, MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN u--:-av I iii The Pe's Paper The abuse of a. thing does not " MAXIMS OIL VMERE MAN pm-guaought is better tlasl re- pentance. ' " ' forbid its use. p 1 Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 3' 0”" ”'"'''"'”''''- """""""' M" '" ''"''"''- """""' Ci-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, MARCH 30, 1953 16 PAGES "' ”"""'"" '"" 0"” in P.ll.l. 89.00. other Provinces and U.B.A. 012.00 per armors.) Morning pally Founded 1801. REDS OFFER T0 EXCHANGE SICK, WOUNDED PRISONER 33 Persons Perish In Nursing Home Fire B.C. Legislature Dissolved; To Be Held VICTORIA, (CP)-British Col- ombians will vote in s provin- ('i!il general election on or before .Iune 15, the second within a year. The first-and only-session of the 23rd legislature was dissolved Saturday by Lieutenant-Governor Clarence Wallace, who rejected the OCF's bid to form an admin- lstration following defeat of the minority Social Credit govern- ment on the floor of the House Tuesday night. Premier W. A. C. Bennett im- mediately announced an election will be held on or before June 15. Actual date is expected to be announced soon. C. C. F. Leader Resigns For the first time in 18 years, the CCF may not be led in the campaign by their 44-year-old leader. Harold Winch. He has been a member of the House for 20 years. Randolph Harding. CCF'-Kasio- Election In June Slocan) announced that Mr. Winch had tendered his resigna- tion to a caucus of CCF legisla- ture members several ,days ago. Mr. Winch said he had offered his resignation because ”I'm tired" but that the caucus had passed a vote of confidence in him and had asked him to re- main as leader. The resignation will be dealt with by the party's provincial convention at Vancouver April 10-12. Campaign issue The campaign leading to the election may revolve largely around education financing costs, the issue which led to defeat of the government last week. The government proposod a new scheme of sharing education costs and claimed it would bene- fit municipalities. Tho opposition rejected the scheme. claiming it would run municipalities into debt or higher taxcs after the first year of operation. Exploding Shells Wreck Small Town In Indiana LEWIS. Ind., (AP)-Exp1odj,.g artillery shells from three am- munition cars on a derailed and burning freight train rained fire on this village for five hours Sat- urday night. More than a dozen buildings burned. and scarcely one was left. undamaged. Only two persons are in hos- pital. Thirteen others were treat- ed for cuts and bruises. Huge Crnter "" Gutted freight cars lay in a twisted mess around a crater 60 feet wide and 30 feet deep. A 10-man army demolition squad was sent here to remove the warheads from several hun- dred unexploded shells scattered about the scene. Observers kept well away from the,shalls. The survival of the 300 resi- dents of the village in the face of such devastation appeared to be due to two factors. The blast occurred a quarter of .1 mile from the town itself. and most of the people were gather- ed at the Masonic bulldins on the far side of the town for an Eastern Star installation. The Masonic building, its broken win- rinwa boarded up. quickly be- came disaster headquarters. M Families Affected The Red Cross listed nine houses and four barns as de- stroyed and 54 homes damaged. It said 84 families were affected. Two buildings in the small busi- nl-as section were destroyed. scarcely a house is habitable. Friends and relatives in nearby towns and rural areas took in the dazed residents. It was impossible to count the number of freight cars in the burned wreckage, but the Chi- caso Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific Railroad reported 24 cars were unaccounted for. The two persons in hospital If! Dan Lyons. 82. who lost an eye. and Pat Stevens. 