MAXIMS MAXIMS OF A or A. MERE MAN MERE MAN Love is like the nuclei. we our have It once. and the later in life we have It, the tougher it goes there " it wasn't for faith. gould D9 ,. couldn't even eat hula wi gfeir. . Five Cents. Tang" only Founded sass. no living in this world; us any The.Pe '5 Paper C Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY. JUNE 7. 1951 TLIES THREATEN KEYSTONES IN RED DEFENCE TRIANGLE re art to Ottawa on :,,,rve;1e2iIrx'ejx: made in this Pro- Ifncg states: ”Gencrally the pic- .',i,,., is one of ignorance. indiffer- Enul and neglect." completed by Dr. B. iJ. ovmggra. Director of the Dlvla on ,( Dental Public Health of P. E. I we report of the survey was idafter the examination of 5.- 5m children. 2000 of these child- M were from schools in rural mu, and 3,500 in Charlottetown mg summerside. The report divides the children In", ggo groups and states that 9,, decay rate in permanent teeth is wry similar in urban Coming Events E "Abcgucli. R. B. P. Kingston. Nagy, June 8th. "Dance Orwell Hall June lltb. ililiview Orchestra. Lunches. "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. "The Cancer Campaign will be held the first week in September. "Farmers Seeds now. "Mined Seed. 7096 Timothy, 3096 Clover. 26 cents. Mcauigsn dc Boyle. "seeds: store -open daily. also llonday anti Thursday evenings untils P. M. Arthur vessey. York. Book your Clover McGuigan & Boyle. "Regular Dance. East Royalty Bink Hall. Friday, May isth. Bus leaving I. M. T. 9.45. "lung.-um Y.P.U. presents their 1-1:: play. ”A Pair of Country Kids" lll Cornwall Hall. June 8th. "New Haven tonight at 9.00. grilling outdoor show "Canon 1;... "Ben Kmkorn. Play in Kelly's Cross llnll, Monday. June 11th. Dance alter. "Hear Bishop Waterman to- night 5 o'clock. st. John's Anglican church. Milton. "Rs-servo Wednesday, July 13th for the Murray Harbour Tea Party and Boat Races. "Kinkorn Hall. Friday. June Bill. See special Film ”Maytlme" liming Jeanette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy, "see . ilops River players lment their play "The Campbell: Are Coming" in Long River nail TWEGBN. June Till.- i"M0tion Pictures Bradaibane llall tonight. Alan Ladd. Donna Rttd in "Chicago Dead Line." Action and mystery. H2399. "Here comes Charlie". i Yiilnearnnce, Millview Hall. day. June 8. Proceeds above unease for Millview Church. ."DlhCE. Mt. Stewart Legion gm Every Thursday. George illppell nnd his Merry Islanders. been service. Admission soc. ii I micornmencing June sixth. our M will close Wednesday after- wn for the summer months. Mal- unljh Mt'I.sC?ln to son. Vcrnon River s. NM 1 . K M ;u 3TvFlidI.V . night Dance Am " 9'" 5 Bay Holy Name Hall. nwlg. June 0th. Dancing from .. - M. to 1 P. . ' Hmhum. M Chalssons -2 Is . W 9”” Wrset the sale at Hes- "ito on the premises of John -ymimcmabell. on Wednesday. mm -' ii. at L30 P. M. of houge. i. ”"i5 and farm machinery. VHHV. 1&- V gloria. this is the night you Three Days of Grace" pre- ..h N by Kenalngton Presbyter- f1,,,mu:-”"- Sponsored by your '. 9- Specialties and candy. ""i'he '10 D TE:-rlmoir llillsboro ohaotsr l - - ual Oookln lchool '"' '” bar mi. 'E'mHnbar the fun and p Ilsa "M Mr and be sure to attrand. ...... x Attention: This is filly to ace the play We . season by Kcnaingion M-7 TSMI Players. Thursday. .,.,' si”""0F0d by Victoria in- - sis of candy. . as i .' 0 Val- ncial will be presented iv NM I. in laconic in special- II on of iii" 1": 0 a can thorny for military ser- Ba and rural areas until the age of 10. After that age there is a sig- nificant increase in the rate of tooth decay in urban areas. The presumption is that this is due to the fact that the town child has more access to sweeten- ed foods and drinks than his country cousin, and that from the age of 10 he has more pocket money to spend on them. Only seven per cent of the children examined are free from tooth decay or have had all de- cayed teeth treated, and 36 child- ren out. of every 100.,in the six year group. do not even possess a toothbrush. Although the number of ex- tractions of permanent teeth in the rural areas is not much less than in the towns. the number of feet which have been filled in rural areas is considerably less in the younger age groups. In fact. up to the age of 10, the number of fillings in permanent teeth is negligible. At that age less than one in ten decayed permanent teeth have been fill- ed. whereas, in the towns. three in ten have had fillings. Each year after that. the