or A A CMERE MAN A;- ssssslssloewolsarssssslm. “NIX!!! o Gesrllelhetieste. OMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH AT SCSIDE Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 194s rybody New York Faces Grim Food, Fuel Shortage Barracks Fire Takes 2 Lives I 'l'hs Canadian Press) Men. Feb. l- ‘rwo men died in a barracks but Ire early today at the base ramp of Exercise Moskox, iii miles north of ere. names will be made known later by Army authorities. The fire is believed to have started from an overheated all stove, sweeping through éhe plywood and tea-paper ullding Dsmaguwes sstlesetell at more 01.000, including ‘llllflliflu and supplies in the ll s For fighters cl‘ Iixerche Isis: battled thgk flames in ZI-below west wind spreading the flamu. tron-r- xrrlrsit rllrllur mitmrn- ...___ HALIFAX, Feb 8 -—- (OP) -_ Jamcs Robert I-lutt. 88-year-old lightkeeper st Nichol Island, a- long the Nova Scotia coast off Sheet llarbOi’. died Saturday fol- lowing injuries received when he tripped Saturday and a shotgun he was carrying discharged. Roy- af Canadian Mounted Police offic- gills‘! said an inquest would not be e . Coming Events "Brackleyvs. Milton at Milton tonight. Game at Mo. Skate ‘all: " okinole Party, Pownal Gar- age all, Monday, February 11th. Auspices ‘Y. P, U. 24-11. "Gerda-l Seeds. All the latest and best varieties. Send for free 1946 Catalogue. Arthur Vessey, York. "Loading Hog»! at Vernon for Davis k Fraser. Thiesdfi’ after- noon, February 5th. Ed clson. "Hockey, at New Glasgow Rink tonight. Brookfield vs. New Glas- gow. Game starts at 8.15. skate after. 24-11 "Receiving at Crapau for gglvis & Fraser B ., every ues- Olirn. R. N. Dawson. 12-15-tf. “Swifls Baby Chicks estimate your chick requirements for the com season. I am now booking orders. Signed Joseph Trainer. St. Teresa's. 2-1-4-6-31. "Buying pigs Monday at Fred- ericton, Tuesday l1 am. Charlotte- town Market Square; 1 pm. York. (Ii roads open tor trucks.) Knud Joraenaen. 2-4-11 "Ho: Social and Dulce, Cove- head Community Hell, edneads . February 0th, fin aid oi new Rin . Good music witl Charlie Glam- berlaln entertaining, . 2-4-21. "Loading l-iogs for Davis and lh-aaer, Albany and vicinity; also Emerald, Friday, February 9th. Phone collect. A. C. Green, Albany. or G. C. Green. Emerald. 1-5-M-W-lf. i '.'.i‘"‘i°.°°§" ."“'wl.'"“ hi“ Ca ng o g a tshre, r - stock to our local agents. 24-11 "Livestock Marketing Board dllkhOgd at summeraide Tues- 1‘. . th, until one o'clock p. It. Kensington until 2.80. Markets strong, returns in line, so bri us Nur hogs and cash in on w t'a lOing. I-d-li "Livestock Marketing Scard 10a hogs at Hunter River "fly on afternoon end ‘lues- mm lily until tra time. ser- Yite a“ uest. winner: ns clml. u Oresweli. cool-con pidatheeonAnn: . si- "vhdlv. Incense‘; fildarll-‘lrrigw gt until fl-ltfivllflmtidd.hq.fl0t£ Oil axullllzlsflgdtsulllglsgffilmln ‘El: ‘ll-ion to high market price. Oome I one of us. Livestock lcerd. "Rog breeders adlecnt Ober- mhwhm %e:te: We have no ‘-="*"‘:'."'~,....ul"? ‘seams out. ass slnsvolll‘ can't heir it Livestock "M1.'."ci£ m‘: 1.00.5090‘ osu wllsis ' i m. e t NIWYO.RK,rbb.I-(AP)_ NevwYorkflityhelpectediobe without the indie of m its aunt is l will" mfi at . AM. w metropolis face the grim ospeet of fuel and load shortagesmcrl an un lleled . bout 8.500 workers who the 1 local ssc, United . which is in dug‘? wlul t hinge. and l c Withtmmolcrbargea tugs e boatinacoestelarr extending (flail Sandy H N to New Haven, Conn. cease to move because o! lock of low pager Willi am ODWYII est t tary District N d, aied that l0 per oent of the egg‘; M“ coo u? m’ b’ Hill Comma of 11kt; ftood would be out off by the and other fuel and near we u. Only troopships — , eerviccd by army tugs — railroad-owned tugs by tzw oil lee are ecied to useo the llityl; main A 40-hour instead of a 48-hour weekhasbeerlesksdbytilellnicn Ius an increase in hourly rates of ‘L5H i0 $1.5 from $1.10 to $1.40 i: icensed pemonnel and a rise h 1 l th t U7 to 7:111!’ ygay, rem e curreu _ a flat e130 for unlic nnel d perso . mgr offer of IO-Oefifiill-hbllghi- . mo. e — quickly rejected by the Union. . l. S. Prcmlar Comments 0a Dttaws Conference (ll The Canadian Press) AX, Feb. 3—Premier An- gus L. Macdorlald oi Nova Scotia returned to the Provincial 0a ital tonight from the Dominlom. ov- incliiall flier-once in Otte we. e mler said there still were points that had not been ironed out satisfactorily. These matters will be studied during the next two months and Premier Macdon- G aid stated that should satisfactory arrangements be reached, there would be a good possibility of an agreement at the next Donlinion- Provincial meeting in April. Feud May Ba Cause Df Double Slaying PELLBROKE. Onto Feb. 3 -— (c?) -- Dazed and downcast, Th0- mas Gibbons, towering, 03-year-old bachelor farmer of Renfrew, Ont., tonight was held 1n jail here on a murder charge arising from the double slaying of two brothers in s lung-standing feud over the use of a rural laneivay. The brothers were John Iidwerd FitzMaurice. S5. and Joseph 83. shot and killed Friday with a Win- chester repeating rifle on the lone- ly roadway in dispute when they halted their team oi horses and of- fered to help Gibbons get his car out of deep snow. Gibbons who telephoned police and reported the crime. was ar- rested and held on a charge oi murder at Ranfrew until Saturday afternoon. l-le was arraigned be- fore JPA. Devine. justice of the peace, and remanded a week. Later he was transferred to the County Jail ~at Pembroke where he will appear next Saturday before Judge PM. Galligah. chattin will a reporter in his Renfrew ail cell before he was ar- raigned, Gibbons referred in a nlrnbll conversation to some "trouble he had with the bro- thcri, but did not amplify the re- mer . Nigbbors, however, said there had been a long-standing feud be- tween Gibbons and the brothers over the use oi the lanewey vnlich ran through Gibbons to a woooiot owned bv the yI. The tanner ‘ibjeoted to the brothers using the roadway while they. in . inisted it was the only way iheycould reach their property. Irate Wednesday" com- mned to police at the brothers pmybeen respalsiug on his pro- I3 Aged Persons Burn To Death In Cl tel hen .°...,.‘"*- ....'~" - 3°13‘. 0 I swept J marl Oghtilliwllcgem t e aged in suburban d Ba rose to 1| today ea ohn etere in 86-year-old occupant, ed of ' till alli- F""l.'.:.'t.r"",l,,."' that". .. powerfu. stubby boats mhedulew wet off their Jobs tor lnidn t in a strike celled by Marine Division. International Longlhcrenlenk As- the cial Premiers back in their ca - Quebec Command. G00 M or- General ling. Rcenaud. QB. O E. offices from tandem, and Agricui adieu 'Army Photo) E. P. Cppenheim, Famous Writer 0i Spy Stories Dies _fore any healt insurance measure é. 81'. PIPER. PORT, Channel Islands, Feb. 8 - (OP) - 3.‘. Phillips Oppenheim, popular fiction writer for move than half a century, died in his sleep today at his home here. l-le was 79. Tlhe famous author of spy thrill- ers, mystery and society adventure books had been ill for- Wbeks ago be suffered a stroke and he had several oiiilcrs put slackcned ‘d homes on the Riviera and the Channel islands, he had been turning out books at the rate oi three or four a year from the beginning of the century. Mr. Oppenheim attributed his career as a writer to a custom his Inaugurated oi requiring each child lc write a story to be read on Christmas Eve in prize going to the author of the one voted tile best by the family. At the age oi 13 Mr. broke his father's winning streak. Born in London, Oct. 22. 1066. Mr. Oppenheim received only Leicester where his father had a leather business. Though he sold his first short story when he was la and h's first novel two years Oppenheim managed the family business until he was 4o while writing scores of novels "on the side‘ before he started his full-time literary career. Mr, Oppenneim had written more than 150 novels of dctecticn and intrigue in addition to many short l! suchnbeat-sgiiers as " charge of the Dominion Pubic Saturday. times daily, will be prepared for a number of areas of the Bay 0i Fundy. the Gulf of St. Lawrence a and the Atlartic adjacent to Nova Scotia. In this way. it was el- pained, fishermen and mariners in each locality would have avail- able a forecast for their own pair- ticular area. The forecasts will be ‘broadcast and distrbuted to Mar- itime newspapers. ermen will be provided through a system of storm warnings when winds of lid-miles per-hour or high- Cl‘ were expected. "Murder at Monte Carlo" (1932) and "The Lost Train (1941). 