Maxims of e Mere Man He that does nothing find: helpers. 16 PAGES Er. Taxi Pa iluashed By Supreme Court Cliarlottetovine by-law restrain- iiig taxies from parking in meter- rd space has been quashed by the unanimous decision of the full l)Plif'h of the Supreme Court. Mr. .lil31li'.e G. J. TWEECII. delivering Ill" judgment of the Court declar- ed that by-law No. 85 is ultra virea .-f the City Council of the City of Charlottetown on the grounds "run the said by-law is unrea- .-nn.-ible, oppressive and discrim- iiiziiory and beyond the power and .-iiithoriiy conferred upon the said Lfify Council, by the Legislature." The ruling Irose out of the con- virvion last January 12 of Raymond Miirphy. a Maple Leaf taxi driver. iw Stipendiary Magistrate K. M Martin and a fine oi two dollars for parking his taxi in a meter .-pace without immediately picking up or setting down a passenger. The question came before the iziiprcme Court as a stated case. The result of the decision is that fnr appeal is allowed and the con- yirlinfl nnd sentence quashed. No Ofrlfllt was made as to costs. Vi:-. Justice Tweedy cited the pn'.lPZs of the City Council un- dc: Sec. 38 sub-sections 12 and 32 or the Act-inC01'I3oratinS the City .:h iiicludc authority to regu- i traffic and parking. Tlic igi-law purportedly made un- der those provision: was passed rking Bylaw 5 or more cars shall pay in ad. Vance a monthly fee of 54.00 for the use of two metered spaces and these two metered spaces shall be for the use of said taxi cars only." i The Judge sziid he recognlzedl the principle that if by one construction a municipal ordin- ance will be valid. and by another void, the Courts will, if possible, adopt the former. Citing Privy Council authority, he stressed the difference between power to regulate and power to prohibit, noting that the latter re- quires express words on the part of the Legislature: "A municipal. power of regulation or of making by-laws for good government. with- out express words of prohibition. does not authorize the making it unlawful to carry on a lawful trade in ii lawful manner." He also cited cases on dlscrlrnlnatioa and unreasoniiblcness. From an exiimlnation of all the cases cited His Lordship said it would appear "that to enable the City to pass a by-law such as No. 85, clear and unmistakable langu- age must be used. Such authority was not given by sub-section 3'2 of Section 88. ”I have not," he said, "given any consideration to the broader question as to whether or not any on October 25, 1952 as No. 85 it pinVl(lPd ihit no person shall. ex-, iinmorlirilcly in take up or get, down :1 passenger, park a taxi-cab in any mefcred space other than a space especially rent- ed by the person or cab service operating such taxi-cab. A Police Committee regulation reads: "That all taxi-stzifids maintaining nlfiCe iii the metered .-irca having or-pt parking at all should be permitted on the public streets of the Ciiyi Streets are made for moving l.l'fIf-3 he and for the use of nil pcrsonsi and ought not to be used for the time.” Mr. J. B. Johnston and Mr. E. S. Trainor were counsel for the of an 'appellani: Mr. J. P. Nicholson for the Crown. Democrats Score Big Win:-In Alaska Voting JUNEAU (AP) - Alaska”: Dem- nri-ata scored an overwhelming llCi0l'Y in Tuesday's election. on ilie basis oi mounting returns Wednesday from all parts of the lnrrltory. As the outcome Assumed the ear- mn-rks of a landslide for legis- lative seals. congressional delegate E. L. Bartlett, remarking that "Alaska almost always has pointed the way the nation will vote in November." mule the forecast: "This makes it thoroughly sure the Democrats will organise the national House of Representatives ov some 30 seats." The Democratic delegate