difference becomes less. At 15. in rural areas. one quar- ter of the decayed teeth have been filled. while in towns one third of them have fillings. The difference is counterbalanced by the fact that the country child has nearly two less decayed teeth. Missing Nhd. Pilot is Safe ST. JOHN'S. Nfid.. June 6- (CP)-Pllot Eric Blackwood was back home here tonight wonder- ing what all-'t e fuss was about. The 29-year-od flying manager of Eastern Provincial Airways had been grounded by fog at Sandy Islands. Labrador, while an extensive search was being prepared. He had been reported missing on a flight from St. Anthony to Cartwright Saturday. Blackwood said he attempted to take off again when the wea- ther cleared Tuesday but was de- layed by battery trouble. Lack of communications in the isolated area made it impossible to in- form his base of his where- Extensiora OFT Feed iGriain Dental Report Critical Of Conditions In P. E. I. likely TdBe Continued For Eighi-Monihs OTTAWA, June 0 -(OP) -.An eight-month extension of the Government's multl-million-dollar feed grain subsidy likely will be announced soon, it was learned to- day. A wartime idea, the subsidy helps boost the movement of Western feed grains to the Pacific coast and to the central and Eastern Provinces. Under it( feeders can get West- ern grain at relatively low prices, through a Government contribution to the dealer on the basis of freight costs. The original idea was to en- courage beef and pork production to meet overseas contracts. This has fallen by the way and the question of whether the subsidy should be continued has been the subject of debate by the Cabinet. However. with a big supply of low-grade wheat still on Prairie farms, the Government has been under pressure to continue the subsidy and get the wheat sold as feed grain. Feeders also want the subsidy continued to keep PTO- duction costs from rising higher. Price War In The U. S. Continues NEW YORK. June 8-(AP)-war- ring department stores slashed price tags on more merchandise today to pump new vigor into their seven-day battle of bargains. But the mad rush of customers snapping up former fixed-price items at close to dealer cost. ap- peared to be about over in New York. Meanwhile. price-cutting spread to new areas of the United States as more retail merchants decided to take advantage of a U. 5. Sup- reme Court ruling that they need not observe manufacturers fixed prices unless they had signed "fair trade" agreements. some department stores in Lou- isville and Lexington, Ky.. dropp- ed tags 10 to 30 per cent on about 1,000 items. other price-cutting areas ranged from Clarcmont. N. I-l.. and At- lanta Ga.. to sltka. Alaska. and abouts. he said. San Francisco. The slitting of the Board of Transport Commissioners to hear the application to make this Pro- vince a on-2-zone freight rate area ended yesterday afternoon without argument by counsel. Chief Com- mlssioner M. B. Archibald ruled that due to the length of time taken up with the case the oppos- ing counsel should submit briefs rather than have the Board hear their arguments. Mr. A. K. Dysart. A.C., counsel for the Canadian National Rail- way. opposed the suggestion but his objection -was overruled. As a result Mr. J.0.C. Campbell. K. C., counsel for the P.E.I. Potato Marketing Board, was ordered to have his brief prepared by July '1. with Mr. Dysart being given until July 28 for his reply. Mr. Dysart an an alternative had suggested that opposing counsel present their argument: before the Board at Ottawa at the and of this month. This, however. was objected to by Mr. Campbell who stated the Supreme Court of this Province would be sitting here al. Briefs To Be Filed By Counsel On Both Sides that time. At the time adjournment was taken on the case yesterday after- noon Chief Commissioner Archi- bald said the Board would sit. here until Friday night to give this Province and the C.N.R. time to fully present their cases deal- ing with the cessation of railway traffic on the llilhrborough Bridge. Mr. Reid's Evidence The first witness called yester- day morning was Mr. E. D. Reid, manager of the P. E. I. Potato Growers Association and also manager of the P.E.I. Potato Marketing Board. The former, he said, was a co-operative with 2,000 patron members who shared in any surplus profit at the end of the operating year. The Board was a producer controlled board whose main function was to regu- late price setting and dictate the minimum prices at which