30, who suffered cuts and shock. Coming Events ..:. "sasdsi send for Free Catalogue. Arthur Vsuy. York. "Card party and dance at Lot 65 Hail. Easter Monday night. "lslvatlon ;nd Sunday Army programme awards. Monday. I "Dance Easter Monday. Mount Stewart Legion Hall. Burns Or- chestrs. "We are ' -' to the appointment of Grove use Miiian as exclusive Ful-0-POP dealer for the Cevehoad district and vicinity. We solioit your pat- "mlsa on behalf of our dealer. Quaker Oats Co. of Canada "'Attantton Farmers in-Crapauti Victoria. Tryon. oariaton and Al- blnr areas -our truck will be soi- Mivlhs hose on niesdeys as usual. Where roads are passable. If our "Hail cannot set to your farm. "M1! let us know where we can "Mi you and arrangements will be made. llobt. Dawson. raoiio BOSTON. (AP) .- Northern New Ensiandwweplrup Sunday other the worst floods since 1936 and folks GUWBM-1'09-m Bllrded for new on- daugihts by ramrpagirig rivers. The Wealrher Bureau forecast a new storm heading into the d1'el'lC1h- ed region with the heaviest rain- fall expected in southern sections. The areas that appear threatened by new floods are the southern Connecticut river valley in west- ern Masschuaetts and Connecticut. the Men-mock valley in northwest Ma.macthuset.t.a and the Biddeford. Me.. area around the mouth of the Saco river. . Hundreds were already liomeieas in low-lying sections of Biddeford and Saoo with three of four bridges connecting the two oommunritiu closed as waters of the Bees lapped at their floors. Burma To Drop U. S. Aid June 30 RANGOON. (Routers) - Burma aamoum-ed Saturday it is dropping United States aid June 30. A government spokesman said Bunday the action is being taken so that Burma will be free to bring before the United Nations all the facts concerning Chinese National- ids within her borders. "The termination of aid will give Bunns full freedom to expose the case without feeling under any ob- lkution." the source said. explain- ing that Burmese ministers believe Washington is "interested" in the activities of the 12,000 Chinese Na- tionalists in Burma. Both U. E. officials and National- ists Ghinme up ' on have strong- ly denied this. IQIDON. (Routers) - Detect- ives Sunday hauled up pieces of a buried oorpse in Netting Hill Clate's murder house - the sixth victim of "moon-mad" killer. The charred bones were pulled out of the backyard of the rotting, three-storey house and police dis- covered they were not part of the s. Ar . u.s dug up huu.d'y the an msnlac'a fifth known vtetim. Duriday's find lay buried in the anruilby yard near where victim No. is was pulled u Saturday. tuck- ed into a rudty aslioan. Polloe do not known yet whether llundars pile of ehsrred bones are fmrn one or two persons. They were taken to a police laboratory for an analysis which will show whether the moon-nrnok fierid's death ma- Housed Old-Age Pensioners And Mentally-III . LARGO. l"la., (GP) - Thirty- three persons died Sunday n a pre-dawn fire which took only minutes to destroy a private nurs- ing home. Twenty-five other per- sons escaped. "The fire just went through that budlding like they were burning dry straw," said William Hardin, 76. one of the patients who escaped from the flames, helping to satiety anotilievr aged man who had to use two oanes to walk. Heroic Nurse Lost All but one of those killed were patients of the Liittilefleid nursing home, The other victim was a her- oic nurse who died trying to rescue others. Thirty of the dead were women. The home, located in an orange and grapefruit grove about 4'.'i miles from here. housed old-age pensioners and mentally-ill po- tlente - persons not aiok enough to be sent to the state hospital for fine insane. some of the mental pattients ran around screaming in a citrus grove after being rescued. Others, un- aware of what. was happening, re- sisted rescue efforts. some fought to remain in their rooms. us- From 56 To 95 A - The patients ranged in age from 55 to 95. The blaze. which broke out about 3:15 a.m., started in a part of the kitchen. spread through the main dormitory, where