MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN A picture is I dumb poem. by r A in l'.l.l. 88.00. other Provinces . Oharlottetnwn. Hummer-side Ill.” per eonnrn. Elsewhere and 0.8.; 812.00 per annular.) Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. -CANADA. MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 1953 EIGHT MEN ABOARD MISSING LANCASTER RESCUE MAXI MS OTA MERE MAN ojju Knowledge is pnweo 14 PAGES Joyful Reunions .Maric Return OF PrisonersiA-0-W-W-iieliigates Visit Canadians Want To Forgei ii Ever Happened (By Joe Mocsween, Canadian Press Staff Writer) VANCOUVER. (CP) - Eleven Canadian prisoners-of-war who .vant to forget "it ever happened" arrived here Saturday from Tokyo. Typical of the group's reaction in their first glimpse of Canada in many months was the remark if Pia. Bernard Jewer of New Waterford, N. S. outwardly laconic as he stroll- Pd away from the plane, Jewer was quick with a smiling reply when a bystander yelled "you don't look very happy." "Maybe I don't look it, but I sure feel it," said the little Cape anion soldier, who lost 30 pounds while a prisoner of the Reds. Reluctant To Talk A number of the men were re- luctant to talk about their ex- 1lel'i9liCBS as prisoners. The arrival was by far the lamest of returning Canadian 3nlV's so far. and was headed by End. Lieut. C. G. Owen of North Vancouver, whose allm, blonde rife waited at the aircraft ramp with their two small children. The lieutenant, who had been isied as missing until a week ago -mileti as he left the plane and ;.-.ihoi-rd his family into his arms. Arriving with the soldiers was sill Boss, veteran Canadian Press var correspondent who has re- mrted the Korean fighting and . 3 i Visiting Captain B. L. at Cape Tormentlne before -rmisiltte scene since the first "75ntinued on page 5 col 3) Coming Events "Danna. sb..Golu&,o;IniivgflIuare-i lay, September lrd. "Barn dance Hermitage school "uesday. September let. and Captain Cousins. Higher Court On "Regular Dance in Morell Hail Iinight. Munroe's orchestra. "Dance st. Peter's Bay Holy Name Hall Tuesday. But-ns' Or- choatra. "l7enner'l regular barn dance liiosdny night. Good music. Can- lrirfl service. Bus leaving I.M.T. 0.30. "show Monell Hall Tuesday ”show Boat". This is one of the lies: pictures of all time. ”Dance at Miiivale school Wed- nesday. Sept 2nd. Dancing from nine to one. Lunches served. Murder Qharge PEROE. Que, (OP) - Wibert coffin, 39-year-old Gaspe prospec- tor, settle down in a court house cell here aturday to wait trial next autumn on a murder charge arising from the slaying of Rich- ard Lindsey, 17, Hollldaysburg, Pa. Magistrate Joseph Dumay late Friday ordered Coffin to stand trial after a l2-hoirr preliminary hearing. Monireal Boy "Regular Dance, Bonabaw Inn. Tiiestiny night. Charlottotonians orchestra. . "Provincial Plowing M a t c h: Handicraft booth has been doubl in size. "Dance in Oovehead and stan- hnpe Community Hall Wednesday. Shirt. 2. in aid of ball. sale of luiichrs. "List your name at my office for --iislom combining with an up-to- iaie machine. Phone S-2. 1:. J. llacDougall, Vernon. "Buying live fowl Tuesday. 8 A. M. till noon. Highest market nricrs. R. 1.. Dlckieson. New Glas- ;Zrilt'. ':Prnvincial Plowing Match and hair. Dundas Sept. 28 and 24. Write W prize list. Albert Acorn. secre- 'M1l'. Cardigan an. 5. "it's Results that count-Am WW car of Master Feeds has ni1'li'ed Prince Edward Island Fur P001 Ltd. Summers:-in. Phone Ed Casrly. Feed Department, mi. "Come and bring your friends '0 Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic at Eldon Hall on Thursday. Sept. 3'11 between l:30 and 8:30. At. least 100 donors needed. "Provincial Plowing Match: All "P010? plow entries must be mail- Pn in the secretary by Sept. 1'1. Write for prise list. Albert Acorn, ""rtnri'. Cardigan n.n..s. "The Annual Convention of the Women's Christian Temperance Union will be held Wednesday Ilternoon. September and. It Mrs. Gordon MM:Millan'l, Beechwood Pardon. Cornwall. T ecutivs meet- '"K at 2.30 P. M. Box lunch. t"lt's Ruulta that count-Am oher car of Master rem has "lived L. .1. noutcer. cminna It. Emchariotooiown. special prices: 8 Grower .00. Pig Oonoentrate 30- Celt tartar-Grower with izeiim ms: was Dairy ms with "Wren mo. Chick Growing mm or Pellet! uaa. Phone mo. Girl Drowned ODNSTANCE BAY. 0nt.. (C?)