P. E. I. potatoes might be said. He added that the same minimum price pre- (Continued on page 6 col. 2) CALGARY. June 0 -(GP) - Thc worst June snow storm in history today paralysed the wnols of southern Alberta. A record 14 inches of wet snow had been dumped on Calgary by mid-aftcmon as the storm went through its second dly. The Weather omc. estimated just as much snow fall. In tho Lathbrldge region. but poor communications prevented may of the extent of the two-day total fail. There was no hnadlate let-up in Tel graph and telephone oom- raunioaiion lines in the south were knocked out for hours. Mani! roads were impassable or haunt- ous. side roads were reduced to soggy masses of mud or the damn '"-i-i's'asu- facilities in cstsarnnd Lethbrldgc wars snarled, making hundreds late for work. Tradllll Alberta Has Worst June Snow Storm In History Livestock Market. because of the bad roads and the number of pow- er and other lines brought down by the storm. The Weather Office held out no hope for an end to the continuous snow at least until late tomorrow. The snow storm. mixed inter- mittently with rain south of cal- ry. was concentrated in the ooihllls from the Iscihbridgc and Crow's N t Pass area north to Calgary and lanff. The weather disturbance. which devalopad in Montana and moved north time A yesterday morning. brought light to heavy rain to slliarn and central parts of Alberta and most of Saskatche- wan. ft is hcadiu for Manitoba. atlas ware sunny in Edmonton. It VII the damn roar since 1900 that more than a trace of snow fall in Calgary in June. The heav- iaot previous fall in June was six A else. Subsidy I Probable ' Gen. Eisenhower Recalls Lesson Taught To Nazis m... BAYEUX. France. June G-(AP) -Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower re- turned on D-day plus seven years to Norman-dy's dearly-b 0 U I h I beaches and hedgerows today and bluntly warned the Communist world. to remember the lesson taught Hitler's Nazis. "All the free world would rally here again" if Western civilization is threatened by aggression, the supreme commander said at Ste. Mere Eglise, where the float waves of U. S. parachute troopers paved the way for beach assaults on Hitler's forms: Europe in 1944. "Today the Western world is united to defend freedom before it is lest," he told a crowd of 8,000 in another short speech at the British cemetery in Bayeux. the eastern end of the 65-mile D-day assault front where British forces captured the first town in the Lib- eration of France. Eisenhower flew to commemor- ate the occasion from his head- quarters in Paris, where he heads a growing Atlantic Pact: army to defend Europe against any new aggression. llis plane circled over a fleet of - 40 French. British. Norwegian and Danish warships engaged in I joint "operation progress" exer- It landed at Cherbourg, the first large French port captured by the Allies in 1944. Eisenhower motored to Ste.Mere Eglise and placed a wreath on "Ml-lcstone Zero”, which marks the start of the armored dash across France to the Rhine. ”We hope that the campaign he- gun seven years ago taught all ag- gressors one thing-that the soil of France is sacred to all the free- dom-loving world." he said in an iirhprcvniptu speech before the Town Hall. "Ail sggressors would do well to rememiber that." Eisenhower said the only aim of the Allies now. as seven years ago, is peace. but "tragic experi- ence has taught us that peace could never be the lot of those who were divided, fearful or wishing to remain spectators." Taxation Bill Gels Thinliieading tD'I'rAWA. June 6 -(CP) - A filial Opposition attempt to knock out a B125.000.000-a-year jump in the Federal sales tax was defeated by the Government majority in the Commons today. The House voted 138 to 50 against tampering with Finance Minister Abbott's budget proposal. rejecting a move sponsored by the C.C.F. and backed by the other Opposition groups. Then. it gave third and final reading to a Gov- ernment bill embodying the sales tax increases and other taxation boosts. The bill. whose sales tax hoist from eight to 10 per cent has stirred criticism in the Commons ,for some weeks. now goes to the Senate. M. J. Caldwell. C. C. F. leader. called for the vote on the sales tax issue when the bill was up for third reading. He moved that it be sent back to the committee of the whole House for reconsideration of the clause dealing with the sales impoat. Hospital Ass'n Eiecis Officers ST. ANDREWS. N. 13.. June 6-- (CP)-R. H. Gale, superintendent of the General Hospital. Saint John was elected chairman of the New Brunswick section of the Maritime Hospital Association at its ninth annual meeting at Al- gonquin Hotel hero succeeding Dr. D. !'