polled 73 per cent of the vote in his race with Mrs. Barbara Dimock. It compared with the 56 per cent vote he polled in 1952. Coming Events "Buying and cleaning timothy laiiy. McGuigan & Boyle. "Masquerade Dencefst. Andrew's Hall, Mt. Stewart, October 14th. "Reserve Oct. 30 rummage sale at Bestonu. "Dance, Millvicw Hall every Friday commencing October 15th. "Crapniid District scarlet Chap- ier meets in Lorna Lodge, Thursday, evening. October 14th. "Pantry Sale, Belfast Hall, Sei- urday. October 16th. I - 8 p. m. l-Tldon W. I Diinphy'a. "Dance at Clair PI-akee station, Friday. October 15th. "Masquerade Dance. New zea- land school, Monday, October lath Prizes. Chiiisson'a Orchestra. "Monthly Meeting Kingston Branch Canadian Legion at Char- lottetown. October 14th. "Anyone wishing to cell ClOVlll' vied standing contact us for prlcee. E. J. MacDougell, Vernon. "Dance South Rultlco Hall every Thursday night. music Rol- lie Mecl-(enzie's Orchestra. "Annual chicken bazaar, St. ' Mary's Hall, Jet. 20 and 21st. "Reserve October zotii. for Vernon River Chicken supper. Supper served from D-9.30. Dance after. supper and Sourls. "Reserve Thursday. December 2nd. for Annual Afternoon Tea and Bazaar, at Charlottetown Baptist Church. "Hot chicken supper. hlnftn. Mr. New Parish Hall, North Ruslico, Wednenday. Oct. 20th. Supper! 0 rum. "Jemboree in Cherry Valley Hall. Friday, October iiiih. (Good Specialties). Lunches served. spon- sored by lernscliffe W. I. "see the motion picture "file New world society in Action." Kingdom Hall of Jehovah's Wit- iieses, 81 Highland Ave, OCIODCY 20th. 1.80 p. m. Free. ”Meke plan: now to attend Giant Radio Rally in Roliawn! Chm. Ohlrlothetown, Mondny. Oct- ober Ilth. 7.45 p. in. Heat Pastor In the three major division (districts) in which most of the votes were tallied, Democrats were leading for 20 seats in the legis- lature and the Republicans lead- ing for only two. The campaign was waged on di- versified issues. They ranged from hood to which had made most fed- eral funds available to the ter- ritory. Murder Trlalilf Four Under Way. MONTREAL. (CF)-The murder trial of three men and one wo- man, charged in connection with the gun-whipping of restaurateur- B. J. McAbble in 1952, got under way Wednesday with testimony of Crown witnesses rafter selection of the last member of a 12-man Jury. On trial are Rxiy Colllgnn. Ger- trude Servant and her brother, Leo. and Gerald Patrick McKuher-. The first to testify was Dr. Jean-Marie Roussc), 46, Quebec medico-legal expert, who perform- ed the autopsy on McAbhie's bndy. Ile atirihuied death to a cerebral haemorrhnge caused by hlows is the head and face, by a blunt in- strumcnt. 4 MILLION WEEKLY WINDSOR. Ont. ICP)--Board of control estimated Wednesday the strike at the Ford Motor Company of Canada will cost the city of Windsor 81,000,000 a week. Controller Robert Fuller said this ion in equal to 30 per cent of the city's budget. parking of vehicles for any lengthl 1 bec South and General OHARLOTIETOWN, CANADA, Founded 18 72 THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1954 Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dew PRICE 30 Hurricane Heads. or U.S. After Causing Untold Damage OnHaiti. Discuss Seminary Plans At Charlottetown I-Ion. G. C. Power, M.P. for Que- Chairman of the Redemptorlst Fathers Sem- inary campaign, is pictured lbove discussing details with the Holy Redeemer Parish campaign heads at the Community Centre night. A few minutes after the picture was taken Mr. Power delivered an eloquent address on the reason for the campaign. Shown from left to right are Mr Frank O'Neill co-chairman of the last! P.E.I. campaign, Hon. G. C. Power. P. E. I. campaign. lRev. ncderlck Coglilan, Chairman Erection of Seminaries