBSh in which both vehicles were wrecked and seven persons injured. Fails In Effort To Form Greek Cabinet ATHENS. Aug., 2s —(AP)—Oon- stantin Tsaldarls appealred stymied tonrglht ln his efforts, supported by Party representation Greek Cabinet. His choice was narrowing down to ex- ‘7 clusi-vely from the right wing, or of Cl’ thb rl fect A1,: 10, General Motors cll-al- erg disclosed here today. Increased cost of prcducdon is twe rcasonl given. ' An Ollsmonfc sedan now is 861i higher while the cruise- model goes '11.! by $134. the four-door sedan to $2118 on the special deluxe model AN Tl-BR-ITISII STILKERS DETROIT Aug. ‘.15 - (OP) - Anti-Brlrisla stickers bearing a swastika centred on a reproduction of llle llnion Jack were 1155196 0" buildings, uti.ii-, poles and refuse cans on downtown avenues yester- day. They we‘! reported pasted up oy ihn- boys and three girls about 19. The sticker; bore thl- printed lines: "SB. l-brodur-IMT- BrltLsh floating Dachau." (IBI-ANGING NOW At the beginning of the Second World was, Britain was rrcdwli-B lels than ens-third of the food shl consumed. 0f QVGII Yllfl. [0530 CANADA FLOUR . p 5 . iflil.‘ ilLl ,1; HALIFAX, Aug. 25—-"(CP)—Bu1l- dozers and just plain hard work brought relief in the forest ares of Western Nova scotia today as rain 5599-000- - did the work in the Eastern sec- The shelibums b1!" 1e“ 14 “OI-L homeless, adding to the drastic ‘Three homes and a churcn were destroyed in the Jordan Bay area near shelhllrnc, 100 miles tron here on the south shore, before n HALIFAX, Aug. 25 —-(CP)—- A shift In the wind early bo- nlgllt turned a forest fire buck towards the fishing village of Jordan Bay on the south Shore I00 miles from here and eight homes and the school- house in the hunlet where l4 people have already been left ‘ ‘ were ti: ‘ ’ force of 1,000 fire-fighters con- trolled the flames today. Officials a't the Roseway Hos- pital in Shelburne who had ore- pared to evacuate some I00 patients said all danger was past in their area. At sandy Cove. several miles sway from Bhelburne, bull-dozers ringcdhouses with deep ditches just in case the flames broke away from fire-fighters who reported them in check. At Sheet Harbor, rs miles east of ‘Halifax, all was serene n rain fell. But the damage had already lflg- the of Miss Della Pulmcre, 75, Lower Kilns. Iid.. and spread lo the DYE- Flve 1513mm N s" according m mises of Spruce Specialties. Alto- ihe verdict of a coroner's jury to- Eel-h"- ilve lilllldihis 0! m6 W0 001711133193 arc- flame. tkle fire, whigh is being fanned by s stiff southwest wind ‘n the dir- ection of a about 5.» feet rrom the flames. is unable to get within effective range of the flames which towered 150 feel in the smoke-filled sky. Take llo Chances On Bank lilovlng_llay the United States. to bring Liberal “Wnh lhe m7" mm a new from Kingston Penitentiary si-ill at large policn took no when of Montreal’; coalition i0 strcct. Four constables armed with ary figure. The crisis was precipit- flawed-Q" Slwlflllns. a tummy gun ated by the fall Saturday lMaxlmos Government. moved in four large safes. a . Forest Fares In N. S. Chevrolet cars rangenifirtfllisgsbil been done. 1n the town of 1,200, five homes and a gave work to 80 men were wiped ' had such a. story to tell. Fire Causes Heavy Loss In Two British Seaports PORT ALBERNI, B. C., Aug. 25 —iOP) - Fire oi undetermin- eo origin tvlnght was roaring un- controlled through the waterfront of this Vancouver Island port af- t" dQStFOYlHI; a $1,500,000 Gov- rrnment assembly clock and ware_ house. bulgzng with about 600 ions o! plywood. _Uaught at its moorings at cock was till: British steamship $811 Pepp. a 10,000-ton vessel owned by Airzes Steamship Co, of London, which was ablaze and be- iieved lost. j Every piece of fire-fighting equipment in Port Aiberni was pressed into action but flames were still mounting skywsrd in uncontrollable fury. A stiff breeze fanning the in- ferno was driving it towards Stan- clard Oil storage tanks but they were not believed in immediate danger. Six small harbor tugs endeavor- eu to pull tile steamship Sampeb out into the stream. The vessel, its plates waped and low in the water, was without steam and rwo front anchors were down causing difficulty in moving. Also destroyed on the wharf were three Esqulmalt and Nanai- zno gondola railway cars, one ceded with lumber, Officials said the Sampeb was loaded with about 600,000 board feet of lumber loaded today for shipment to the United Kingdom. They gave no estimate of the value of the lumber destroyed in the warehouse and on the