women patients and a few men were hom- ed. then leaped to a smaller build- ing where 13 men were staying. All the deaths occurred in the main dormitory. Fire chief Peter Treoia of Clear- vmter said the cause of the blaze may never be known. At the scene Sunday afternoon. weeping relatives Went from per- son to person asking if their loved ones had been saved. Occasionally a can of food in the hot ashes of the home exploded. startling the crowd. ' Comb Ruins Inside the roped-odif ashes. re- mains of patients lsy upon what had been their beds. Dr. Jim Nor- ton. assistant county medical of- floor, combed through the ruins looking for bodies, There were tales of bravery. Mrs. Gertrude Warnlck. a nurse, pulled one person out of the flames. then went back for another. She was not seen again. Mrs. Alehha Herring. ii part-time nurse. told how W.L. Littiefieid. operator of the home. dashed re- peatedly into the burning building to bring out patients. Mrs, Herring. wlho herself res- oued several persons, said that on one trip Lltltlefieid "picked up two at one time. weighing about 300 pounds. I don't know how he did it." MINESWEEPERS WOODEN PORTSMOUTH. Va., (AP)- The U. 5. Navy Saturday introduced its answer to modern sea warfare- the wooden snip. Two mlnesweep- era of wood were christened the USS Bold and USS Bulwark at the Portsmouth naval shipyard. The wood is intended to counter-act the magnetic mine which was de- veloped during the Second World War. -nil: killer buried victim No. .5 six Cftmud 12-41 or 17. years ago. police believe. This may Police Find Sixth Victim of "Moon-Mad" Killer mean he has been strangling and sealing away women during the last six years or more -- and police fear the gruesome finds will multi- ply. They had a theory that the cup- board in the house - where three half-nude women's bodies were found last week -- had been only a temporary storehouse for his corv- see. , While the dissing detectives turned up their iatut victim - or victims - behind the shabby mur- der house. throngs of Inndoners stood fascinated outside. eating ice cream or shellfish. It was like a carnival at 10 R.li- - lington Place. The curious flocked in by auto. bicycle and on foot. to stars at the rotting building and listen to the sounds of ripping boards as ddtootives ranncked the home for more homes. - "Jed-t.iie-SA-sngter." whose lust to kill apparently came over him when the moon grew full. is still at large somewhere in Brihin. IDNDON, (AP) - Eight stalwart guardairien reverently carried the body of Queen Mary in-to Westmin- ster Hall Sunday for the last court the stately old queen ever will hold. At the end of a. journey through crowded. silent London streets, the guardarnen tenderly lifted the wt- fin aloft and placed it on a data- falque for a public lyilng-in-state. Near each corner of the bier a giant candle. lighted at that mom- ent. gliiitered in the sombre gloom. Queen And Windsor Attend The Queen and the Duke of Windsor - a.'rerigning grandchild and a favorite son who gave up the throne - watched through misty eyes. They stood motionless, with the gotlhezring of the great and fa- mous about them. as the voices of a ohovir echoed through the great oak rafters,of the ancient hall: ”In life. in death, oh Lord, abide with me." Britons solemnly passed into the building and moved like a slow river down eadh side of the catat- alque. Each paused for a moment to bow or curtsy beside the coffin. Pope Pius Gives Lenten Address VATICAN CITY. (AP)-:M'I'i'i0 Pope. in a lenienaddresf. warriod Roman Catholic pastors and preachers of Rome to guard their flocks against the ravages of "the enemy." Vatican sources said he meant athetlstlc communism and other modern threats to the church. The Pontlff addressed the group in the Vatican's consitorlal hall in one of the few audiences he has given since his serious all- merit that confined him to his bed more than two months ago. chin-e-tie Guerrilla: Reported To Be In Opium