. W. Porter. superintendent of the Moncton Hospitll. Dr. 0. Msclntoah. Antigorflsh. was nam- ed chairman of the Nova Scotla- Newfoundland section and Neil Maclsean. Charlottatovm. chair- man bf the Prince ldward Island section. other sectional officers are: New Brunswick. secretary. Rev. sister Burns, Superior of Hotel Dieu Hospital. Chaiham; execut- ivs members. Miss A. .1. Mc- Mastsr. R.N. superintendent of soldiers Memorial Hospital. Gags- bsliton; J. D. Winslow. - stock; and K. I. Irvine. St. Stephen; Nova aootis-Newfounm land. secretary. Miss Rhoda Mc Donald. superintendent of Paysant Memorial Hospital. Windsor: Prince Edward Island. vice-chalh man. luv. Mother Paula; and sec- reiary, Alex Molasac. both of was wounded on till 9'll.!.'.V.l , s inches in solo sad sass Charlottetown. V Summer Collage Damaged By Fire Al York Pi. Fire late last night caused con- siderable lnternal damage to a summer cottage at York Point owned by Mr. Picton "Pic" Brown, Charlottetown. The fire was first noticed by nearby farmers about 11.30. Origin of the blaze at the time of writing was unknown. It ap- peared to have started around the fire place but there were none of the owners in the cottage since late in the afternoon. The blaze quickly spread to the nail and over the floor but near- by neighbors succeeded in remov- ing all the furniture without dam- age or loss. City firemen with the Dickie. pumper raced to the fire and with the aid of neighbors over- came the blaze. U. 5. Wholesale Food Prices Show Decline NEW YORK. June 6-(AP)-U. S. wholesale food prices. as meas- ured by the Dun and Bradstreet index. this week posted the sharpest decline in eight months. The index dropped to 57.08 from 37.16 last week, and was 18 per cent above the year-ago level of S6. The index represents the total cost at wholesale of one pound each of 31 foods in general use. Read by Eveybody iiiih ArmyTiack To Positions Held Before lied Drive By DON HUTII TOKYO. June 7 -. (Thursday) - (AP) - Allied armored prongs squeezed Wednesday to the gates of Chorwon and Kumwha - key- stones of the Red redoubt in North Korea. Rearguards of an estimated 300.- 000 Communist force yielded slightly on the central front but resisted fiercely on the east and west flanks. A powerful nutcracker was tightening along the two main roads leading to the bastlons of Chorwon and Kumwha, l7.and 16 PAGES L with us. Subscriptions delivered 80.00: Mall Id.Il other Provinces and lJ.B.A. 58.00 An argument between counsel over the admissibility of several letters exchanged between Premier J. Walter Jones and Mr. Donald Gordon. President of the Canad- ian National Railways, highlight- ed the sitting of the Board of Transport Commissioners in the Supreme Court room yesterday af- tcrnoon. land and the C. N. R. closing of the Hlllsborough Bridge to railway traffic. with the Chief 20 miles north of parallel 38. United Nations tank forces gained one to two miles in the central mountain corridors. bureau chief, reported from the liront that. the battle-hardened ; Eighth Army. comprised of troops ,from 14 countries, had smashed iback to positions they held six weeks ago when the Chinese and two costly and futile spring of- fcnsives. Late last April the main Allied line was four miles from Chor- won or about 12 air miles north of parallel 38. Heavily-censored field dispatches cloaked the exact positions in the current Allied rebound. Eunson. at Eighth Army head- quarters. said there was general agreement the Chinese were build- ing up to strike again. but "it seems to be the general opinion that they won't be back very soon." ” From Formosa Wednesday came Chinese Nationalist reports that a Red international brigade of 30,000 men assembled at Pyongyang. the Korean Communist capital north- west of Chorwon. The case of Cecil Arsenault and Clarence Cahill, charged with robbery, which occupied the at- tention of the Supreme Court in Summer-side all day yesterday wilvl go to the jury this morning after the charge by Chief Justice Thane A. Campbell, the presiding judge. Yesterday the Crown pre ted four witnesses. including the m- plazlnant. Mr. Roy Ford of Northa-m. The defence did not present any evidence. The jury was addressed by Mr. Harold Goodwin for the Crown and Mr. H. F. McPhee, K.C. for the defence. Attorney- General W. E. Darby. K.C. was present but did not take part. Mr. MJuPhee made a vigorous plea on behalf of his clients, con- tending that there was no evid- ence of robbery, no evidence of an assault, and that the identi- fication was not proven. The first witness was Mr. Ford. who told of coming to Summer- side with his wife on March l9ih and coming out of the New World Cafe in the afternoon and meet- ing two men he didn't know. One asked for the loan of a quarter which he needed to buy a bottle of liquor. Wltue.