5,000 quuris of nltro-glycerine to iinnic wcll No. 2 in Turner Valley TO\\'. Three Children Are Asphyxiatsd sivc-onc of the most powerful known —was completed Saturday, but other details, including the loading oi‘ the firing gun, hrid to be worked out. ~ . After 24 hours of delay, it was announced tonight the blast would be set of! between 11 am. and noon, E.S.T. tomorrow. ‘IOHDNTO. Feb. I - Three children were asphyxiated Ln their East Toronto home last ni ht when fire burnt a cheater- livi De d n! are Morris McGratn. 4 1- tilree and Patricia. two. ‘AITIONOMICAL TOWN” "rejuvenate" the well and perhaps the Turner Valley oil fields, the largest producer in Canada. 'MOIOOW, o An "astronomical town," consist- ing of ler e observatories and oth- ar ectablie merits for astronomical research, is among settlements on whlcglnccnstruction n ut the odoviet Unio tilts reported today. Canadian Zoldisrslwers charged in court here Saturday with stealing a“ large quantity of merchandise bert Military Camp, near here, Jan, 5. A Truro merchant, Casein I-Iarb, was char d with receiving stolen goods. l cases were l\- mended until Feb. I. M ky, Sgt. Murray nldugte. John A. Lund, were mem- bers of the Debert Camp Fire De- eveland ‘Fire roglirlvivora agreed that the fire d quickly within a few min- after the 133d of en exp s- hoes was eatlma ‘e ‘iRallllway Wharf Repairs Tender Is Awarded To Original Contractors Preparing For Next Session * Journlment until April and provin- ltals, Prime Minister King and is cabinet will begin this week their task oi drafting legislation fcri the next session Justice Minister St. Laurent and oi Trade and Commerce Minister MacKinnon have returned to their ture Minister Gardiner and Secre- tany of Sta'e Paul Martin are ex- pected shortly. ‘llhe conference with its indetc - minute ending makes it unlikely that the Government will ask Par- liament to pass a health insurance measure next session. Provincial agreement is a first essential to a bll of this kind, and as yet the provinces are far from unanimous on matters o! public health. More- over, the Canadian Medical Assoc- iation has asked ihat it be kept fully lnlform and consulted be- is put, before the commom. One of the early measures of the next session of Parliament will be the Canadian Citizenship Bill which is i0 be iniroduced b Sec- retary of State Martin. So a.r all groups have given approval of thb principle of the bill which creates a new Canadian citizenship with- out prejudice to the righa of a Canadian as a British subject. An~ ticipating the bill, organizations in many ports of the Dominion. notably those where ‘here are large proportions of "new Canadians" are (Continued on Page '1 Col. 8 . —¢Ie-s-~o-e-~,_- — Plan Weather Forecast Service Fcr__Fl_shsrmell HALIFAX. Feb. S -—- (OP) -—'Ik1e Dom nion Public Weather Office at Halifax will inaugurate c new weather forecast service for fish- ermen and other marine industries operating in the coastal waters of , the Maritime Provinces Feb. ll. RA I-Tornstcin, meteorologist in lvelltilel- Oiuce, announced here Forecasts to be ‘issued three Additional safeminrds lo fish- Turner-ila-Il-ayklmi eiayed llnill Today CADGARY, Feb. 3—Exploslorl of be set-off at the bottom of Weill has been postponed until tomor- Loadlng of the dangerous explo- The explosion is designed to Soldiers Charged Wltll Theft At Dabort Camp n Th c ill r rshilo ° émfi-ti‘. snflillm m the Salvation Army at De- The three soldiers, aatggley . on- council has been passed granting authority cept the tender of J. P. Porter and B Montreal, for repairs mprovernenta to the railway This will entail, at unit prices of the tender, an expenditure of the above sfiecc was received on Saturday by M. J Lester Douglas, M.P., from the Alnhonae Fournlsr, Minister inlsterk letter was in ac- h previous announcements that money for this been revoted at the and that tenders had been cal ed with a view to having the work started at the following strong representations the Queen's County members The