Maxims of a Mere Man Giving and keeping require rains. 12 13501.55 hi- . lllcmliers of the local Naval Re- serve and Sea Cadets yesterday morning held their annual Battle of Atlantic Sunday parade and church services to honour the al- most 1,800 men who lost lives in one of the most vicious and longest engagements of the Second World War. The parade, led by Commander J.N. Kenny. IMPR their y 0...;-. Essive NAVAL i5ARAii5i?YEsrERoAY Commanding Officer, II M C 5 Queen Charlotte left Kingfs Square at 10:30 a.m. and paraded for services at Trinity United Church and St. l)uustan's Basilica. Par- ade commander was Commander Clarence Mercer. Summerside, and the platoon commanders were Lieut. K.A. MacKenzie. R.C. party laud Lieut. L.G. Douglas, Protes- 77te Guardian - tant arty. The Summersltle Sea Cadetylland was under the di- rection of Sub. Lieut. Eric Shr-en, parade gunner's mate was C.P.0. W. Morton, R.C.N. En route to the church the parade passed along Grafton Street and paid their respects at the War Mem- orial. After lervices they reformed cw.- RLOTTETOWN. QANADA. MONDAY. " " EQUAL TO io MI -4- MAY 21 1956 LLION TONS TNT By ELTON C. FAY U.S.S. MT. MCKINLEY. Off Bi- kini (AP)-The first air-dropped American hydrogen bomb, with power equivalent to 10,000,000 ions of TNT, burst with savage fury above Bikini atoll target island in the black pre-dauii Monday. At precisely the .srhc(iuled in- stant of 5:51 a.ni. (2:51 pm. ADT Sunday) a pinpoint of light pricked the darkness just above the hori- zon in the Pacific. Even though the almost opaque filer of high-density goggles, the swiftly-growing brilliance of the expanding fireball was ilazzljng, An observer, taking a cautious, quick glimpse over the rim of his goggles, quickly put them back on, Swelling swiftly, the fireball raced out to what sccmctl more than a three-mile dianielrc in a matter of seconds. a..u.sL....o.inln.'n4-H on Hillsboro Square and then pro- ceeded west on Richmond where the salute was taken by His Hon- our Lieiit. Governor T.WL. Prowse in front of the Provincial Building. Attending llis Honour were Surg. Cdr. L.E. Prowse; Captain J.J. Connolly V.R.D.: Lieut. Col. A.W. Rogers, ED, and Cmdr. Kenny. FO. .F.P. Coyle Of Chilown Is Killed Flying Officer F.P. Coyle. son of Mr. and Mrs. James Coyle. 20 Stewart Street has been listed by llie Airforce as one of those killed :n a mid-air plane near Winnipeg last Friday which took six lives. F0. Coyle was one of the instruc- tors in the two craft involved in the collision. He enlisted with the rims in i the fall of 1953 after completing his junior year at St. Dunstan.s University. After receiving his primary education at Queen Square School, he worked for a time in Upper Canada before resuming his education at St. Dunslan's. While at St. Dunstan's Philip proved to be an outstanding nthlele. participating in nearly every branch of sport. However. football was his first love and it was under his captaincy that St. lhin.-itan's captured its first Maritime Intercollegiate and Mc- Curddy Cup title in 1952. On May 21. 1955, he married Lillian Collins. Winnipeg. who is accompanying his body to Charlottetown for burial. In addition to his parents he is survived by five sisters and three brothers. They are Con- stance tlllrs. Alex H. Macleani. City. Adele. (Mrs. Lee Gishl. l.ong- Island. New York, Ger trude. Toronto. Marion, Mon- trcal. Fred, Toronto, and James, Joseph and Mary at home. Another brother, Flying Officer Coming Events Regular Dance. BOI1SlI8ln Inn.