Trade. By ROBERT HEWETT RANGOON. (AP) -. "'f1he opium army" is what Burmese soldiers call the Chinese Nationalist guerrillas operating inside Bum1a's mountain borders with Red China. They use that description because many Burmese. and some Western observers. are convinced the estim- ated 12.000 guerrillas are more in- terested in profitable opium smug- gtllng than in fighting the Chinese Reds. Burma accuses Chiang Kai-shek's Chinese Nationalist government on 1"oivi-noon of supplying and directing the mystery force, Chiiing's gov- ernment aaya it has no control of the irregulars. The force is said to be equipped with U.S. weapons. The us. has denied giving any support to the guerrillas. The irregular army is part of Chlang'a defeated forces that were driven out of Yunnan province by the Chinese Reds in 1948. They are supposed to be poised on the Red frontier to harass the Communists. But Burma. charges they instead are marauding the Burmese coun- tryside. The Humane have complained to the United Nbtiona about the guer- riliaa. . New Sabre Action in Korea SEOUL. (AP) - The fifth air force has announced a new Sabre- jet wing is flying against the Communists in Korea with an im- proved version of the F-80. The new sabre outfit is the lath fight- er wing. Until recently it was flying the older F-51 Miimngihina l"-00 shooting Btu fighter-bomtr era. The conversion boosts UN ilrst-line fighter strength by 50 per cent. 1'0 COIITIBT FATHER'S. SIAT BIILFABT. (Reuters)-Mrs. Pat- riois nerd. II. daughter of Sir Walt: smiles. member of the British Parliament who drowned in the Princess Victoria ferry dis- aster Jsn. 31. will contest the not he left vacant. A meeting of em delegates satin-day chose her As Unionist candidate for the a North Down by-eiootlon. Nomina- Britain Paying Final Tribute To Queen Mary Queen Mu-yfs standard was draped an the bier. There was only one wreath. fra- grant with early Erig-i:ish spring flowers. That wreath spoke of the family affections of royalty. "In loving memory. from her devoted Lllibet and Philip." was written on the oard. Liliibet was the pet name of Queen Elizabeth when she was a little girl. After the royal family departed. Prime Minister Ciiumhill led the procession past the coffin. Directly behind him ca c Labor leader Clement Attlee, who delayed enter- ing a hospital for an appendix op- eration be be able to pay his final respects. Then the peers and peereses. manbers of the House of Com- mons and lhelr wives filed past. Queen Mary's body will lie in state at Westminster Hall until early Tuesday morning. Then one will be moved to St. George's cha- pel. Windsor castle. for a quiet burial next to liar husband. George V. and not far from her son. George VI. The old queen. a symbol through her life of royal dignity and pur- pose. died last Tuesday. Former Mountie Helps In Mau Mau Roundup NAIROBI. Kenya. (CF) - A for- the men leading the drive to catch Mau Mau terrorists responsible for massacre of several hundred Kik- uyu natives in the last few days. John Timmerman, A native of (hnada. is assistant pc-lice commis- sioner helping direct the hunt for the anti-white terrorists. He was formerly an ROMP ocirporai. Hundreds of police raided the nearby Bahatal African Location before dawn Sunday and started screening about 13,000 Africans. Police said later more than 500 Africans were identified as crim- inals wanted for murder. arson and administering the anti-white Mau Mau oaidh. Another 700 were detained be- cause they were absent from their reserves without passes. The entire Bahati area was seal- ed off for seven hours. Those hr- rwted were later taken to a special detention camp, singing and shout- ing defiantly. Troops hunting the Man Mau gang which attacked Naivasha po- lice station Thursday night and made off with sub-maciiiine guns and other arms. ambushed some of the gang Saturday. killing one who was found oiaaping one of the sta- ion madliine-guns.,A rifle and more than 100 