-s said that he gave him a quarter from a wallet which he opened in view of the men and which contained between forty and fifty dollars. A short time later he met them near Hol- man's store and one said that they had got the bottle and invited him for a. drink. Witness tcstiiicd that they all went down back of Hnlmsn's and sat on a window sill and the bottle was passed around two or three limes. He said that when he started to leave one man hit him and then both attacked him and beat him about the head staggering him. As he gained his "Come on. live got it." He felt in his pocket and his wallet was gone. He was bleed- ing from the mouth and nose. Witness identified the accused as the men who attacked him. Un- der cross examination he admit- ud that at the preliminary hear- ing he said he was not sure of Cecil Arsenault and after some hesitation. said that statement was oorrmt. He said that the first time he saw the accused after the incident was in court at the preliminary hearing two days later. Mr. Willard I-logg testified that he in a clerk in T-lolman's pro- duce office and that on the day in question some one had come to the door and said that a man had boon assaulted. He said hc saw . Mr. Ford and be was bleeding about the face. Mr. Arthur . said that be h I member of the R.C.A.i-1 and on March is he was a con- ,(Contlnucd on page 1575?? feet they ran out and one shouted Siside Robbery Case . Will Go To Jury Today iNew Moderator '0f Presbyterian Church Elected OTTAWA, June 6 --tCPi -Rev. Norman Kennedy. M.C.. minister of First Presbyterian Church. Re- gina. tonight was elected moder- ator of the Presbyterian Church in Canada. His election came following the opening service of the 77th Gen- eral Assembiy of the Presbyterian Church being held here in St Andrew's Presbyterian Church. Mr. Kennedy. a distinguished Seat and holder of the Military Cross for gallantry in the First World War. was elected on the first ballot. He succeeds Rev. Dr Frank Scolt Maclfenzie of the Presbyterian College of Montreal. Nominated by the East Toronto Presbytery. Mr. Kennedy has been minister of the Regina Church for the last nine years. He moved to Regina nfter serving 13 years in New Glasgow. N. S. Others nominated were Rev. Dr. David Lang. st. Andrew's Church. st. John's. Nfld. and Rev. Dr. Wil- liam O. Mulligan. minister of St. Andrew's Church. Aurora. Ont. PRINCETON. N.J.. June 8 - (AP) Movie actress Elizabeth Taylor was voted the "favorite Desert Island companion" of Princeton University's graduating class in its annual poll today. I maonro, June 5-iCP)- The wife of a midtown hardware 5101'? ,owner was found slain in her shop zloday. n hatchet from a display icsse buried in her skull and her ihsmis lied behind her back. nos- bery was believed to hove been the motive for what police termed one for Toronto's most gruesome mur- iders. . The body of Mrs. Edwin Darkl- ;son, 40. was found in the rear of ;the little store on Yonge Bireet Just south of Bloor. she had been Iairnoat decapitated while her hus- band lsy ill in bed in a room above. A towel was tied about her neck and she had been -gurotled with wire. The store cash register had been emptied. A youth described as "looking like I farm bot!" was sought. Pol- ice said he had been seen leaving the chop. blood streaming down his face. shortly before Mrs. Dcrkilorra body was found by bank msncngar Thomas Ireland who had entered to deliver a. bank draft. . Robert Eunson, Associated Press Korea Reds launched the first all Commissioner on the Board are icommissioncrs Armand Sylvesire, K0,, and H. B. Chase. i The Chief Commissioner finally .ruled against Mr. A.K. Dysart, iK.C.. counsel for the C.N.R., and isuggestcd that the correspondence ihe wished to table be laid aside. iMr. Campbell had objected to its gadmissicn as the file proposed to Ibc submitted contained only cop- .les of the original letters and "they ihave not been proven". He sug- jgcsted