contract was given to the same Montreal firm whlcn held the original contract. awarded on Jan. 5, 1940 at a total estimated 000. The sum of $150,- sly been votr-d in the Estimates, but on June 25, 194.0, the work was discontinued on the plea cf wartime economy. Six Island Airmen Land AtNew York NEW YORK. Feb. 3 - (OP) — A score of troop trains, their win~ dows ablaze with peacetime lights, high-bJalled out of New York and home 12,000 Canadian fighting men and women who arriv n aboard the liner Queen Elisabe >1 for a glimpse of New York's busy and Manhattalws stately to board waiting trains Prince Edward Ts the troopship incl d Sgt J FM. Gsndet, Mlscouche. Hobbs, Georgetown. NfI‘. MacLeod, Cardigan. Lac. Al. McCarville, 63 Victoria Op , L, Monaghan, Kelly's Cross. Sgt. 11.11.. Whitten, Coleman. News Briefs BOSTON. Eingland, Blob. I — Sir Gordon MacDonald, 91-year-old govemor-desigrlate said Saturday one c-f his biggest jobs will be to pre- pare for the restoration of popular government in the ancient colony. Si! Gordon is leaving his post as {Britain's regional fuel controller and will proceed lo Newfoundland at the end of March. WASHINGTON, Feb 3 —- (Cl?) —Oonadian and United States tourists in greater as motoring. t ain and air facilities the two countries are try g to make the border formalities more than they have been in VATICAN CITY, Feb. 8 — (Al?) -1-Iundreds of trained workmen. are busy giving the Vatican a thor g ough cleaning and preparation for beginning Feb 18. Creamery Butter Stocks Are Down OTTAWA. Feb. 3 - (OP creamenv butter held l ipel cities in Canada on to lied 18,002.56‘! pounds. 39,507,910 gounde .25 m. 1 106, the Dominon Bureau tatistics Nlwrted Saturday. Oheeee stocks Fm. Ihfli - Vlzili Q " CASH FUR BREAD ' CAKCH- PIES ‘COOKIES P. E. I. Premier Speaks At Guelph QUE-PH. ont, Feb. s - (GP)- Premier J Walter Jones of Prince Edward Island tonight told mam. bers of the faculty and students of the Ontario Agriculture College here that the Dominion-Provincial conference was concerned princl. pally with who should have con. ol of corporation and personal income taxes. , "I "link 1i is rumble," he said. ‘that when the conference has concluded corporation taxes will . be Blwnt all over l3anada." Prince Ekivward Island, he said, spent $15 ill tho rest of Canada, principal] Ontario and Quebec, for every lio- lar that P111. received from the other Provinces. The Island had to get the rest of its income from ex- port trade Addressing the annual banquet of the Husbandry Club of the co]. loge, Premier Jones devoted much of his speech to the youth start- ing in agriculture. He sold a mort- nflke on the fann isn't such a bad idea for such a youth. " very 1m you've been iliwllfih COW-Kc will lay you open to suspicion You must make your way in the community If you start with a mortgage and pay it off that will raise the other farmers’ estimation of you. But you'll have to show more modesty than you are showing around O.A.C." A master breeder of holsteln cattle which won $4,800 in prizes at the Canadian National Exhib- ition and Rcvsl Winter Fair in one year, the Premier said that the inbreeding of cattle was not a. dan- gerous practice. as was generally believed. He declared he started 30 years ago with three animals and had carried on his PEI. farm s'nce with only two and a half out-crosses. New California, N-Y-Ccumerilicl Air Record Set NEW YORK, Feb. 3 —- AP) - A coast-io-coast commercial flight re- cord of seven hours, 27 minutes and 48 seconds was set today by a Transcontinental and Western Air Lines Constellation plane on a non-etc flight from lBurbank, e Caliifl, o La. Guardia Fl d me giant airliner, piloted by Jack Frye, president of Transcon- tinental and Western Air, Inc., carried 45 passengers and a crew of seven-a record number of per- sons for a cross-country commer- cial flight The previous coast-to-coast com- mercial flight record was 11 hours and 55 minutes. also set by T-WA. with a stratolinar in July, 1940. We flew at an avers. e s ed oi g He Frye said. "We made it at a maximum of 17,000 feet but our average was between 15,000 to 16,000 feet. The 345 to 350 miles an hour, distance was 2,490 miles." The same plane set an eaabwert commercial record of 10 hours and 40 minutes Friday. On this flight it made a stop at Kansas City. set t flight 26 seconds. Royal Winter Fair To Be liesumed This Year By The Canadian Preset TO ONTO, Feb. 3-'I‘he Royal Winter Fair, suspended during the war, will be resumed in 1046, a] meeting of the fair’: board ol dlr-‘_ ectors decided yesterday. The board set tentative date for the. 194s fall- at Nov. l2 it Nov. 30- Elderiflltlrsons Durll To Death In Log Cabin O'I'I‘AWA I'd). 