"only. la nae Ian. films-nuances. s '1 Gaarlluulbulsl III. ‘mom-a Guardian. 1n can. mam Cl-IARLUTTETOWTN. CANADA. TUESDAY, rum: 11. 1941 WA LLACE URGES TRUMAN - STA Read by rybbdy _ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 12 PAGES _I_ Coming Events r ~' . — Mnrell. Thursday. New Glasgow, Thurs. Hunter River, Wed- Conoe Cove, Wednes- "Concert la New London Hall, lune 20th. "Cornwall Players. Bonshaw to- night. "Dane in Fort Augustus School Friday, Jliill. ' '5, lllfllflW tonight. Cornwall "fl . Pint "See Cornwall Play. Bonshaw llall, Tuesday. June 17. e, Valleyfield Hall. ..June 19th. Refreshments. "Dart-v. Grandview Hull. June 18's. A‘l>}\l139;~ Women's Institute. Th lust’. "Dan-w Trucadie Hall. Wednes- d1 me 18in. Rollie ilfacKenzleh 1.1. Damcing 9-30 l0 12.30. "llwciecrin - A meeting 0f thO l‘ ‘ ~ Tuesday evening, Jun»- inn. "Durtrirlg tonight, Country Club. T; ‘is Rest, for a good time. ding car feed wheat. bn . mnriay noon til; Tuesday ocnirg- Court 8r. Son. "Don't forget the Dance, French . llail, Tuesday 17th. Rollie . Orchestra. "Carve. one, come all to Bon- mil. Monday June l6. Mac- iftln a Orchestra. "31.. lune oil 60c per gallon: . 51m per bug; quantity of ‘lrlnd. Low price on 45- R. L. Dickieson. "WW1 lbs. bulk ulheat arriv- lru lion-m River next week. $2.25 R. L. Dickieson. "llunicr River Y. P. U. pre- “"' ' m‘. Tillie Goes To Town," Hall, Thursday, June l9. PM. v‘ use "Cmchcad Hall-Milton Play- b“ lhurll “Uncle Josh Perkins“ Srrmnlties. Wednesday. June s. ii \\'h~.nli~y River Hall, ‘Tuesday. Jill!‘ l7, at 8130 RM. “Ainmv ndainresents their Varm"; Concert-Where? In Cra- l-"l lliil, June 19th. Dance liar. l"'l'ilill'."l' River Play at North V-I-"lllr tmstponed until further .\lrs. Bruce Deacon. North If‘. "Com- to Wncatisy lum- 0am tut. in Iiortsvllle Hall on June ‘All. imiuring Oliver Ross and “"1011 Broihers. ‘fResular Dance. Moi-um» Culling Rink every Tlh/ursdcy . Al. Hianrharrils Orchestra. Modern and old me "own Mlle Bay run. rho Wflponed Credit Union Meeting “l1 hr held Friday. June 30th. no PM. _“Hunter River Y.P.U. present ‘but Tilliea Goes to Town" North nlélshire hall, Tuesday. June 17. 11m. ‘ I “Wloliectinl hogs for Canada a fkers Ltd by truck every ‘Phurl- li- Phone N. A. Cutcliffe, Fred- glllion. or writs me, p. 1.. uencw- u ..._.. “Collecting Hogs each ‘Pl-leads! MCI-Duds rum-r from vemcn ‘af- Uim. Elliotvale, Summar- " Hmfliflde. Avondsle Gl Call Ralph Lea, Vernon be i_— "P"?! livs Hon Thursday P 13'1""? Simmer-aids till 1.30 Ml- Kenslniim till a P. u. n, ‘i 310MB. Hunter River ll’ all day. Elmer Wllmore. h! Wane. Thursday tut train pmfmklflc service when room ~ Mncnwea and carom. zirr River Y. P. U. pre-j "hint Tillie Goes To Town" Truman Vetoes U. S. income Tax-cut Bill --_- VFASHINGTON, June 16 _(APl -—President Truman today unash- ed the Republican income tax cut with s. veto. and denounced it as “the Wmng kind of tax reduction at the wrong time." He termed it “risky” and "un- safe" on the ground that "sub- stanllal" payments should be made on the public debt in these good times. Aroused Republicans immediately got busy to try to override the veto in the House of Representativ- ea tomorrow. But they conceded that even if they should muster the necessary tum-thirds majority there. they would have no chance in the Senate, punch then would vote Wednesday. The $4,000,000.000 of income tax cuts ranging from 10.5 to 30 per cent which would have gone into effect July l. now goes out the win- dow. And bill No. 1 of the Republican- oontrollrd Congress becomes a. hot campaign issue for 1948. Carroll Reece, Republican nat- ional chairman, set the tone with this comment: _ “Mr Trusnan has committed his administration to continued sup- port of the ‘tax-and-tax and spend- snd-apend and elmt-and-elect’ philosophy of the now discredited new deal That ’ philosophy W“ repudiated by the American people Last November, and I am confident it will be repudiated again and even more emphatically in 1946. First Time In History It. was the first time in Ameri- can history that s President has the late President Roosevelt in 1944 vetoed one to raise them. Truman gave two nnain reasons w, . by. l. It would be bad for the country's 800110131; and for the treasury. 