rounds of ammunition also were found. To Publish Result Of Crush inquiry KARACHI, Pakistan, (Reuters) - An official report on the inquiry into the March 3 crash of a Can- adian Pacific Airlines Comet jet- liner will be published next Tiles- day. it; was teamed Saturday. Five Canadian crew members and six British technicians were killed when the Comet crashed wiiiie taking off Man. Boy. Sheep Jump To Safely CREETOWN, Scotland. (A?! A man. a boy and 98 sheep jump- ed to safety from a runaway truck Saturday. Hugh Love was driving the truck containing 100 sheep and stopped on a hill to examine his load. Vwhlle he climbed up at the back r the le, it began moving downhill. Love jumped first. Then 1:- year-old Andrew Welsh, who was travelling in the oab, leaped to safety. The sheep, as sheep will, followed. Wnen Love got to the bottom of ed in a field. and Oil sheep graz- ing quietly. one had been killed and the tooth was badly injured. Captain of Liner Dies of Heart Attack HALIFAX. (CF) - Capt. Wil- helm Kracke. master of the liner Arosa Kuim. died of a heart attack on the bridge of his ship Sunday night minutes after she slipped her moorings and headed out to sea. The liner-returned to her berth. She will sail late Monday. carry- ing the captain's body to his home at Bremerhaven. Germany. tions may open about April I. mer Canadian Mountie is one of the bill be found the truck wreck- - Also Mike Bid For Truce Talk Resumption By Milo Farneti TOKYO, (AP) -- The Reds of- fered Saturday to accept the Uni- ted Nations proposal for an early exchange of sick and wounded Korean war prisoners. a move some sources saw as the first Communist step toward approving the principle of voluntary repat- riatlon. The Reds coupled with the offer a bid for resumption of the truce talks, broken off since last fall over tnat very issue. G-en, Mark Clark said Saturday night his United Nations command favors re-opening the talks if the Communist offer is serious and forthright. Clark Has Authority In Washington, state department officials said Geri. Mark Clark has full authority to go ahead at once with arrangements for the ex- change it the Communist proposal is in good faith. The Reds handed over a note at Panmunjoin '”'day, accept- ing Gen. Clarkls Feb. 22 proposal for cxchange of sick and wounded In Washington, me state depart- ment aald it regards the Commun- ist note as an "unconditional ac- ceptance" of the principle of voi- forcibie repatriation of war pris Killers. The letter from the Reds sug- gested that the prisoners could be l untary repatriation as opposed to. lice Brings Shipping To Halt Along East Coast 0i Nfld. ST. JOHN'S. Nfid.. (CP)-Ai':- craft were called into action Sun- day as stubborn ice brought ship- ping to a dead halt along New- foundlands east coast. A helicopter and two planes buz- zed over the rough fioes off near- by Logy Bay. where a seal hunter has been missing since he went adrift on loose ice Saturday. Drops Food To Trawler liariier Sunday. an RCA? Canso dropped food supplies to the traw- ler Blue Haze. jammed solidly for five days a. few miles off Bay Bulls. The trawler, with a crew of 1.9 and a big catch of sole and had- .doclc below decks. carried food for 12 days but ran out of supplies while battling ice on the trip home from the Grand Banks. She once came within three miles of port here but was carried back down the roast by drifting floes. one seal hunter. cold and ex- hausted, was picked by a hover- ing U. S. Air Force helicopter from Sugar Loaf rock, where he be- came marooned by the shifting, treacherous pans. Seal Hunter Missing But there was still no trace of William Dunn, 31. one of a three- man party who took to the ice as seals appeared in hundreds all along the shore. The three became separated at nightfall but the oth- ers spotted a. light and reached short. safely. While aircraft droned overhead. searchers picked their way over the ice carrying guns equipped for shooting lines to drifting