- Tucsday night. Burns' Orchestra. All Vcrnon River plays have ht-on cancelled until further no- lice. See the Eldon W.I., present two plays and specialties, Flat River ilall, Wednesday, May 23. l')ance- in Vernon River Hall. Tuesday, May 22. Webster's orch- Cslrl. Card Party. Spring Park Hall. lllonday. 8:30. Prizes. Lunch. 'l'ournament. Farmers - cleaning t i in of h y tlmly. MacGuiiinn and Boyle. lliintcr River. P.E.I. For hrst rcsulls book yotir rluver sccds with us. lllctjuigan & Boyle. Hunter River. llunler River llall, lllny 2i-sf. "Here Comes Charlie." by Wheat- lcy River players. Ham and snlml supper but 65 lit-ill, Monday, May 2151- S--river served from 5.30. Dance alter. Unloading car of Co-op feeds Tuesday and Wednesday morning. THE LATE F0. COYLE John Coyle was killed in a flying ac4c5ident in England. on March 2. 19 . AIR COLLISION WINNIPEG t,CP) -Six airmen, four of them student navigators. died in a scorched tangle of metal Friday after their planes collided in midair and plunged in A slow spin to the ground. The twin-engined RCAF Exped- lters carried the men to their deaths in a farm field six miles southwest of Winnipeg as they circled in a low, wide arc min- utes before coming in for a land- ing at Stevenson field. A pilot and two students were in each aircraft. The RCAF re- leased the names of the pilots only-F0. J. T. King. 29, of Ayr- shire, Scotland. in former RAF pilot. and F0. F. P. Coyle. 26, of Charlottetown. Three of the train- ees formerly were with the RAF while the other was a Canadian. They were studying navigation under the NATO program. ROUTINE TRAINING FLIGHT An air force spokesman said the planes were returning to base after a routine navigation-training flight. when they collided three miles otit at about 1.500 feet over suburban Charleswood. The wrecks landed 150 yards apart in a plowed field and a pasture on the farm of George Coopman. Cause of the crash was unknown and a board of inquiry was set up. No one witnessed the actual midnir collision. Adolph Coopman, 33, George's brother, was harrow- ing the field with a tractor 400 n Air Crash yards from the scene. He said: "I heard a crash loud enough to be heard over noise of the saw the two planes spiralling straight down. They seemed to be about 200 feet from the ground." He unhitched the barrow and ran to phone police. Then h drove the tractor to the twisted wreckage. BODIES THROWN CLEAR "The flames were shooting high Into the air. I couldn't get close. There wasn't a chance of saving anyone by this time. Two badly- burned bodies were thrown clear of the flames. I could see some bodies inside the planes." The sky was clear and bright with evening sunshine when the alcraft collided. They were not flying in formation. m tractor motor-and looked up. lic BRILLIANT COLORS From its initial silvery-uhite brilliancy, the fireball began film- ming into a creamy white, then Into orange and red as it started to shrink. Up from the dark rim of the horizon rose -the point of an nmnz- Ing brilliant red arrow of lighted cloud, ascending at a speed of hundreds of miles an hour. It pointed a finger at the mush- room beginning to take shape over- head. By now the night was starting to turn into the grey light of dawn. RAF Group Visits S'side - On Weekend On Saturday afternoon at (.00 pm. an R.A.F. four-engine Hast- ings aircraft, under command of Group Captain G.R.A. Embllng. .B.E.. D.S.O.. chief instructor at -RAF. College, Mamby, England. touched down at R.C.A.F. station Down over the target island of,of light were noted close to the Namu, at the northwest end ofyforming cloud. These were not im- Bikini Emil. 3 "3359 surge" dc-.medizilt-ly explzunalzle. There was veloped a broad, low-lying l)aIll(tSp(.'