2. It would give too much re- lisf to those ‘in the high in» come brackets” and not enough “to the low Income 'group.” The President also gave his answer lo arglurnettts made for tax reduction: “There is no shortage of funds" for “necessary investment and business expansion" so a tax cut is not needed to release money for that purpose. as many contended in hearings. The purchasing power ofconsum- ers should be increased by ironing out “the disparity" between prices and wages throitgh‘ “wise policies and improved practices of business and labcrz" cutting taxes “is not the proper way" to get ll. Retailers particularly hnd urged lower tax- es to boost. purchasing powcr. Three Young Jews Sentenced To Death JERUSALEM. June 10~(AP)-—A British military court io-day sen- tenced three young Jews to death for terrorism as the United Na- tions Commission on Palestine be- gsn its task of finding s. formula for bringing peace to the Holy Land. The Jewish undergrc nd organ- ization Irgun Zval LIEU promptly appealed to the Commission to iniarceds with the British auth- orities on behalf of the condemn- ed mm. By Tom Williams IDNDON. June 10 - (AP) — Britain announced today she is scekinl to enlist Russian partici- pation in the ald-to-mrope pro- Ject advanced by State Secretary Marshall, but Moscow already sp- psared reluctant to co-opsraic in any continental-wide pump-prim- ing effort. financed in large part by the United States. _ The British overtures, a Foreign Office spokesman said, will be msds through sir Maurice Peter- son. British Ambassador in Mos- sow. The announcement cams about the rams time that the first Soviet mention to Marshall's sug- gestions was published in Pravda. Communist Party newspaper in Moscow. Prsvdfs commentary at- tacked the proposal as another case of"‘dollsr diplomacy" and laid it was an extension of Presi- vetoed a blll ‘to out‘ taxesalthoush‘ wit nesscs l l Inquest Into Death 0f Ghild In Explosion. A coroner's jury last night found that Carl Maclicnzle. Goy- town, came tohis death in the P. E. Island Hospital on Wednesday June 11. l947_ as a. result 0f an explosion of a. SOO-gailon under- ground gasoline storagg tank on the premises of Somers Service Station, Gayttown. The Jury found that the deceased had dropped s. lighted match in the tank which caused the explosion. The jury recommended that leg- islation be enacted covering the safe installation, removal, and disposal of all gasoline storage tanks. Dr. J. D. MacGuigsn, coroner, presided. G. R. Holmes. KC, ap- peared for the Crown. The first witness, Dr. I. Rach- mel. said he was called about B o'clock, Wednesday evening June 1i. to attend Carl Mac enzie. Witness examined Carl MacKenzle and found he was suffering from multiple fractures and shock. Wit- ness started to administer blood plasma. but. ths patient died with- ‘m the next few minutes. Mr. Claude B. Somers, pro- prietor of the Somers Service station, said two workmen had dug up the tank and had left it near the hole on Tuesday evening, June 10. Next morning the tank was removed to the other end of the lot where it remained until the accident. Witness was working ai. his house, about 100 yards dis- tant from the tank. when he heard the explosion. He had not seen any boys about the tank. Witness; ran "to "tlterscene of‘ The" dréploslon (Continued on Pagfeilgol. j) Datholics Begin To " Gather At Ottawa‘ OTTAWA. June 16 - (OP) - The first small groups of an ex- pected 200.000 visitors to Ottawa for the Marian Congress flowed into town today, and. Congress of- ficials re-stated assurances there would be room for all despite the fact that the Capital's population may be temporarily doubled. The tour-day Congress opens hero Wednesday. when Roman Catholics from all over the world will join together in prayer to the Virgin Mary for lasting world peace. Among the first arrivals to the congress were the Primate of Ire- land, Archbishop John d'Alton; Cardinal