8 — (W) -—- Tbrec elderly persons, two broth errs and a sister were burned to death last. night in a fire'in their log some i5 cabin near North Gower. milau south of here. Bodies of James Tobin, ‘i0; his bloiiher, Patrick, ‘l8; and a skier. Miss Winnifred, 80, were FIIIY DAMAGE) HALIFAX Nb. S -- (C?) —.A.n ice jam in the Strait of Oanso damaged the Department of High- ways car ferry, it was announced here Seturda" and some repairs will be necessary before the ser- vice between Mulg-reve and Port llawlresbury can be resumed. ughout many other districts of the Province. icv highways have seriously impeded tral ic. 'I'I.U IN BRITAIN LONDON Feb. l-(Ari-The Ilirliltry of 1mm. seld today in- Hruns l fluenaa la more widespread than it has been since i The Min- ie reported I'll in iienne deaths- ln ndon and surroundivl towns is the week ended m. i 8 PAGES A t- r lied P-80 army fighter jeihbp oggtOfd transcontinental time for all types of planes Jan. 26. making the coast-to-coast rim in four hours, 13 minutes and town. Councillor Morrison, chair- mittee, has Issued the explanation west circuit to prevent the steeple end early Canosoctgafs 1945 hm1l2ey the 194 level of 34, 0,000 the Dominion Bureau of S tistice reported Saturday. Crops in On- tario and Quebec were unusually small, accounting for most of ifhe price per pound was cents. com ed with 15 cents in 1944. but he total value of the crop was $4,946,000, six per cent be low 19-14, Average yield per colony was 59 than the vious y l ncaliandtintmeensmorethan llbeoripilon osuvssss lass. usu. use; other mslssss e mas. use. BURN ED Loss ls Estimated More Than $100,000 Firemen Defeated In long Battle To Save Seventy- Year-Did Only the charred hulk remains today of St. Paul's Roman Catholic Church 1n Summersldc. The 70- year-old brick structure was des- troyed yesterday by a fire which broke out about eight o'clock in the morning. Firemen fought a see-saw battle with the flames for about two hours before it aecame evident that tho building was doomed. By eleven o'clock the whole church was s mass of flames and at about 11.40 the l55-fo0t steeple with its large cross top- pled and fell into the body of the church. Only the brick walla now remain standing. Pastor Discovers lire The pastor, lit. Rev. Mrgr. OJ. McLellan, had just begun the first Mass of the day when he smelled smoke near the sanctuary. Two men in ihc congregation investi- gated and found that the furnace room beneath the vestry was llflre. The alarm was immediately turned in and the congregation left the church. All the church vessels and vestments, along with most of the statuary and the new stations of the cross were saved. The value of the building is place at somewhat over $100,000, part1 covered by insurance. A call was sent in for the air- port flre equipment about tcn o'- clock, which arrived and rendered some assistance, particularly with their pressure pump. Two of the hydrants near the church were found to be frozen and othefi at s greater distance had to be used. Fortunately it was completely calm or a whole section of the town might have been destroyed. As it was, clnders lighted on the roof of the Knights of Columbus home and it was TIECCSSSAy to turn water on it. People living in an odlacent house removed their fur- niture. _ Six years ago the exterior of the‘ church was completely renovated and the brick re-polnted and paint- ed and the steeple strengthened. Later the building was completely re-wired and only last summer and fall the interior was beauti- fully re-decorated. The parishioners were ve proud of their fine church an lumps rose in many throats as they watched it being consum- ed in the flames. lt had been intended to have a marble