- A four-year-old Montreal boy was drowned here Saturday with a 16- year-old girl who tried to save him. Dead aro Ross Caawcll a son of Dr. and Mrs. Lloyd aswbll of Montreal, and Constance Defalco of Ottawa. Mrs. Caawell was rowing her son from a raft while the Defaico girl was swimming alongside. The boy suddenly toppled into the water. Mrs. Caswell Jumped in after him and the girl swam to where the two were struggling. By the time the two brought the boy to the surface. a stiff breeze had carried the boat away. Mrs. Caswell started toward the shore. calling for help. Fred Shaver of Ottawa. reached her ill his mntorboar'but Miss Defalcn and the boy had disappeared. EDINBURGH. (Reuters) - Ai husband's place is in the kitchen right alongside his wife, the eighth International Congress on Home Economics has decided after a week-long conference here. For 40 hours a week. the bread- wlnner can remain safely at his job, but when he is home he has no right and no reason to sit in the easy chair while his wife wears herself out with the house- hold chore. said the conferees. The 1,300 delegates are return- ing home to 46 countries from Edinburgh, where they discussed two main themes: How to free the housewife from the constant drudgery of homo.-making and how to raise the status of hnusewlfery as a profession. The only answer to the first question at the present time Is to enlist husbands and children as helpers, the conference decided. The second question was an- swered with a resolutlonxappeah mg to "all who have influence on public opinion" in show N131 the job of homernaking is no way A.C.W.W. Delegat -v Cousns on the brid several delegates to the Associated Country Women of the g , held in Toronto. These women are amongst the 57 members presently making a Mari- time tour. They were met Saturday by executive and members of the E. I. Institutes three-day visit here. Left .to right are Lady Evelyn do Soysa of Ceylon; Miss Katherine Staley of Meridian. Miss- issippi; Mrs. R. Manning, P.E.l.W.I. staff; Ml's. Astri Glestad of Norway; lVlrs..M. Car- ter, Bethel, Me.: Mrs. J. A. Jarvis, Red Deer. Aiia.; Mrs. M. J. Doyle. President P.E.l. W.I.: Mrs. C. Kingston, Victoria, Australia; Mrs. D. Moser, Gatooma, South Rhodesia; boarding the ferry for a Fhiffwiiiii Aboard Missing In Quebec HALIFAX, (C?) - A plane with six persons aboard is missing in Northern Quebec, Maritime air command announced Sunday. The pontoon-equipped Norseman. owned by Mont Laurier Airways of Roberval. Quc., left Fort. Chimo, just south of Ungava Bay. last Tuesday for Nitchequon, Que, a trading post about 300 miles north nf Quebec City. It has not blen heard from since. Word of ihe plane's disappear- nnce was delayed by poor com- munlcailons. Bad weather held up an aerial search, Two planes were at Seven Islands. Que. and n third at Goose Bay. Labrador, awaiting better visi- bllity. The missing plane carried four passengers and a two-man crew. Their names were not known here. VANCOUVI-lit MYSTERY VANCOUVER. (GP)-Skulls of two unknown children murdered in Stanley Park more than six years ago were examined by a scientist Friday in an attempt at identific- ntinii. No one has ever come for- ward to claim the bodies or to give liiformatlon that would solve the mlirdcrs. 1,300 Delegates Discuss Status Of Housewife inferior to most other orrupallons npen to girls. Another serious problem dis- cussed waa the growing number of wives who are forced by the high cost of living to take out- side jobs. The Earl of Home, Bri- tain's minister of state for Scot- land. described this as "perhaps the greatest of contemporary so- cial problems." Never. be said, in the main guest address to the assembled women. has economic pressure compelled such a direct choice between outside employment and the home. The only solution is increased production on national levels to keep up the standard of living. has declared. The resolution on "rationallzlng housework and making it less on- erous" declared the fundamental element was the wife's capacity to make her husband and child- ren take an active part in house- hold work. Thus they would share In the daily worries of the home and "atihln a true fartilly feeling." ge of S. . Prince Edward Island are Ferry W ; i World conference recently Aliegweit Slightly Damaged Without liisruptiiig Service ; some slight damage was suffer-: ed by the M. V. Abegweit early: yesterday morning when she hiti the side of the pier at Cape Tor-" mentine. There was no interference with the service. however. as nec- essary repairs were being made while the ship was maintaining her regular schedule. It happened when i after leaving Borden at 6:30 she' ran into heavy fog and high seas. There was some damage to the side of the pier, Railway officials had divers and, employees of the Bridge and Build-' lng Department on the job almost immediately and they continued working throughout the day, l Plane Missing , l GASPE, Que. (OP)-The wreckl of a DC-3 passenger plane. miss- ing since March 22. 1062, has been found in the Gaspe peninsula wild- erness, 40 miles from here, it was announced Sunday night. A spokesman for Maritime Cent-I ral Airways of Charlottetown. own- ers of the craft. said it is believcdi there were five persons aboardi when the plane disappeared. Theyl. would be a pilot, co-pilot and three! (Barter's Film Lab.) i :- Convention Opens To-day The annual meeting of the P. E. Island Medical Society opens this; morning, beginning with registra- tions at Prince of Wales College where all the general sessions will he held. Following the offi- cial opening and visits to the ex- hibits a luncheon will be held at the Charlottetown Hospital which Dr. C. W. Burns, President of the Canadian Medical Associa- tion, Professor of Surgery Univ". Bity of Manitoba, and Chief Sur. 3.5”" M WIHMDPK General Hos- Dltal will be guest speaker. Dr. J.i P. Sweeney will pl-gain.-, The guest Sneaker will be iroduced by Dr. W. J. P. Mitc- Mluln. who has represented this ,5:-rovlnce in the Canadian Medical Association for nearly half n can- lury and was honoured at Banft 1"” 3'9" by hilinit made a seniorl member of that distinguished or-i ganization. l Dr. John Downing win hol rhalrman at the afternoon session! which will be addressed by 1)., JA G. MacLean, Saint John, N. B..l and Mr. F. w. Jelks. Dept. of Health and Welfare P, E, island on "Fungus Disease of the skin". DR. Geralti'M. Halpcnny of Mont. '”l W” Sptfnk on "Maiiagomenti .df Constipation". At 8, o'clock in the "GUIDE. lhc President, Dr. .I.I Harold Shaw and Mrs. Shaw will grid an informal reception at; eir summer home at Snnliopei F0”0WinR the blisinoss he held at the P, E, Dital where the he Dix island Hos- Kllcst speaker will A- D- K””)' of Toronto. Dr. E. S. Glddlngs will preside, The afternoon session is scheti. uled for 2.15 p.m. with Dr. .1 K L Irwin in the chair. President Burns of the C.M.A. will again gd.dT”'.'. "15 35-Wmbly. his subject ems Acute Peptic Perforatlons", in be followed by Dr. P. H. T. Thor- -Tci3x7fTu?d't7n.Bair:F?6l -"zi D Chino Sending Field Guns To lndo-Chino 3! Lorry Alien HANOI. Indo-Ohlna. (AP)--China for the first time. is sending lilg field guns lnta Indo-China to help the Oornmunlst-led Vletmlnh. aaya Gen. Rene Oogny, commnndg; of French Union forces in north,” Indo-China. Oogny reported the Vietmlnh now are getting guns of 105-rnllll. meter calibre from the ohlngge, A. far as is known this is the heaviest field piece ever delivered to .the Vletmlnh, although they have used 120 millimetre mortars against French soldiers. Along with the big guns, Conny said. the Vletmlnh also are getting bulldoaers from ihe Chinese. The Vieiminh badly need bulldoaeraito repair supply roads China from destroyed by heavy rrenc bomb- lngs. l mi Vefero”n,iEDe-rho-n l of Montreal Dies p less campers. passengers. p A search party siinday reporledi finding skeltons about the wreckagef which was spotted last Thursday by the pilot of a charter plane op- erated by 'I'ran.s-C-aspeslan Alr- llne of Gaspe. R. W, Goodwin of Moncton. NB., Mllfiltlma diairlcitnir -regulations superintendent for the departmentl of ti'an.spoi't, arrived Sunday ioi start an investigation. Pilot of the wrecked plane was Capt. John McClalchle, 28. oil Cllarlotletown and Ktmora. Onr.l Co-pilot was John E. Boudreau. 