McGulgan of Toronto; Maj. John Weir Foote, V.G.; and Bishops from Scotland and Vene- zuela. Among others expected later in the week are Cardinal Fpellman of New York. Cardinal stritch of Chicago, and Cardinal Qerlier of Lyons, France. Britain To Be Shall 260,000 Dozen Eggs LONDON. June 16 - (Rauwrsl -B'ita‘n will be short. TGKFO’) dczens of (ggs in the next. i8 months because an outbreak cf fowl pest hes made it nect-ssarv to slaughter 21.000 birds. Tom Will- iams, Minister of Agriculture, sn- ncunced in the Commons today. Four million sheep and lambs were killed by the winter conditions, he said also. Soviet Union Cool 0n Aid - To - Europe Plan encs" in the internal affairs of other countries. Foreign political observers in Moscow, after rsadinl’ the Prev. d! reaction. said there was little hope of the Soviet Union taking part. Russian refusal to participate vrould mark a widening of the division between Eastern and Western Buropb. it was agreed. British - Russian consultations will be along the sums "explora- tory" lines as those Foreign Bec- retsry Bevin is undertaking in. Paris tomorrow with mreign Min- ister Georges Bidsult and Prom- ier Paul ltamadler. There was no indication. how- ever, that Bevin plans to lo to Moscow. 0n the other hand. the London Bvsnln! Standard report- ed. without any support from any other source, that Foreign Min- ister Molotov of Russia mllht Io to Paris following Bevinb- 0on- dsut human’: plan for “intsrfer- sultationl time. $00,000 Stolen ,lnp Looting 0f 35 Deposit Boxes KBLOWNA. B, C., June 16 - (CP) - Thirty-five deposit boxes in the office of Whillla-Gaddea Lid, real estate and investment brokers, were looted here dur- ing the week-end and the rob- bers escaped with more than $60,000 in bonds and cash, pol- ice reported today. A hole had been smashed through the vault to reach the safety deposit boxes which were forced opsn with a crowbar. The loot was reported to have included the life savings of several Okanagan Valley farm- ers as well as $25,000 lost by Robert Whillis and his partner, Charles Gaddel. Kelowna. in the centre of the rich Okansgan Valley fruit lands. is 150 miles east of Van- couver. lt was one of the biggest rob- berles in the history of British Columbia. The Whillis-Gaddea office, on Kclownws main street, is only 100 yards from the police sta- tion. vliiusioai- Festival» _ gwn the steepHGarden. Streethill Assn<.-Holds~r Annual Meeting The annual meeting of the P. E. I. Musical Festival Association was held yesterday at Prince of Wales College. With the honorary president. Mr. L. W. Shaw. bccupying the chair. the meeting came to 6rd- er. In his introductory remarks he outlined the purpose of the organization. then called upon the secretary, Mrs. Archibald, to read the minutes of the last general meeting. Following their adoption. the minutes of the last annual meeting were reed and approved. Th6 report of the president. Mrs. Preston Beck. very capably summed up a year's strenuous and widespread activities. The four naln points: supplementary course on Festival Music. per- centnge allotment plan, scholar- ship fund. and field committee were discussed. after which the report was adopted in full. Mrs, O. Archibald rend a com- plete report of her work during the vear outlining well her vari- ous duties and their fulflllmrnt. Ivoon motion, her report was ac- cepted. A copy of the treasurers. Mrs. V. M. Hudson's. report was plac- ed in the hands of each one at- tending the meeting. and showed a very favorable balance. Report adopted. Detailed reports were then Bi’- en by conveners of these com- ‘mittces: Music, Hall and Tickets, Publicity Prizes. Program, stage. Syllabus. Membership, Finance and Nomination. The slate of officers brought in was as follows: Hon. Pres: Mr. Iloyd Shaw- Pres: Mr. Barry Budaen. vice-Pres. (Prince): Mrs. creel- mar. MacArthur. Vice-Pres. (Queensl: Lt-Coi. 1 T. Lmwther. Secretary: Mrs. Edwin 600K0- Treastirer: Mrs. Victor Hudson- A full slate of members for the various committees was also brought in. and than Bhflll 5° given later. m. Bugden. on