(.'lllElllUII that they might have Of dirty Clouds made up of dustlbeon some form of instruincntzliion and moisture drawn into the airildroppctl from the high-flying B-52 as the hot gases of the mushiooin l-timber that dropped the bomb. or cloud mounted above it. ililmsllily just stars, By 12 minutes after tlcton:-.tion,l One scientist aboard um tut, the top of the miislirooin hzitllillt-Kiiilt-y said that such a super-l reached an estimated altitutic of powerful detonation creates a mod 25 miles. j.iiit-nt of vacuum in the atmos- Thgwidth of the mushrooni as it phc-re. This, he suggested. might flattened out was iit-aiiiig 100 litivc czitisctl stars to shine thi-ougli miles. .with unusual brilliancy for a mo- The giant cloud by llicn ' high that the rays of the Mi: stilll some where above the expltisitm, below the horizon. DtllIlil'll it. in an F-101A supersonic jet fighter brilliant salmon and pink colors. cruised. its pilot making observa- OBSERVERS ran AWAY M5 M "19 bias” The observer ship .ut. .llI'Kll1-lPLANES RANGE!) OUTWAKD ley. with 15 corrcspontlcnts ;.nd a Ranging outward were some of score of civilian defence ()l)st'fV'- the 36 planes assigned to cover ers on board, was 34 nautical miles the explosion. (39 land miles) from the towel. Radiologists said that the height The shock wave reached lh-- ship of the bursting bomb made it prob. two minutes. 43 Seconds afsi 1lit- ably that a minimum of con.amin- Lxpl0Sl0l'l. It came as a prolt-ngcd ntion had been produced by Sucking deep-lonedt Efllmbling roar. up dust and moisture from the Ears of observers cracklcti asltarget area. the air pressure changed when the The exact height of the burst rush of air reached them was a military secret, but the As the mushroom cloud rose angle above the horizon suggested above the dark bands of natural it must have been not. lower than clouds. touches of brown appeared 10,000 feet. in it. This was evidence of oxides This meant that even with its of nitric acid produced by the ex- great size, the fireball did not plosion. touch the earth. A few seconds after the burst, First unofficial a half-dozen small, brilliant points cloud suggested so mclil. study of the it was moving along the safe course predicted- dropping whatever ratlioactivuy it Covers Prince Edward Island. Like the Dew contained along a path directly northward from the Marshall is- land, out in the empty ocean. About one hour after the detona- tion, Rear-Admiral E. Hall Han- ion, commanding joint task force 7, said his combat infoi'in:uioii centre aboard the coiamanri ship the arca at detonation time got iEstes. reported: "All aircr-"-it ml The first of the current Ferlel ll" lJ0SSibl.V a dozen tests of nu- PRICE 5c 'Firsi Yankee Air-Dropped , H-Bomb Exploded Today i The United States thus demon- strated that it really has a hydro- gen bomb which can be trans- Pflrted by air and dropped pre- cisely upon a chosen target. LONG WAIT There had been a long, monon- ous period of waiting. with succes- sive postponemcnts since the shot vvas first scheduled May 8. away from the Shot. This s;Jcvitiiv- clear dexiccs had gone off pre- ally included the B-52 drop plaiie."5eisely on schedule May 5 (May 4, DETAILS SECRET While details were classified as secret, it was presumed bomber was about 15 miles away from the bomb, which it had re- the. U.S. datel. That was an atomic device which was detonated on En- iwetok, l)escribcd in terms of a "num- inal" 20,000 tons of TNT, ltl pur- pose was not disclosed. but there