Only Way To icombai Materialism. Says Mr. Power "The erection olriide-quote semin- arios for the education of our Whlch 018.101” DENY llldr done the priesiii la the only-way to combat most on behalf of Alaska state-.ll1e doctrines, theories and princi- ples of mater-ialiem which have almost made ii large portion of this continent it fertile breeding ground for communism," stated Hon. C. G. iliower. M. Pm r Que- bec South and Wartime later of Air who spoke tn .1 large gath- ering at the Community”. Centre last night. Mr. Power. who is General Chairman of the Redemportlst Fathers Seminary campaign, was speaking to a gathering of cam- piilcii workers and piibllc citizens and his eloquent address was well received by the attentive audience. He recalled that it was with some sui-prize that he accepted the Redemptorist Fathers invita- tion to hold the Dominion-wide drive for 0550000 to erect'a new seminary. I "I told our pastor that I was no do-gooder and that I oould not help the campaign a great deal but he told me that ii 1 had spent 37 years in Ottawa and could not be nf any assistance in con- diiclinir It campaign than I must have been wasting my time." Mr. Power slated jokingly. During his address Mr. Power compared the wartime.-Air Train- ing plan, of which he- was head, to the present Redem orist Fath- ers campaign for fu to erect r. seminary. "During the war, Is a result of oui- Air Training Plan we sent out boys over to Europe to first hold and then defeat the enemy. London Dock Strike By DAVID MASON LONDON (AP) - The London dook strike spread Wednesday to two other major British ports - southempton and Glasgow. In A second critical labor dispute 1.100 of London's double-decker buses rumbled to a halt. The two strikes directly affected some 38,600 men. crippled the country: vital shipping industry and held up thousands of Lon- don's commuters. These were the latest develop- mente in Britain's troubled labor scene: 1.gMore than 2,000 Southampton longshoremen walked out in a one- day work stoppage to support about 30.000 London waterfront strikers. I. One thouund Glasgow dockerl suddenly stopped working ships in 5 pay dispute over unloading a cargo of bone: destined for ferti- liner. 8. About 0,500 London bus driv- era and conductors struck, making idle 1,100 buses because of trouble growing out of overtime work. In London alone. 125 ships were idle. At least. Ill ships were af- fected in Southampton and an- other I1 were not being worked in Glasgow. The driver-conductor strike made idle about one-seventh of London's Pm? 1". Rockwood with John Crabbe at piano, Beryl Grant and Charles Lambahead, Piano Accord-I "I and singers - . . 7.000 big red diesel-powered buses and electric troliy buses, The city's volt lulrwu network still Spreads To Two More Porls As 1.100 Buses Also Halted operated. Automobile traffic in downtown London increased as many busi- nessmcn used their cars. Com- muter treins to outlying districts were jammed.- The conductors and drivers walk- out in protest over new working schedules introduced in an effort to improve service: already de- pleted by aniovertime ban. The ban is part of the bus operamre' drive for an increase in straight time wages, which now average between 5:0 and :0 a week. The London dock strike began Sept. so when no dockere objected to sorting meat from a ship. They claimed sorting slowed their work. On this seminary campaign we are, embarking on it training plan to, meet enemies which are just aaj dB8dly"jllSi. as difficult tn heat nsf the enemies ii. the last war." he; stated. ' He noted that in the world to- day among free nations there al'rVl three main defences. The first is i i defense on the military level. the second dc-tense on the