sccwtinl ‘J10 office of president. commended tbs pastspresident, Mrs. Beck. If"! (Continued on Page 0 Col- ‘ll Blnssu CANADA FLOUR l wlilll" 0 OTTAWA, June l6- tSpeciah- Her new summer dress of paint applied both. outside and 1n the interior, the new Prince Edward Island car ferry today is "the, smartest-looking ship i-n Canada," Transport Department officials told The Guardian today cn their return from a eek-end inspec- tion of the vessel at Sorel. “The color scheme ls light green. dark green and white, The two bands of green are close to the water line and above them the hull is a vast expanse of gleaming white. The ferry looks almost like an enormous yacht. The funnels are buff contrasting Wllh the white of the hull and superstructure" an official said. As announced in The Guardian on Friday. Mrs. J. Walter- Jones. wife‘of Prince Edward Island's Premier will officially christen tho "Abegweltfi by breaking a bottle oi’ champagne over the bows on Saturday. June 2B and Premier Jones who will accompany her will be one of the‘chief speakers at the manning and christening ceremony. t Transport Minister Lionel Chev- rier will be the principal speaker and will take over the vessel from Témmea”... "Page s Col. ‘m’ Runaway‘ Roller Smashes House ~~sigiswm4uom was: "am. 1e- (CPl-Jtumbling out of control this afternoon, a huge street roll- er ended g, 100-yard runaway’ "then it smashed into the front of a house and came to a. stop with the roller partly in the front hall. A veteran of D-Day. Allen Gould, who was sitting by n window, leaped back into the room an in- stant before the roller struck.. He was badly shaken up. Witnesses said the Donald McHugh_ swerve the giant vehicle to pre- vent it from ripping through I. group of children playing farther ' down the street. A Police investigators said the rcll- , er was working on new pavement | on Garden Street. It “jumped its ; gears" and quickly gathered speed down the sharp incline while Mc- Hugh fought without success bring it under control. operator, to, Two Double Drownings‘, Reported From N. B1 SAINT JOHN. N.B., June 11-» (Tuesdayl-(C P)-- Two doublcl urownings were reported early, today from different sections of New Brunswick. The accidents oc- curred near Saekville and near Newcastle. - The dead, two men and two; children. were Frank Snowzion. ‘ 23, Wood Point; a cousin, Gerald Sinowdon, 2a. Wood Point; Arron-l Francis, 6. Newcastle; Joseph‘ Vincent Simon, B, Newcastle. l l Attention liiris! OTTAWA. June l6 — (GP) -- Thers were 07 single male Can- adians making more than 0100.000 a year in 1946. Married men who earned more than that numbered only 42, according to figures tab- led in the Commons today for A. M. Nicholson (CCJH-Maclienzlel. The return showed that. the total incomes assessed were 01529312000 for single and $587,904,000 for married persons last year ss corn- psred with 01.020.146.000 and $2.- 494010000 in 1042. Income tax receipts were 048,702,000 and $400,001,000 compared with 8124,- 000000 and flll.0B2.000. W.» ligam- hun- appeared to , “Communists Break U p Freedosn 0f Speech Plans For Christening Of Car Ferry Announced 700 Hungarians Fight Back In Bloody Brawl SZEG. Hungary. June 1s- (AP)— Nearly~150 Communists, armed with weighted rubber hose. brass knuckles and hatchet-like Hungarian “fokos" broke up a. Szabadasag (Freedom) Party meeting hers today which had been called expressly to determine whether there was freedom of speech and assembly in Hungary. Kn a bloody brawl, during which approximately 700 resentful Hun- garian men and women fought back. with their fists and wooden chairs-and even pushed one Com- munist out of a. second floor win- dc-lv-an undetermined number of persons was injured. There was one official report, however, that five Freedom Party supporters were sent to a hospital with serious head wounds from the heavy, long-handled “fokos". Thirty grey-clad policemen who u-crc assi-gnefi to watch the meet- ing, held in the second-floor ball- room of the Tisza Hotel here, rushed in with rifles and broke up ‘lhr- fight-after it definitely had