20.: of Mnnciou. Passengers, all employees of. Fraser Brace Contractors Ltd. oil Saint John, N. 8., were June; A. Robb, 51, of weatmount, Quc., David Herbert of Rexton. N. B..i and B. A. Kamlnskl, a, German at immigrant newly arrived in Can- ada. The plane. chartered by the coil- tracting company. was bound from Saint John to Goose Bay, Labra- dor. when it disappeared. 4 MONTREAL, (CF) - Christa-l pher Carson. 83, former director. of the Montreal fire depnrtmenm died in hospital Friday night. He' took' over direction of the depart- ment in 1932 when lW. l. Province Over Week-End l Associated Country Women oil the World touring the Maritimcsi following their triennial confer- ence in Toronto arrived in Prince: Edward Island late Saturday) afternoon aboard the S. S. P. E. I. They were greeted in Cape Tor-i mentinc by Proiiinrial preside-nl.i Mrs. M. Doyle of .'V'ni'lh RllSll(lO;i Supervsor Miss M. Rolilu;! assistant supervisor Mrs. R. Man-i ning; W. I. staff member Missi Rosemarie Brown; members nil Borden and Carleton Siding In- stitutes and press repi'e.senliitlves.' The women who are trnvellln,1 together aboard two buses, rel)-i resent England, Scotland, Wales,i Ir:-land. Ceylon. Southern Rhod-I esia, Norway, Australia, New Zen-5' iann. llalii, the United Slates nndi Canada. For all of them, this is. their first visit to the Marilimos.l Because the buses were delayed Find Wreckage Of M.G.ll. l i since 1952 9 Harris Expecled To Be Gov'i l House Leader ! OTTAWA. (CF) Citizenship, Minister Harris is expected to be named government House leader in the Commons for the 22nd Par- liament. expected to meet in' November. l Appointment of the 49-year-old, lawyer to the post. probably willl be announced soon by Prime Min-I ister St. Laurent. Mr. I-Ian'ls will succeed I-Ion.l Alphonse Fournier. former minis- ter of public works, who directed the day-to-day business of thel Commons during the last Parlin-I ment. The post became vacant when Mr. Fournier retired from the cabinet and was appointed al puisue judge of the Exchequer: Court of Canada. I Mr. Harris, a major in the Can-i ndlan Army during the Second World War, won't be going into, his new job cold. I-le frequently; (cRinDii'&iD6h pa El-f'?'c?ilTl in New Brunswick. the party spent only a few minutes in Sum- mersidc seeing the new Federal building. They arrived in Tyne Valley about 6:30 where they were warmly greeted by members of the Tyne Valley and Port Hlil lnslilulcs. (ipeals At Slipper At Britannia Hall, the visitors ate a chicken supper. The hall was decorated by the ladies with flags of the countries which the fif'lCERiCS represented. Tables were ExpetlSuez -- Agreement in September, By ZEIN NAGATI , CAIRO, (AP)-A British-Egypt iaii agreement on Suez, which may grant the Western powers avail- ability of the giant base along the Suez canal in case of war. is ex- pected tn be reached late in Sep- tembcr. a high official source said Sunday. The informant. said Egypt and Britain may reach a decisive stage in their long-standing dispute ishnrtly after the return from Lon- don nf Lt.-Gen. Sir Brian Rob- ertson, Britain's top negotiator. The informant confirmed an earlier report that all outstanding points of difference have been thrashed out during inform-al talks which have been going on since July 30. Nfld. EZii-J71: Open on Schedule er. JOHN'S. Nfid.. (cpl..Naw. foundlzind public schools will re- the epi- denilc. The provincial health depart- ment announced Saturday, how- ever. that family contacts of vic- time will be barred from schools for 21 days after a case is discov- cred. The record so far is 101 cases and six deaths this season. No new cases have been reported in the last three days. worst polio ,Heat Records Broken Many Places In The US. I CHICAGO. ICPJ-The sun brnii-it ed the United States from the Ctllll states to the East Coast Sunday. breaking heat records in many, cities. Only the Rockies and lhcl far west escaped the sizzling tom-1 peratures. 