administra- tive level and the third defense on the home or family front. LEADS TO DESTRUCTION There is no Government defense for the third front and it is only too easy for the enemy to infilt- riite our ranks, on this front and gain inroads that would load to the destruction of us all." he stet- ed. i "Unfortimately today we have given up the spiritual in worship the nivrterlnl." coniinucd Mr. Pow- er. "we worship the man who win.i ii man gets to the top in the pub- lic eye we forget that he may have risen on the backs of his fellow- men through neglect of his em- (Contlnueri on page 5, col. 2) Lumberjacks Held in Assauli Case (CF: - Two VAL D'0R. Que, the week-end and charged with heating an ngeri iiirui and ms dziiighter with A board iliroughl which nails were protriirliiig Charged and ordered held with-l out hell were Bertrand Dumas, 26.' of St. Gabriel dc I(amouraska,andl Ftriymond ROHSSCI, 23, of Riviere mil Loup. ,- Police said they Afiurked Em-I maiiucl Jolinsoii, 68. and his 27-3 year-old daughter Rcjcaiiiie in a' cabin near Lake Caughon whenl they were unable to supply thcl lumberjacks with beer. I Police quoted .l0l1ns0ll as saying, the men beat him with their fists, and later with a spiked hoard. lie, we 3 taken to hospital suffering from multiple ciiis and bruises, His daughter suffered a broken Jaw. HEAT WAVE NEW YORK (AP)--New Yorkl city's official temperature soared to R2 degrees shortly afternoon Wednesday, setting A heat record for the second day in 3 row. l Earle regardless of his methods. When i lumberiacks were arrested during! oi the Island Branch of the Cam- paign, Dr. Loyola Duffy, Chairman of the Memorial Committee, Rev. .7. Gregory Murphy, Rector of the Holy Redeemer' Parish and Mr. Ivan Berrigan. Co-chairman of the l l Barler's Film Lab Hearse Destroyed By Fire During Funeral TI-IESSALON, 0nf.. (CPI -- A hearse was destroyed by fire dur- ing a fimeral proccsion Wednes- day near this town 50 miles east' of Sauit Ste. Marie. i Quick action by driver Merle, i Lawrence and funeral director Hu- bert Mccaiilcy saved the casket and body. A shorted wire was blamed for the fire. Peak Situation in Polio Passed "It would appear ihril the peak has been passed in the polio sit-l uailon and that a recession in it's iriclivily is in ei'idcni'e," Hon. B. Miicbonnlrl. Minister said yesterday when re,- case figures up to 'llc.'ilih viewing the Oct. 8. Two cases were ,the past three ihroiiglii. the total number in the Province up in 73 for the year gihus far. Of the 73 cases reported, it-lghfeon are severe and the oth- irrs are listed as "mild". . l Two of the four dr-:ifhs attribut- nd to polio took place in Char- llolietown. one in Murray Harbour and one in Uigg. By counties the outbreak .-truck hardest in Qiineriks. where 49 cases were re- ported while 18 cases rlpveloped in king”: and sit in Prince. At present the-rc are fwclve lpailcnis in the polio unit Al. the Isanaioriiim: eleven oihcrs are out- paiients, seven are in the Char- ilnttnioirn Hospital and one, in the lP. I-7. lxlanrl Ilriapilal. All other, pnlinnls nrn being cared l llicir iioiiirs. Buffer. Margarine Production Higher i (CPJ--Production of both butter and margarine this year is running ahead of last year's marks, the bureau of eta- tisiics reported Wednesday. Butler output in Seplembori totalled 34,402,000 pounds, compar-I ed with 31.629000 .1 year earlienq added during WM-ks, which OTTAVVA, Production in the first nine months of the year was 258349.000 pounds, against 24'f.3.'z'l.000 in the corru- ponding period of 1953. Margarine output rose 22 per cent in September to 10,755,000 pounds from 3.795.000 ii year earl- ler, boosting the nine-month out- put to fi3.340.000 pounds from 11,- 683,000 A year earlier - m