leased approximately one minutelwas speculation that it might be previously, when it went off. The 600-mile-an-hour speed of the B-52, piloted by Maj. David Critchlow of Sacramento. Calif., banked sharply in n 180 - degree turn. in a bunker in Enyu island, 22 miles from the target island at the opposite end of Bikin atoll, were 10 scientists headed by Dr. Galen Felt. chief of the scientific test group. They radioed that there was a strong blast of air but "no other immediate post-shot effects." This appeared to mean that they experienced no earth shock such as comes from detonations OI nu- clear ground. I intended iradiation 'rained down from the sky. g as the warhead of a xguidcd missile. Such a weapon would be useful in tactical war- fare for pinpointing relatively - small targets. l Before Monday's tes. extreme precautions were take to avoid any repetition of March 1954 when some Marshall islander and the crew of a Japanese fishing boat. the Lucky Dragon, suffered from sickness due to ash A wide ocean area of 375,000 square nautical miles (more than 400.000 square statute miles) had ibeen closed to all shipping. Naval vessels patrolled It regularly to eapons on or close to theiprevent anyone blundering into the , 'danger zone. lsummerside from Winnipeg. The call at Summerside was an over- ,night- stop on the way home to iEngland completinga 20,000-mile tour of R.C.A.F. and United States airports. On board were 25 R.A.l-T. navi- gators and crew members of the Air College at Mamby and the purpose of the tour was to study teaching methods, bombing tac- tics. and aircraft and instrument development in Canada and the U. S. A. Yesterday they took off from Summerside at 9.30 and will have a stop over at the Azores before I at their home base. Marri- by, ngland. ' " W PACIFIC OUTPOST The eight principal islands of Hawaii cover a total of 6,423 square miles, with a population of 500,000. COSTLY PEST A small mollusk known as the teredo or shlpworm causes mil- .lions of dollars damage each year lto wooden ships and piers. The list contains in order of merit the names of the students at St. Dunstan's University who have made a general average of 60”b in the year's work an for First Class standing 80'? and above in the course named, for Second Class standing 6591- to 7966 In the course named. standing 5096 to 6496 in the course named. - Biology I-First Class: Gerard Burge, Michael Swift. Leo Ped- die. Second Class: William McCar- ron. Wilfred Barlow, J. Allan MacDonald. Michael Quigley. Wil- liam Trainor, Jean-Maurice Veull- leux, Marie Burge. Adelbert Roche. Passed: Phyllis Brcen. Elliot MacAulay. James Dunne. Jean- Claude Desrosiers. Bernice De- lory. Biology 2.-First Class: Thomas Ford. Lewis MacDonald. Second Class: James Noonan. Germain, Lemieux, Cyril Maels- aac. Thomas Grant, J. Allan Mac- Donald, John F. MacDonald. Wil- llam Cameron. Gaston Roy. Passed: Brian Doyle, Gerald Monaghnn, Noel MacMillaI. S.D.U. Pass List Is Announced for Pass l I Biology 3-First Class: Lewis Mat-Donald, William 0'Flaherty. Second Class: Wilfred Gillis. Passed: John Conran. Commerce 1-First Class: Don- aid MacDougall. Joseph Revell. Earl Handrahan. Herman Connol- y. Second Class: Leo Doiron. David MacKenzle- OTTAWA (CP) -. Government Commerce msecond Class: In House Sunday released the text Gillies. of birthday greetings sent to Queen Elizabeth by Governor-General Massey, aboard his vice-regal train at Sherbrooke, Que. Commerce 3- Second C I a as: Donald MacDougall, Leo Doiron, Passed: Joseph Revell. Ian Gil- lies. Raymond Hickey, David Maexenzie. Commerce 