cakes. Only the old-timers can recall when seals last moved in on this part of the coast in such numbers. At nearby Pouch Cove. as many as 200 have been bagged. The bring-'em-back-alive men had their day too, and several city stores are displaying caged and. squealing whitecoats. MON'I'R.EAL. (CF)-The Grand exchanged under provisions of article 109 of the Geneva conven- lion. This article provides for repat- riation of sick and wounded pris- oners bi.” says that no prisoner "who is eligible for repatriation may be repatriated against his will during hostilities." This appeared to be the basis for the state department assertion that the Reds have backed down on their demand for repatriation even of prisoners who do not want to be sent home. Views Move With Caution l Gen. Clark viewed the lmove with caution. ' "We are going to study this of- fer very closely." he said. ”We want to be sure there isn't Red anything in it we don't under- stand." At the United Nations in New York, chief U. S. delegate Henry Cabot Lodge, .lr.. sounded the same note: ' "It is very encouraging if it is bonafide and sincere." L. B. Pearson, Canada's external affairs minister and president of the UN general assembly, said: "This is something we have been hoping would happer so tar as it goes. it is encouraging." The Red acceptance covered only the sick and the wounded, a mere fraction of war prisoners held by either side. The Rcds claim they hold 13,000 Allied POWS. including about 3.- 000 Americans. The Allies hold 132,304 Chinese and North Kor- eans. of which. 9.106 are civilian internees and 123,199 POW's. I """" "-CT I Marines Slop Bed Aihicks SE0lll.. (AP)-U. S. marines and iirtilicry chopped up Chinese Red attacks Sunday on the West- ern front 30 miles north of Seoul as the Communists "feel-out" spring drive. wound up a week of bloody fighting. in the air. Sabre jet. pilots re- ported shnotuig down four MiG-15 jets and damaging a fifth ivhiie boosting the total of IN Jet ares pilots with five or more red kills to 30. No. 30 was Lt.-Col. George National steeplechase. annual fairy lzodmother to a. sprinkling of Can- adians. ran true to form again Saturday leaving to ticket holders richer by 5728.000. This was the good news to holders of Irish Hospital sweep- 'stake tickets but there was also rejoicing from lucky winners in the Army and Navy Veterans sweepstake as those who had the three first horses will collect 394000. Three Canadians. all from Ont- iario. came in for the lion's share- -s1-40.000 each-with tickets on the winner, Early Mist. There were four holders of tickets on the sec- ond iiorse, Mont Tremblant. and three on the third, Irish Lizard. Mont Tremblant. gave its ticket holders about s56,000 and Irish Lizard about s2ll.000. Mrs. Wesley Gardner of Ham- ilton, Mrs. Aida Micheline of Wei- Iaiid, Ont.. and Mrs. Lena Ling of Forest Hill village. near Toronto. pocket. the big money. Mrs. Gardner. wife of a steel- worker who has been on short time. plans a new home. She is the mother of four children and used the nom de plume "Guards Sweetie." Mrs. Micheline. 68-year-old mother of six children. wept with joy and jubilantly declared she will build seven houses, one for her hue-band and herself and the others for each of the children. Her eldest daughter, Mrs. John Valvasorl. said later: "she's too ex- cited to speak now and we've put her to bed as she has a bad heart”, Her First. Ticket 3 Mrs. Ling. 40-your-old switch-l board npc.ratoi'. raid at first she hoped her horse n'ouiidn't win be- cause she didn't want. a horde of salesmen pounrlting on her door. It. was the first swcepsttike ticket she ever bought. Mrs Charles Dciihez of aubur- ban Points-aux-Trembics held a Lickct nn Mont Trcmbiant. sh and her husband. a. chem- ical engineer. were too excited to llSlPll to a radio ..ccount of the race and lcarncd of their good fortune from a neighbor. Over- iviiclmed. tiis-y said they have llol immediate plans. Mrs. Jack Fa-:k:' of Eloisa. Ont. also held a ticket on Mont Trom- blflli. Both she and her husband are employed at Eiora. Iiidustrics Limited in this small town of 1,300 persons. near Guelph. 