l of- PORT-AU-PRINCE. Haiti, said Wednesday hurricane Hazel razed whole towns, hundreds in dead and injured and caused untold damage in its sweep across Haiti's southwestern peninsula. The only official report to come day night's storm said two were knowfi dead when the winds and rain smashed at Aux Cayes, stricken area. Earlier unofficial reports had put the casual- ties there at 200 dead and 350 Other unofficial reports second largest city, was almost swept into the sea, with 200 dead and injured. There was no breakdown of these cas- ualties. The hurricane, its force some-; what blunted as it passed between; the Haitian and Cuban I'IIOUnf.3llISi bordering the Windward Passag-3,' headed into ihe southeastern Ba- hamas Wednesday. HEADING FOR U. E. Later Wednesday it was reported regaining strength and curving to- ward the north-northwest. in the; general direction of the American! mainland. it was about 500 miles' sbutheast of Miami, Fla. The storm was headed for San Salvador, midway in the Bahama islands chain and travelling in direction between north and north- northwest. Alrcraft encountered just under ioo miles the storms northeast l i winds ofyi an hour in quadrant,: rthe Miami weather bureau said in pared with a year earlier, the blll'- pi-osnni, pnsiiion I 5 pm. advisory. Aux Cayos, whichvhas a popula-, tion of 71,000, is HRiCl3' ihird larg-' est city. I s'rrwc'runi:s aw:-:r'r AWAY l Little was reported left of Jere- le. It is on the northern coast about 130 miles yeat of Port-au- Prince. the capital. Two men who crossed mountains near Jeremie early Wednesday said the hurricane blew the sea into the city and swept away all smaller l Egg Grading Slalion Operators Form Association Al Summerside Meeting -About 30 egg grading station. operators from all three counties met at Summerside last evening and formed an association to be known as "The Prince Edward Island Egg Station Operators Poultry Products Improvement As- sociation." Urban McQuaid of Charlottetown was elected president of the new lorgahization. One of the objectives of the as- sociation is an improveinent in the standards and quality of thc egg and poultry products being pro- duced in this Province. Considerable concern was ex- pressed by many of the operators regarding the large number of grade "B" eggs that are being re- ceived by the invading stations. and it was felt iliat 1 better un- derstanding of consumer demands. and the improved quality of eggs which results from better care and feeding of poultry. together with the marketing of the eggs as soon as possible. would result in the improvement which in desired. 5:) that all farmer producers of 'eggs and poultry may have the ,opportunity of fully understanding these problems and the methods which should be taken to bring higher returns from their egg andi poultry sales. t association inl co-operation wit the Inspection, Service and Department of Agri-' culture will hold A series of meet-i' mg: in several centres throughout Prince Edward Island, At the present time there arel bout 58 registered grading inta- tions in the Province. and mem-i (AP) -Unofficial reports took llfice Pros. Hayes on first Official Visit through . after Tues- largest city in the injured. said Jeremie, the peninsula'si structures. A prison hospital was demolished. the homes of Roman Catholic sisters and priests were washed into the sea, and the cus- tom house and bank were damaged. The Haitian Red Cross appealed to the International Red Cross in Geneva, Switzerland. for assist- ance. In Washington. the American Red Cross announced it had al- lotted 525000.000 for relief of the Haitian hiirrlcane victims. ,. l " - .v'r .. Gfocgg-Y. chain l-lllififlnznald Iinycs. vice-pr:--E ,ticni and ;:Piiri;il iii-'ma,:rr of lily Sfofe Sales lcanadian National Itailu a;.