been won by the Freedom Party. —-and declared the meeting ad- Jourhed. Then. 500 policemen dispersed approximately 15,000 persons stand- ing in the square facing the hotel. Numerous small fight; broks out in the square and, in o. numbu of instances. pollfle smashed their rifle butts into the faces of those who refused to move back at the Open Me Local Restaurant Owner Speaks At Halifax Meeting HALIFAX. June l6 _ (C?) - Nova Scotla lvd "on s very pre- zarihs rcwwmg," lndusty Mais- ter Harold C'm~.o11y told the Mar- itmr- crrflerrnce of the Crnsd an R-i~u‘"nt Aaxviatlor. here to- nigitt Whle pravincnal revenue last. year was 822000.000, about 18.- 000000 came from liquor profits and 11f these profit-s declined to $4.000.- 000 thc Provincial Government would have a deficit, he said, The ltLnislry urged that Nova Scntiflns cfferlrzg hoaplfalty to tourl=ts should provide good fo:cl and lodg n95. He said the Government did not vsnnt to spend money for tourist HFlVPTllSlEg and then have the vis- . .tu" overcharged. “You must. give your tourist vai- ue if you svant t; make him a re- peat customerj’ Tcm Whit.- c! Glmrloitetflln, who urged establishment of a san- xtzry (‘Odo for restaurants, opened the nroeting by describing pros- pvctive innovations in the trad: He predicted future cooking by 1n- ft-a-red rays and plastic and fro- prcof paints for restaurant flcors and furniture NEW YORK. June 16 - (AP) .. An unprecedented sit-down of C. I. O. seamen immobilized ship- ping at many United States ports today and John W. Gibson. assist- ant secretary of labor, sped hers from Washington in an effort to end the stoppage quickly, Gibson, assigned to the dispute by Labor Secretary Lewis B. schwellenbach. hoped to meet both sides within a short time. Joseph Curran. president of the National Maritime Union. largest of the five Unions involved, laid that almost ‘100 ships were tied "no-contract. no-work” by Union leaders. Curran said M0 of the affected strips were in east coast ports and predicted that the national total would lump to negotiations with ts ken ‘ panics were unsu _ (Continued oniPagc o¢1;__s__»_, up in the dispute. Jabcllsd a "strike" by the operswrs and s IWDPIIQ .000 IGOR l! fldlib Freak J. Taylor. president of Meeting COUNTESS JAILBD Convicted of collaboration tvlth the Germans during the occupa- tion of France. Countess Marie Tcherntcheff, shown here, was sentenced by the Paris special court to two years‘ imprisonment. fined 200,000 francs (about $2.000) and had one-third of her property confiscated. The Russian-born countess once was a model and 111m scuttle...“ an.- . -; 51;; ' - ._I_.,.4.-d. .;'.— Dominion Fox Breeders eting Here The first day of the annual meet- ing of the Canadian National Fox Breeders‘ Association concluded with a banquet yesterday evening to the directors or! me Association at the Charlottetown Hotel with Mr. W.M. Mellish, Sumtmerside. presiding. ~ The banquet was tendered by the Canadian Bank of Commerce. Present were His Honor Lieut- Govemor J. A. Bernard. Mayor B. Earle MacDonald, Mr. R.S.P. Jar- dine, manager of the Charlotte- town branch Canadian Bank of Commerce; Mr. W. B. Gordon. superintendent of the Bank's act- ivities tn the Mairitimes and Now- foulnclland; and Mr. W.M. Black- stop, Halifax, who will soon succeed Mr. Gordon as superintendent. Liana-Governor Bematd gilve an interesting address on the origin of the fox industry in Prince Edward Island. sketching its devvlonnlsni from a small lJQBlKUIJITIS l0 a timid" on lgageflb Colfbyt Dlaim World Record For Australian 00w NEW YORK. June 16 -—(('P) -—The Austrulntl News and ln- formation Bureau rcpnrlvi induv that a (cw owned by thk Vnto - isn Depmtmtnt or Agrirulurr prctiucvrl .0,103 pound; of mil‘: and 777 poundg of butnrlnt .n fll days - a world record, lis owners claim. The cow. a R 4| Poll. was tzatcd by the Stati- R '- saarch Farm at Werrlbee. mm‘ Melbourne. ths American Merchant Marine Institute and chief negotiator" for east and gulf coast operators. said reports indicated that sea- men were aboard the ships but idle. l-fs termed the