5 The sun melted two Chicago heat l, Chief Raoul records as the temperature SO:lrEdlb9lPl'C the end 01 "10 Gauthier lost his life along with 31 to 96.1. That reading broke a i'ec- iC1l1CRlZ0 HmbUlR"0” secutive day when teh temperature rose to 06 degrees or higher break- ing a record of five such consecu- tive days set in 1911. At. the Chicago White Sox-New Yni-k Yilnke85' baseball double- header in Comiskey park 25 fans were treated for heat IDFOSUBUOYI first game. and rescue other persons in a fire and explns--ord for the date--95.7 degrees seti-Vllllifl-5 510119 hlndled 38 M595 hf ion on the Montreal waterfront. 1115 Foreft Fires Break Out In North l TORONTO. (C?)-More than l.ri , nu-oi.-i ooo firefighters armed with planss.' 3;” ""1 V131” l” ”l” Pxllihild On; helicopters and bulldozers ””d"Y m0minR II Iunvltcntl Willi 115 f-oi-est fires raging across he tinder-dry woods of Northern, On-, iario Sunday. lnl , Lands nild-forests officials said 22 'went along with them for the l'l(lC.il)llbbl('(i sit l0l. bllcaklnil of the fires are out of Three persons have been fighting the olitbrealta. I Hot. dry weather and a series of lightning storms are blamed for the majority of blazes. But offic- ials said "loo high a number" of the fires have been started by care- control. i killed I The most serious outbreak is re- ported in the Mccnllum township area north of North Bay. The fire, believed started by woods travellers at a portage. is burning over a 1.600-acre swatch of.mixod timber. In addition to the more than 1,000 woodsmen and fire rangers battling the fires. forestry offic- ials said 15 planes equipped for water-bombing. 'three helicopters and "dozens" of bulldosers have been pressed into service. The de- partment issued an emergency call Saturday for aid in quelling 63 fires reported in the Pembroke- Sudbury-Norih Bay districts. Officials said general forest con- ditions in the districts have im- proved during the last 24 hours but that it would be "three or four days before the danger would be past. Woods operations in most of the fire areas have been suspended to allow workers to join the fire- fighters. Two men and a boy were killed; Friday night when a plane being; in 1925. It also was the sixth cor.-i ern Ontario li:eO(TiVn--llzvirlii-l'lllrl7i)TPBKS in Algon-, qulii Park rrashecl in the bush. Roy fou lillnnn-ling, 43, the pilot. of Cobdrufni 926 srt in 1921. Five Ont.. Leslie Boolll of lluntsvilie and Sault. Ste. Marie, and 14-yr: d Murray Bulmcr ni Cobdrii. iviio perished in the crash. i persons overcome by the heat in a 24-hour period. New York reported a sizzling 95.9 ft! 3:05 pm. New York's reading set, the second consecutive record for the date. Saturday's 100 also had set a record. New England boiled. Boston's iPlllpPl'8llll'e hit 98, selling a record for the date. The old record was 93 set in 1801. Hhl'll0rd. Conn, hit .07, topping the Aug. 30 record children have been riiioiviicd ill Connecticut slucc l”l'i(iR)'. in Richmond. Va.. the mercun a record sci in 1932 for the date. Blame Hot Weather For Attendance Dip At Fain; By Jim Peacock Canadian Press staff Writer 'n)RoiNTO. (GP) - Attendance look a dip at the Canadian Na- tional Exhibition Saturday andt ONE officials blamed it. at least. partially. on the brolllng 90-degree heat. The iiirnstiles clot-kt-d 267,500 persons through the gates Satur- day, Warrioi's' Day, 14.000 off last, year's second-day figure. l But the warriors, veterans of some dozen wars. who highlighted the day's many events, apparently paid little heed to the weather. Men and women 34.500 strong from the United States and Call- ada. paraded for 2 l-2 hours through the grounds, strutting in review before Field Marshal Vis- count Montgomery. The British field marshal. ap- pearing fresh and smiling through- out. took the aalulo while 30,000 watched from the ONE grand- stand. Forty hands. headed by H:-r tr-niinllcsdgriigs of -l-nentand worn- cn, were on parade. Montgomery speaks Viscount Montgomery. who made a special trip to Canada to offic- ially open the 76th annual CNE. earlier had told a luncheon meet- ing of war veterans that the great- est. single factor in lhe world is strength-religious. moral. eco- nomic and military. Then. in n jeep. he personally led the war- riors' parade before 200,000 lining the exhibition streets. dlsmounting in take the salute in front of the grandstand. Another of the primary War- ririra' Day events saw 38 Canadian air cadets defeat the defending United States civil air patrol corps ln' the tnlemational air cadet drill competition. aci-oaa the country. followed Richard J. Chalmers, in. of win- Majeaty's Royal Welsh Guards. and I ,.”