--., Moncton, N. B.. who was in OTTAWA lC?V '- G709”? ind Charlolletnwn yesterday making 3316-iihis first Visit to the Island Div- Cflm-.isl.on since his appointment to hit last Juli. Mr Hayrs' visit is for the purpose of day. igelling acquainted with the star! I-fowevcr, five other types of and to inspect the company's pro- cliain outlets reported sales were periy. He leaves this morning for yiower in August than it year eai-i- siimmpi-sidi, and garden, fer. Chain shoe store sales fell 7.5 Mr. Hayes is delighted with hi: per cenl, drug stores 3.2 per cent.,irlp lo the Island and is looking hardware stores 1.7 per cent, var-;forwarri in it return V15”, U. the iety storea .5 per cent and woin- near future. en's clnthing stores .3 per cent. Inventories at Aug. i were hiKh- er for all types of chains except women's clothing stores, whose stocks were down 10.1 per cent. chain stores increased their by 64 per cent in August. eau of statisiics rcported Wednes- 3 Armed Bandits Escape With S6.000 BOUCHERVILLE. Que. (CPI Thi-ee armed bandits, with sill: stockings pulled over their heads, Wednesday entered B. Caisao Pop- ulaire here and escaped with 56,000. Provincial police said the bpridim tied up manager E. Vezina'.1 daughter Andre and it ciisfomei". htrship in the new organization Then they held Mr. Vezlna at will be five dollars. The proceedslgunpolni. entered the vault and from the memberships will be used: helped themselves. by the association in pi-omotlonali ----v------- and educational work for the bene- -MIL SUICIDE fit and'betterment of the egg and BROCKVILLE. Ont. ICPJ--l-far. olri Rollins, 42, of Brockville. await- ing trial on a charge of indecent assaiilt. Wednesday was found hanging in his jail cell. Authorities declared his death A suicide. poultry industry. i The meeting was attended by Messrs. S. C. Wright. Deputy Min- istcr of Agriculture: Fred Nash. ldisirlct inspector poultry products: lEmei-ic Holland and Ben Arsen-I ault or i.iie Inspection Service. l Mr. Wright and Mr. Nani atl- ldressed the meeting briefly, in- A '5 I idicating their ncpproviali of tlhe new ONE QUY WHO ' 'organlzaiion an pie gng t e sup- , port and co-operation of their de- L"-E A Q. pariments. 9 In the election of the nine exe- cutive members three were chosen from each county, and this execu- tive chose its own officers. Following are the officers and executive members: President, Ur- ban McQuaid. Charlottetown; vice- Wreckage of Missing R..C.A.P. Plane ifound. Four Persons Aboard Dead VANCOUVER, (CP) The words "no survivors" crackled out from the snow line of Mount Arrow- lmlth Wednesday, first definite word on the fate of four person.- who vanished Sunday aboard an REAP I-Jxpeditcr aircraft Experienced mountaineers, who spotted the wreckage on the moun- tain's 5,100-footlevel, clambered to the site on the mountain's east shoulder and found all four dead Flying Regulations Are Tightenecl I OTTAWA (GP) - The federal government has toughened flying regulations to lessen the possibility of air crashes such as the one that killed I7 persons April I over Moose Jaw. Sask. Civilian planes are directed by order-in-council to fly at specific heights on particular route. and the RCA! has ordered its planes to conform. The new regulations were worked out Jointly by I-ICAP and civilian aviation authorltlu. The orders. officials said. are ani outgrowth of the Moose Jaw dis- iaater, in which a Trans-Canada Air Lines plane plunged to earth afttr colliding with n climbing RCAP trainer. killed. The regiilaiioiis lay down. espe- cially. definite rules for one plane crossing the flying path of another. Generally. they are aimed at see- ing them shall be 000 