ves- sel. the VANCOUVER. A118. M -—(OP)-' The Face meek industrial area of this West Coast city ls being threat- ened with deslructlon by a three- alarm blaze of unknown origin, which broke out tonight and is raging out or control and spread- The blaze apparently slatted in piant o. the Viaduct Dry already spires of Firefighters are striving to divert rock gas-Tied shed, A firoboat 1r also on hand, but Council-Takes Other Steps In Indonesian Case lleav Fighting Reported Fromy One Area ln Java. LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Aug. 25 -~(A.Pi - France today vetoed a Russian effor‘. to set up an 11- .atlon truce ccmmisslon to check cn the Security Council's violated cease-fire order in the Dutch- Indonesinn conflict. The COUIICll then went ahead and took two alternative steps aimed at settling the dispute; 1. The council tendered its good offices to both sides and stood ready if asked, to assist in a settlement through s. Council committee cf three members acceptable to the disputants. 2. The delegates called on career consuls in Batavia. to report directly to them on what has happened since the cease fire order was issued, here Aug. 1 Elf-Premier Satan Sjahrir. re presenting the Indonesian Republ lic, said "certainly" the Republic would accept the offer of good offices. Dutch Ambassador Eelco N. Van Kleffens said he would ask his Government for instruction's. Alexandre Parodi, of France, told newsmen he vetoed the Rus- sian proposal because it was l. question of “competence? The council still has to decide finally on the controversial point wheth- er lt has jurisdiction in the dis- puts. Second French Veto I It was the second French veto in United Nations history and the 20th. in all. Soviet Russia has Invoked the big power privilege 18 times. The first French veto was cast June 20, 1946, in the Spanish case The Council quickly approved s. joint Australian-Chinese resolu- ._________i_____ (Continued on Page 5 Col. 7) A iouslveaifllc’: Bee ; fir. nukes? ills Gbcilfssf’ LONDON, 0nl., Aug. 25 I-(cp) rscaperl convicts chances they moved $3,000,000 in ash 11d secwsities from the Bank main brfnch here its new location a-ross the‘ nd pistols guarded the wealth, sawmill which cut, Damage was estimated at toll cf homes taken in last week's fire which raced through miles of timber in Cape Breton! High- lands Nations) Park. Water hnd to be trucked from the sea to fight the Jordan Bay flames when low wells and brooks went empty. Out of the fire areas came tragic tales of villagers losing all their posslssions. Francis Dugie of Sheet Harbor He an his seven children lived near the lg mill which was lle- strayed Friday night. Dugie had lust finished his morning's work and was on his way home to cat with his children; his wife was in hospital, awaiting an operatlon. As he turned a corner tongues of flan’) licked from the mill- But his home was safe. He rushed for a pump to help fight the blaze: when he returned he had no house. While neighbors cared for his children Dugie made made plans for rebulldlng-“somewhere — not where this can happen again." ‘Ibday Francis Dugie was ltlh nut in the fire area helping to iueaessloulwllllijl BACKMQAJPIFQA” ' l TORONT , Aug. 25 -- (CP) -- Minimum d maximum tempera- turesz-Ed onton 48. 5B; Vancou- ver 53, 69; Regina 37, 68; Winnipeg 47. 67; Toronto T0. 87; Ottawa 72. 91; Montreal 78, 89; Quebec 57, '19; saint John 58. 67; Moncton 54, 68; Halifax 59, 66; Charlottetown If. U: Dyfley M. 61; Yerrncuth 63. 76. HALIFAX. Aug. 25 —- (CP)-- Weather synopsis and official in- land forecasts issued hy thc Domin- ion Publlc Weather Office al Halifax at midnight Monday. Synopsis: Thunderstorms have been re- ported this evening in Southern New Brunswick and the northern half of Nova Scotla. These storms are expected to be scattered over the Maritimes for a few more hours tonight. But the weather is forecast to be generally clear Tues- day. Warm. humid alr covers the Maritime district hut cooler air from Quebec is moving into North- ern New Brunswick and will 60v" Prince Edward Island and Nova Scotia by the evening. I Forecasts valid until Tuesday midnight. Prince Edward Island: Overcast with scattered thundershowerl tonight. clearing in the early morning but becoming briefly cloudy after noon. Warmer. Light winds. High Tuesday at Char- lottetown 86. High tide this morning at 4-59 and tonight at 7.45. sun sets this evening at 6.50 and rises tomorrow morning at 5,14. Full moon August 3m. 11M A. M. Bumrncrside tide eiflliieetl In-lrN save his friends‘ homes. uie; later than Chsrlottefnwfl,