1.. Jones of Vero Beach, Fla. "I don't know whether I'll quit By ARTHUR GAVSHON JOHANNIESBURG, (APi - The battle cries of white supremacy which dominate the South African general election campaign have widened the gulf between races. Fear and passion stalk the land over this issue as the tempo of campaigning nears its April 15 oil- max. I..aw-atbidvina supporters and op- ponents of the government. alike seemed diatreeeed as musclemen continued to break up opposition meetings, with eggs. tomatoes and stones. The race-proud government of Prime Minister Daniel Malan mean- ttme sent shivers down the nation's mine hv "Wiring non-white lead- ers ll” "eatened to "kill nil Ellfil-ll”: . train armies in the night . . :Cic:i blood , . ." I Non-wlilte leaders themselves dstny the charges. asserting they have forecworn the use of violence RaceBitterness Grows In African Election Fight as a method of political stniggie. Basically all whites in this strat- egic chunk of the British Common- wealth want the some thing maintenance of the present mastu- servant relntionsliip. Their proa- perity and comfort depend on it. And just Rboll-I all the whites agrcc with Malena theory of seg- Teflililfln. About ha-itf the cmmtryis whites differ from Maian over the way the Nationalists have set out to stay bosses. Thc Natinnnii.-sis frankly favor a slcrn rule to sort and separate the races. to keep non-w'h.i-tics "in their places" and so "save whilte South Africa." Their solution, for example. to attack mounting native crime: Hire more cops. build more jails. The united party. led by .l.G.N. Strauss. has promised in try to take 10 Canadians Winners Of Sweepstakes Prizes my Job or not." she said. "but I think I'll take a little holiday for a. starter." J. R. Auciair of Montreal, a telephone tester with the Bell Telephone Company and a former transpcrrt. flyer with the R. A. F., won on Irish Lizard. He is going to build a home, give his wife and 18-month-old son "a real holiday." and buy a new car. Another lucky winner on Irish Lizard was a sprightly widow from Tipperary. Mrs. Patrick Ryan of Toionto, who said: I ran every step of the way (Continued on Page 5 Col. :77 You CAN'T MAKE A CLEAN doe ouf oF DiRfY A WORK 9 TORONTO. iC'Pl - Minimul and maximum tcmperaturr-or Min. Max. Dawson . i2 39 ivictovria. . an so Edmonton . 15 -1-5 Calgary .. 251 40 Regina. 35 41 Winnipeg 33 45 Toronto .. .16 47 Ottawa .16 46 Montreal .17 5.1 Quebec 34 37 Saint John 37 55 Monctton 34 40 Halifax - -18 Clirtrlo-ttetown . .73 45 Sydney 40 Yai'mcut.h .v..l .- S1. Jnhnts, Nfld. 31 4'! HALIFAX, tCPi -. Official fore- casts issued by the Dominion Pub- l:c Weatlier Off.cc and valid until midnight Monday. Eastern N. B, counties. lower Saint John river valley: Intermit- icrit. rain and patches of fog; very mild. East winds 20 increasing la the morning to east 30. guests is 45. Low-hia'h at Moncton 35 and 4a Fredericton and Saint John 37 and 48 Upper Saint Jr.-hn river valley, Bay of Chaletir: Intermittent rain. paitciies of fog. Very mild. East winds is increasing about noon to east 30. gtis-ts to -1.3. Low-high at Ed-mundston 35 and 4H. Campbell- ton 33 and 40 Prince Edward Island: lnierrnlt- tent rain. patches of fog, Mild East winds is increasing in the sf- ternoon to east 30. gusts to 40. Low- hirh at Charlottetown 3'1 and 48. Bay of Fundy: East. winds .10 gum to 40; intermittent rain and drizzle. Visibility 4 miles in mist. lowering in fog patches in loss than one half mile. Temperatures near fortv. High tide today at Charlottetown at 10.56 A. M. and 11.24 P. M. High tide on the North short I! 5.46 A. M. and 0.08 P. M. summersldo tide eighteen ruin- utea later than Charlottetown. ' race N-lotions out of party politics if it is alt-Med. sun rises today at 5.50 A. is. do! sets ht 6.38 P. M. '