4 - Second C I a s s: at Buckingham Palace: "On the day on which we in it GRETINGSA to THE" ouisshi The telegram sent to the Queen! ' JEAN GIDDINGS PRAISFD SHERBROOKE, Que. tCP)A Members of eight amateur theatre casts from across Canada were presented Sunday to Governor-Gen oral Massey at I luncheon mark- ing the close of the Dominion Drama Festival finals in Sher- brooks. Mr. Massey Saturday presented the Calvert trophy for the best presentation of the week-long festi- val to the University Alumnae Dramatic Club of Toronto for its challenge trophy for the best visual presentation. The plaquefor the best support- ing male actor was won by Robert Trudel in the role of Geronte, in Le Cercle Molierc of St Boniface performance of Les Fourberies dc Scapin Jean Giddlngs. as n housekeeper In the Charlottetown performance of Angel Street. won the best sup- porting actracs award. in Local. Group Wins Trophy Al The Drama Festival "1 think she could do it any where . . . New York,' Mme. Rosay said of Miss Glddhigrs per- formancc. Festival President David Ongley presented the trophy to La Com- pagnle de Montreal for the best Canadian play in regional competi- tion, and a 3100 award to Mr. Languirnnd for the, best play writ- ten by a Canadian. performance of Teach Me How to Cry by Canadian playwright Pa- tricia Joudry. The play was di- rected by Leah Major. An audience of more than 1,100 heard adjudicator Francoise Ro- lay announce festival winners. Eight plays competed in the finals, Mme. Rosay presented the plaque for the best French presen- tation to La Cun pagnie de Mon- treal tor its performance of Les lnsolites. a play by 27-year-oldi Jacques Langulrand staged Satur-l day night. LONDON GROUP WINNER The plaque for the best English presentation was awarded to the London Little Theatre for its per- formance of Mary Chase's Mrs. McThlng. Included in the list of festival winners was I2-year-old Hank Vo- gelsang. for his role as Howay in the London play. The trophy for the best actress was awarded Rosemarie Copland, for her role as Gwendolyn Fairfax Canada are proud and happy to celebrate your Majesty's birthday, may I send with my humble duty ,the loyal and devoted good wishes of all your Majesty's C 4' subjects." The telegram was signed "Vin- cent Massey." Donald MacDougall. Passed: Leo Doiron, Ian Gillies, Joseph Revcll. Raymond Hickey. Commerce 6 - Second C l a s s: Joseph Revcll. Passed: Leo Doiroii. Ian Gillies. Commerce 7-First Class: Jos- eph Revcll. Passed: Leo Doiron, Ian Gillies. Chemistry I--First Class: Bev- erley Howard. Thomas Ledwell, FIRE INJURES TWO KITCIIENICR. Ont. fCl” A Tirol flremcii were hurt and 343.000 (loin- age caused in a two-hoiir fire Fri-I day ht the J. E. Wlegand aiiill Company Ltd., shirt factory. Fire- men confined the blaze to the bascw menl. About 70 persons work at the factory. Special off-car prices. Vcrnonl llivcr Co-op. i London Paper Demands Recall Of Earl of Home From Canada l.O.Nllf).N' tflciitcrsi-Lord Beav flow of British moncy-and Brit- :-rbronk's Sunday Express de- isb money alone-into this great. moods the recall from Canada of swift developing Dominion that he the Earl of Home. secretary of is supposed to be boostlng.' state for Commonwealth relatlons,j The newspaper, whose publlsh" l)9N”lllSC of osmcch he made ati i, , native of canadav says um Halifax -1dV'S'"E Calmdlans H”! W this was not the inn extent of the llOl'ry too niuch about United minis” -I ttlapse Slates finnnc'ial influence. n S Q h The mil" ' Wl"K l"d9P9'"l9"l at th:yfn0ITeIelIl:dW'll1:lldelhFl'r:tp:leacS: ncwspnpt-r quotes the minister. I mummy storm burn over a "am, who is making an official trip Canada pipeline hm mi-tnigli (2'matln. as having said , --And Wm, do” "ml meam r (iaiiatln shmiltl not fear United ""5, trouhicnt me Express H”- Sl-"l'l'h il""”"3””" "'r”l'Fl' 3" "it has disturbed the patriotic '"”'W "I li""”' 5'5"” 'le"'l””' feelings of many Canadlans--fc-' 771"" i'"Pl'”l4 Tm” ll F" "'”cl' the very reason that the company ti.