(?litiili1.llCalDl'i plscqib-.Do7o'l."TD The Canadians, hand-picked froitln t e orders of commander air cadet W0. The Guardian. Five Canto Morning Daily Founded 1Bl'I. Hand Minor Signal Caught By Searcllflane I CI-IURCHILL. Man. (C'Pi--Th brilliant flash of e hand mirroi Saturday marked the end of i week-long air search for an RCA! Lancaster bomber lot in northern M itobn. The crew of eight, in n d only of a "hot bath. a steak is a rest” was brought here Sun- da . A twin-engined Dakota aircraft from the search and rescue com- mand at Winnipeg made the dis- covery while covering an area about 132 miles northwest. of Churchill The Lancaster last reported to Churchill by radio late Aug. 22, from 85 miles north of the base. it was headed south on the second leg of a routine navigation flight out of Rockcliffe. Ont. The radio report said the air- craft was flying in a heavy elec- trical storm but gave no indication of mechanical troublu. The RCA? said in Winnipeg sun- day that the plane was forced down by mechanical difficulties and weather. The pilot and crew elect- ed to stay with the ship because of the dangers involved in living ii: rugged northern country withoul necessary equipment. Crashed In Storm The crash landing was made in a storm. not long after the last report to base. The plane came down on tundra-type terrain and ended its slide in a shallow lake. The only member of the crew in- jured in the belly landing was F0. A. R. Gossel. of Granum. Alta, slightly injured in a flash fire. Also aboard the Lancaster were: The captain. F0. 'l'. E. R. Steam- ers of Antigua, British West Ind- ""'(cXntinuedDoAii-p-iiEE7To'l'4')-" K MM is cur we Hunts -taouau: ABRoAo I-lhs i-tum AT HOME 9 i TORONTO, (GP) -Minimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Max. Dawson x..... 84 61 Victoria. .. 63 '71 Edmonton 56 63 Calgary .. 54 73 Reglila 5) 83 Winnipeg . 65 at Toronto 70 9': Ottawa . G5 91 Montreal '72 Ml Quebec , M all Saint John . . . M '1'! Moncton 55 p 86 Halifax . M '18 Charlottetown .. 66 '70! Sydney . .. .. .57 76 Yai-mouth . .. .... .. 58 79 St John's. Nfld. . 50 53 HALIFAX, (CF)-The Weath-l Office says very warm air covers the Maritimes. At Yarmouth the Sunday maximum temperature of 79 sot a new record for 'the dale. ll”ltFfiOl'lClfJn had a temperature of ,9i. 5 A disturbaiico in central Que- bor moving eastward will cruel Newfoundland Monday night and cooler air will flow into the Mari- times. Ahead of it. there will be a few showers and a slight chance of a. thunderstorm. Regional forecasts: s Prince Edward Island. outer: New Brunswick oounttes. lows! Saint John river valley: sunny and very warm clouding over In the afternoon: a few showers Monday evening: west winds ll: low-high at Charlottetown 62 and M. Mone- Inn and Fredericton 65 and I0, saint John 80 and 80. Upper Saint .lohn River Valley Bay of chaleur: Variable cloudi- ness: a few showers during the morning: cooler: west winds lb: low- high at Edmundeton and camp- bellton 60 and 75. Bay of Fundy: Light winds in- creasing Monday morning to south- west 15; fog patches; increasing cloudiness followed by I few show- ers in the evening; visibility iii miles lowering to near zero in fog patches; temperature in the six- ties. High tide today at Charlottetown at 2.44 A. M. and 4.06 P. M. High tide today at the North Shore at 11.10 A. M. and 10.40 P. M. summerelde tide eighteen min- uiea later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 5.38 A. M. and sets at 6.53 P. M. . j ”.--r--J... -r-.-.3:-.7--r--' i