ll- tar of liturgical design install- ed in the near future as a rne- morial to the 29 boys of the parish who ave their lives in the Second rent War. Dedicated In 1570 St. Paul's Church was complete- ly and solemnly dedicated nn Oct. 21, 1876, by the late Bishop Mc- Intyre. The pastor at that time was the late Rev. Patrick Doyle, who had been appointed parish priest of Summerslde in 1874. Spontaneous oflers of assistance have come from the congregations 1n the town, the ministers of Trin- ity United, the Presbyterian and St. Mary's Anglican Church have expressed their deep regret at the loss sustained by the Catholic people and have offered the use of their respective churches for Catholic services. These offers nre declply a reciated by Msgr. Mc- Lel an. . Harold Gaudet, prop- rietor of the Capitol Theatre has oilered the use of the theatre for Sunday services and ‘his offer has been gratefully accepted, Masses will be said here on Sunday morn- lngs at the regular times. Assist- ant priests at Si. Paul's parish are Rev. J. C. McDonald and Rev. Howard Wight. During the progress of the fire it was necessary to shut off the light current ln the west part of man of the Electric Light Com- thni. it was necessary to pull the from falling on the live wires. Dominion Noney Dut P. E. I. Ilp OTTAWA, Feb. 1—Adverse spring summq- weather cu to 30.- gngnt below decrease. Average pounds, 10 pounds lighter Pfbdilf.‘ on in silt’. Edward Is- land totalled 46,000 competed with ous yell‘. by North At pected to reach port tomorrow. night, according to the latest in- formation received by embarkatiott officials here tonight. The big liner has a total ni 6493 overseas veterans ing 5,414 Army, was R..C.A.F. and 06 Navy personnel. She was orig- inally scheduled to dock last Elat- urday but the rough crossing has delayed her more than two days. Fifteen troop trains will take the returning veterans to their homes. Iii iiiililo lick Alt AWCNAN l5 Qtutluilir Ski m More ‘liars film on: 9 ... Syglse Lower St. Lawrence Gulf, Se! chaleur and North Shore: north and northwest winds; fail and dedded-lv cold. Lake St. John: Fair and decided- ly cold. have Oberisttetewe Two N. B. Children Lose Lives In Fire (By The Canadian Preset SALISBURY, N. B. Feb. 8- Flre in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Basil Eagles early today caused the death of two boys and injuries h: three other childrcm Basil, Jr.,9, lost his life in the flre and his body was recover- ed later. A brother, Merle, 5, died in hospital at Momiml. Doreen, 8, also was rushed to hospital, wihcre her condition was reported not dangerous. Lois, t, and Elaine, ll, escaped with superficial burns. Mrs. Eagles rescued all tho' children except Basil by drop- ping them from a window to the roof of an adjoining shod after the firempparently caus- ed by an overheated stove-pipe, started in the kitchen ceiling under the rooms where the family was sleeping in the two- atorey building. Mr. Eagles, a railway employee who served overseas ls a lieutenant dur- lng Che war, was at Newcastle at the time. The mother and children, all in night clothes and bare feet, walked about an eighth ul s. Elle to neighbors in soro wea- er. Expect Aquitania To Dock Tonight HALIFAX Feb. 3-'I'he 44.000- ton troopshli; Aquitsnia, held up antic storms, was eu- BURLAP RESTRICTIONS OFF OTTAWA, Feb. 3—(CP)—-Resl.rio- lionspn the manufacture and use of burlap and burlap products will he removed Feb. 15, the Price's Board announced tonight. aboard inc ud- _-__ METEOROLOGICAL OFTIGB. S Toronto, Feb. 3 — (C?) - Mni- imum and maximum atures: Vancouver 33, 30; Edmon- ton sbelow, zero; Regina 6 below, 5; Winnipeg 19 below. 11'. Toronto 2 below, 8; Ottawa 8 below. 4: , Montreal 3, S; Quebec 2, l1; Saint Produgtum Down John '1. 1v; Moncton 2, 16: Hull!- " 20, M; Charlottetown zero, l5; aero 20; Yarmouth 21, 21. clicks. Meritlneee: Fresh north and rsorthwest winds: genaelly fair and cold: scattered snowh flerries. Ottawa and sr at. ram-lost 16 rsll- and deci edly cold. High tiiiaemlodey It noon and to- n a . ‘fillet, t moon Friday, Peb- Sum‘ rnerside tide iltssn use cllsl-l tiled lain!‘ than (Delhi! ~- teznlper- Fresh 1.10 LDC -& 5-. an Arrive ‘Isl s.‘