-trilcn SC('tl'4. Also ni a I1 ll 9 ll turnip niul Kale. Store 01'?" '"'l llIL'lll lllllll ll o'clock. A r I ll u r , Vcscy, York. , lit-ar Smiling Bill illactfnriiiack. in (irahemis Road Hall on ltlon-' day, May 21st. Sponsored by Southi Granville W.l. .lcaitXs Siitit-k ll;-r, l”redcriL-toil. hm-ii. ('oinc iii linvc II hot dog. hill and cold s.'inrlu'it'lic.s. ice cream. confectionery, etc. Home made Ilo-Nuts. and Pics n spcrlolily. Attciilitin niitl I-inter st-ctls in slmlli .lotiP i'etiiiiri-iiit-iiu: utIu'. P. g '- Moi-ris. Sliur-(lniii I-'cti(l Scrxirc.. Kiiikora. t'liai'lollcfown nntl Sum-i Farmers - Tiniothy (icl nicrsidc. , to be done lhaft I islhoulvd think which is '0 put mi: vast Mmnl Al I-llliv Ill-tvs.. grass st-od No. 2- there If r00m 0" I W 0 MV9 gas pipeline project in band is 83 70, I5. is mixture for 17'.2 t-cius-mtincy. per cent American-controlled. 1; lb. No. I registered Laurcntian The newspaper asks "by what llirnip sccrl 05 cents n in luanccl :Hllllnl'llV fl'VrW I.ord Home prc- disservice to British business in- stctl. xellnw or iitaut uhilc. n 10- isunic to advise the Canadians in tei-9513, he ,1” 1.-"9,-M-9.. in can. 49 CPIIIS. Dial 3223. ithis fa-hinn lie is not a public nda's domestic politics. In a cab- , d .,; lrclnlit-its Olllff-T ft", A"'9Yllf8"'tnet minister this gross (lnublc " ( it3P"l"l "3”- M"Y 22 ”" IHISIIVCSS liilvrcsla "0 IS I British indlscrction is for too serious to The Shlrlrcrs" one-act Fl?” mMn,.t minim-r, ibe ,,v"'mkeag- rirzimn lrvliul ciilry tlirct-ictl 3- .. in-. Peter M:icI)t')m-Ilfl: also "Th"isii0i'i.o BOOST IIRPTISII ,0 :,':';i"w,','h ?:'i;,'r'”fmfh'o"n”ylE'(',:i "so hard Home not only does a V as Ford, Leo Paddle. Cyru Mne- Isaac. James Dunne. J. Alan MacDon- ald, Thomas Grant. ('lI0mlSll')' J--First Class: Cyril Maclsaac. John F. MacDonald. Gerald Monaghan. William 0'Fll- herly. Second Class: Brian Doyle. Wil- Iiam Cameron. Wilfred Glllls. J. Alan MacDonald. Geraldine Sulli- sn. Passed; Joan-Guy Lemay. Chemistry 4-First Class: Thom- as Ford, James Noonan. Second Class: Gerald Monasti- an. Thomas Grant. Passed: John Conran. Second Class: James Noonu.' Twenty-fivc mcnilwrs of tlic merslde over the weekend to con- Econolnlcs I-First Clau: Rol- Rev. Peter Brice BM?l"'l""" "."'"l "ii is the influx not of American should recall Lord Home forthwith act comedy. Arid:-tl Sn('f'lRllIfW. M Brmm "mm! mm M "Id MTMCI mm 0" M. lm oll . ih I f,,,”,',',,c',t;,',T,',,.l:'”" '”' """'" '" lnlouia be talking mm. It is uni-imam: ells Devlne. Doreen Cuuck. Sis-' fer Thomas Marie. Leo Mcciinn. I for with officials at the Island base on RCAF hm-iralimlal schemes and techniques. The Tl!- tco-unuoti as me I out. I) hung airmen on Illmbetl of the In the Ottawa Little Theatre lnc.. performance of Oscar Wilde's. The Importance of Being Earnest. Darkness at Noon. prcsciitcrl by the Vancouver Little Theatre As- sociation. won Ian Thornc the trophy for the best dircctnr. Angel Strcct. performed by Little Tlicalrc Guild of Cliarloltclouii. lwas awarded the Martha Allan HELD UP BY PAL OTTAWA (CPI-l”rcti l.a.K'2.'Ilc. 30-ycar-oltl service station optra- (or. tried for half an hour Friilay, night. to talk a former pal out of) holding him up. but finally was forced at gunpoint:to give up Si.