stoppage a “p u r e, s i m p 1 e , unadulterated strike." Just before Gibson's assign- ment was announced. two Federal conciliatora said that. further mediation sessions between Union and operator representatives here had been postponed indefinitely. Curran's instructions. effective last midnight when the unions‘ contracts with shlpowners expir- ed. directed the seamen not to sign-on or slil vessels but said "all crews should remain aboard as long as possible." Union spokesmen said that if the mm were put off the ships. operators would be blamed for a “lockout? Picketim is not to be conducted ll 10H] ll blll III are on the ships. ~ rb-‘fi-dsxercise-"dcw Cabaclplon Delivered 06.00. IaII-MotharProvhcasJILl-l-lI-I i LIN CONFERENC Would i; First Step To World Peace , By D, Har0ld OMvQ WIASI-IINGTON, June 16 4A?!‘ --iienry A. Wruiace called on: Prcszdtm 'l'ruman tonight to invite Premier Stalin to meet vrith him in Berlin as a “first step" to gimmick- tee unrlcl peace. "We must be practical," said thl ("lllvf (‘T1110 of lhe Truman foreign lmlliil’ "The time has come to sub- slilute a get-practical’ policy for the Dulles-Vandeltberg ‘got-tough’ policy." The former vice president cabinet officer who now Ls editing ihn Nwx Republic mad-c his re- marks in a Spvcscll at the govern- mcnl-ovned Vvntergate amphi- theatre. Eflorls by the Aimerican anti-Ccmnnuzist Association to get a Ccurt order barring him from the Amphitheatre failed ea/rlic-r in the dav. (tIiOO-word address Wal- 1. Declared “there will be l. new party. even if it has 1J0 chance of election success in 1948," if bob“. parties “insist in pursuing the present suicidal course toward war and depres- sion." llo dicl not say that hs would lend such a party. 2. Urged, as another “first step" toward eventual disarma- ment, that the United Ststu propose a “complete ban" f"! international traffic in Wei?- .ons oi’ war. ~~~ — 3. Suggested that the ad- ministration and Democratic Party lend a campaign to nat- ionalize domestic munitions in- duurics. “The people should. w» we. control our annulment! plans." , a. Called on thQ Pwdi what. he called “positive” pm- grams on hausiljggnhyealtli. 9035M Cancun and other lesislfilvn- Wallace appeared under tbs sponsorship of the Southern 0on- fercnce for Hwman Welfare. The House of Representation committee on un-Amerioan activit- ies, which called the conference a. "Communist. front ome-nlzotlon." said in acivmlce that it. planned to have "observers" at the scene. Wallace and Clark Foreman. con- 7c<5€£l§uE<§TTPE geTOBfi-T‘ i l btiPPoti 4 Ilium Ynolcssuolists; vusr or. SBTISHD! . ‘ulfu (hi: mu enum- 9 TORONTO Juno 16-— Maxi- mum and minimum temperat- , ul-es. VMICJllVI“. 55, 61'. Edmon- ‘lon 48. '75: Rclrinn 46, '71; Winni- l ‘ifotvton 4-i. pep 56. 63; Toronto 50, '11; Ot- tawa 52, 68: Montreal 55. 64; Qucbrr 48_ 54; Saint John 45. 62' 60: Halifax 52. '7 “‘T‘!O\\'l"l 50. R5; sydney 42,. Yarmouth 4ft, 60. HALIFAX. June l6 - (0P7 —- "Wcethrr synopsis and official ll- Shipping Is Tied Upi In Many U. S. Portsl ‘early in the morning. lnnri fol-cores": issued by the Do- nrnlon Publr Weather Office at xxrrlniclil. icmahi. Synopsis: 1n lite northern sov- iion of the Mariiimcs it was cloudy most of Monday but in the southern section lhe sky cleared Tempera- tures rose above '10 in Southern 'Nova Scniia and were nearly l! high in Prince Edlvard Island but in the Gabi)" rrfllml "if 111811 Y"! the day was in the fifties. ‘I111 cflsturbance responsible for the cloud in the. norihcm section i| moving norihenstward out o! tho an]: and on Tuesday dry air from ilw west will rover most o! m» dlsfrlri and dive fine weather ihrouahnui Eastern Canada. Forrwastfl. valid until Tuesday midnight. Prince Fxiward Island: Vari- rblo cloudiness with much the same temperatures. LlRht Windl- Hlgh ‘Pnesday at Charlottetown 68. mob tide Ills mmmtll‘! U! EU and tonight at 10.05. Sun sets this evening st 7.0 and ‘rises tmnmrow morntrg at. C13. New moon Ame 10h. 4.3 P. M. Bumnmsdde tide eighteen do- uics later than Chsrrlottewm l l l i i .~'.'=. " f,‘ *1 ‘ ‘~='..-.~;-.:: f. 5a»