feet of altitude betwern planes. Up to the present, air regula- tions recommended that pilots eb- l I serve safe distwnces. but thesei were not laid down by law. 1 Government officials said the: regiiletioru are included in a ae-i rles. now being worked out more: All aboard were fllll)',U1!fWllI&l1Al'DEn flying rulesigenerallr. are to fly halfway be- lii a number of ways. The next move, it was understood, will be to redefine ”vialbility" limits for civilian planes flying under visual rules in the light of increasing air speeds. The visibility boundaries are expected in be shortened. i Under the l'P2lIlRYl0l1I made. pub-; lie Wednesday, pilots flying over denigniiigd routes or control zones nre to move at levels of odd or even thousands of feet. depending on which way they are heading. Planes crossing these main lines, tween 1.000-foot marks, thus keep- ing 500 feet between them and the principal routes. so far as the RCA! is con. cerned. the new regulations will not appiv in operational fighter flying. The fiizhferg gm gquippgd with radar that detect nearby planes. , Ipresident, Rod MacNevin, Summer- laide; secretary, E. .1. MacDougaJi, jvernnn Bridge: William MncLean. iKr-iisihgton; Keith Pratt, Bloom-, flrlflj Leo Rossiler, Morell; Ralph' Judge, Montague; Stewart. Mac- Eisoii. Si. Peters; Mont. M.1cEwen., New London. --S AIR CHIEF ABRIVES i MONTREAL (CPI -- Air Chief ' Marshal Sir John Baker. aircraft! TORONTO fCPi(Mimmum gut cnnirollcr in the Rriiir-ii supply rl1f1Xln1lll'Tl temperatures: minisiry, and Air Marshal T. min M,” Pike, deputy chief of the RAF air Daiison . 29 44 staff, arrived here Wednesday for'Vancoiiw-r ,, 43 5;. a 10-day iniir of Canadian aircraft Victoria 4:. 34 plants and RCA? hast! Firlmonion .. 3.3 40 'TO " "COW "” " Cali!-'ii.V 27 en Saskaionn 32 45 Regina - . an en Winniiwg an 5.1 iToronto ... , an 74 Oifslwa ., 62 7:5 Moiilrcal 5.3 7.1 I 4 g)I(f(lllifg:plFl'H will bring out the (3:.l:(;:,(.,m, H 4?, Thr plane w1.I on a 280-mileli,1a(::,::,;1'::hn round mp. Vancouver to TOflI10,lH-ahfax .2 52 B. C. on the west coast of Van- chM.'""",m," i" in ” rmiver island. The wreck in on thclsydnm, ” 47 .... mountain. 65 miles west of 3;m.m;m,h 5. The squad which found the piane,s" Jnhni hndi i 39 M W" 0"? M "'0 3Y0PPCd IWD lhel HALIFAX iCPl-The Dominior DPFK PR"l.V Wednesday by RCA? piihiic wcaihcr office here says lhn heiienpier. Each team was led by very ltarfh .-.ii- mm, dag pughprd one of the Bitterlich brothers, Olaf nut rif fhn snuilici-n Maritime- 3"” Ad0lWl- Tiicsriay tpreari back again Won- The brothers received permissloninesday and temperatures rose. in to lead the team! after they re-lthe 70s in several localitiel Drier ported to RCA? they heard a plane'air moved into the district from crash above them while they werelihe west and caused gradual clear- cllmblng on Arrowsmlth Sunday. ling. Sunny. very warm weather is Temperatures In the area were forecast for all regions Thursday. well below the frggging mark, bugjbiit another disturbance is ex- ihe an-ci-nu, g twin."-uim.d plane':p('FlC'd to cause rain Friday. carried full gurvivn muipmgm mj Prince Edward Island. eulern cimiin. ...-"..., gm”. N. B. rnuntlee: Becomlnl runni- It went missing while inking an """""V "'"""''l? V"! ""0- Rcgp pad", to -roam, M comma light southwest winds: low-high at church services. ,Cherlntletown and Mnncton 52 and Aboard were no. L. 1:. Oppgn.l”' heimer of Winnlpe . the llot: PO. - . Michael Saunders if nriagxoi, 1:ng.; ..tH1;'1210L;,de,.,t0d" nt Oh.mmw'L R. D. Hall. In engineer of Belu High g,."a,.li.,d,y .9, gm. gm”, Rtrmire. near Montreal and the shore at 7.56 a mi and 7.01 p. m. Imdrt Sqdn, Mr. B. O. Stibbards, sun nu. Qodgy .1, 5,37 .. ml ma of Vancouver. At. incl: at 5.31 p. in.