- 500 from the station safe. AIR OFFICIALS CONFER specialist navigation course Mamby. Lincolnshlre, England. They are nearing the end of I two week tour of air installations in both the United Slates and ""-Wide: Squadron Iuder Canada. Above. kit II HUM. no Illlbt; officer commanding spec- First Atlantic Music Festival A Held Al Saint John Saturday SAINT JOHN, N. B. fCPl -The first Atlantic music festival was held here Saturday night following the week-long New Brunswick fes- tival. Eleven performers took part in the four-performance finals. The pianoforte class of four was the largest. uith David Murray of Halifax taking top honors. Others in this group were I-Elaine Moore, St. John's. Nfld.: Alan F,nbar, Charlottetown, and Peter norris, Mount Allison University. Donna London, Saint John, won the junior vocal contest. She com- pcted against Myrna llancock, Summcrsdie, P E. I. Joan O'Neil. Saint John, led Karen Mills. Halifax, in a senior vocal competition Arthur Girouard. Moncton flute soloist and student, at St. Joseph's University. was chosen as best pcriornicr in the instrument class. Also in this group were Alan Moc- Kenzie, Charlottetown. a clarinet player, and Basil Phillips, violinist from the N. B. festival. ' News - oltncstlhhtc tom cmcuv izsrtctattt t”i”i2i.F”l'lE 0 Cs 0 ' -tnouetr-.3 OTTAWA (CF) -- A general- alarm firc Suiiday night lcvcllcd ,3 foiir-storey ice warcliouse and gultcd n IlOl.'Illl'lt'lI”lfl5l house before firemen brought it under control after it two-hour ballle. . weather office: TORONTO I CPI-Temperature bulletin issued by the Toronb , ot,Group Captain G. R. A I-Tmlillncllai navigation courses. RAF: and R0.Val Air Fnrcc new in Sum- the Royal Air Force Air College. chief instructor, RAF Air Collcgc; Squadron Leader C. N. Stanley. .Group Captain W. H. Swcatmamlofficer commanding Number Two commanding officer, RCAF Sum-.Maritime T. L'nit. Sister Louis Marie. Lawrence ” ' Hickey, Sister Thomas Marie. Ml"- M" Lawrence Gallant. Picton Bilo- D NW” D” dean, David Soper, Sister St "5"" ---44 77 Veronica. Phyllis Breen. va"c0i"'e' " " '-- 5t 57 Second Class: Anthony Spence- vlctma --- - 54 lcv. Doreen Cusack, Desmond Mc- Edmmm" '- -' 37 Ivor. Bcrnice Delory. Frank Gil- s'5k.”"”" " 31 lis, Robert Fearon. Thomas Dun- a?3”',” 75 phv. James Reddin Leo Shep- """PE5 -- 57 llcld. (ierald n. Mu hy. T0"0'"0 -- 40 Passed: Raymond Gionet. Al- Ottawa 5? ctha Mullln, Bernard Connolly. M”""”l -- '-- 50 Paul Davey. St. Clair. Trainer. Q"9b9C --- 45 Raymond Belanger. John R. Mac- Ffedsrictw 50 Donald, Betty Kelly, John A. fl-5111:; -I01"! -- -- 53 MacDonald. Philip Henry. Stirling '1 3” 57 Creamer. Kenneth Macxlnnon, Cl""'9"C"”"- -- 53 John .l. lllurpby. Robert King. Chemistry 2-First Class: Thom- SL Jam” '37 lw HALIFAX tCPiAThe weather office here says that after I well high pressure area crosses the dis- trict. there will be increasing 1, cloudiness over the Maritime: ay. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island. eastern j N.B. counties, lower St. John river valley: Cloudy: a few show- ers by evening: continuing cool: light winds Increasing In afternoon to southerly I5. Low-high at Char- lottetown. Moncton and Frederic- lonItlnndS5.Salnt.lolIn35udI0 High tide today at Charlotte- town at 8:00 a.m.. and 8:54 p.m.. at Rustico at 3:11 a.m., and 1:1! p.m. " side tl T minutes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 4:38 a.III.. & Ida at 4:4! DJI. Operational (Dept. National Defence photo) i 7; il l l