that opposing counsel bring .'Mr. Gordon to the hearing, say- 1lr:g.. "he is the man we want". In his opening discussion Mr. ftlysart had traced the stages of the I-llllsborough Bridge from the jdiscusslcns in the local Legislature in 1899. At that time it was de- cided that the bridge be so con- lstructed as to be adaptable for .railway and highway traffic. He isaid orders had been given to dis- Icontlnue operation over it as it is idangerous for trains to pass over ithe bridge and the "C.N.R.. was forbidden to run trains over said bridge". Mr. Dysart said the purpose in wishing to submit the barred cor- respondence was to show "that the ;purpose of the request for recon- istruetion was for the reason of having a bridge for highway pur- poses to meet the standards of the Trans Canada Highway". Mr. Gaffney'a Evidence Called as a witness. Mr. Frank A. Gaffney. C.N.R. Chief of Transport Research, Montreal. produced in evidence a nhotostat map of the section of railwav be- tween Murray Harbour and Char- lottetown. He showed the lines af- fected by the cessation of the ser- vice over the bridge. This brought immediate argument from Mr. Campbell who maintained that in the legend defining the map there was also ll. line which indicated a possible route for a bus franchise. The map was allowed by thr- Chicf Commissioner who ruled that if they stopped the traffic Mr, Dvsart. must be able to show that they had an alternative ser- vice to offer. gion through which the closed line passed and named the villages whose stations were not now on- clbrook. Mt. Albion. Mt. Herbert. are handy to good highways. was bi-oumt out. way had operated a two-day a week service for passengers and also a four-day a. week mixed ser- vice on the line over the bridge. March 10, mil. closing the bridge the service had operated via Mi Stewart. There has been no pas- senger service between Lake Vcrdc and Southport since that date, the witness said. He added that granting: of the applications to permanently close the bridge in rail traffic would have no affect on the freight service with the -7Continued on page 15 C01. 1” -m..:m ! Coroner Dr. smlrle Lawson lsaid the woman had been killed by is-epeaied blows with a hatchet. "his a gruesome think: the WOMEN had been chopped repeatedly." he said. sought was a young man Whose age was estimated as from 20 to 26 and described by a woman who said she saw him leave as about five feet. lo inches in height. of heavy build. bland and wearing a blue suit. Police said in s descript- ion broadcast all over Ontario that the man's clothes would be sputtered with blood. The Derkisons moved into the store only eight months ago. a friend said Mrs. Derklson. who dur- ing her husband's illness had taken over the shop. had been robbed recently of M00. There was no im- mediate way of determining how much money had been taken from the till today. The slaying was Toronto's third so far this year. The two previous cases were reduced to manslaugh- let The Board, under the ehairman- ; ship of Chief Commissioner Ms :D., C. Cn. L.. D. C. L.. Lieutenant Archibald is hearing arguments by Governor of Ontario will arrive in the Province of Prince Edward Is- icharlottetown over the noon accompanied by Mrs. Lawson Board Hears Argument On Hiiisboro Bridge Traiiic llieui. Governor ,0f Oniario To itVisii PE I Today Hon. Ray Lawson. O. B. E.. L. early this after- and Lieutenant Colonel Thomas Lawson, his Aid-dc-Camp and son. The party will be guests at Gov- ernment House during their brief visit. This afternoon His Honor win be driven to points of interest throughout the Province. and will see his first lobster factory. He will be accompanied by Lieutenant Governor T. W. I... Prowse. Premier J. Walter Jones, and Mayor B. Earle MacDonald. This Evening he will be guest of honor at a reception at Govern- ment House. attended by approx- imately fifty guests including Pro- vincial and city officials. After is visit tomorrow morning to the National Park. the party will leave by R. C. A. F. plane for Trenton. Ontario. where I-lis Honor is to offlciats at an Air Force cel- iebraticn. O'I'l'AWA, June 6-tCPl- Thd average Canadian industrial work- er was earning 346.42 a week on April 1. the highest average week- ly wage in history, the Bureau of Statistics reported today. It com: pares with 348.19 at March I and 544.77 at April I last year. AN Ecofis-r is A Gov WHO is fntkmc. Aaour HIMSELF with You Wanf 1'AErLooR! I HALIFAX. June 6-(CPI--Offh vminion Mr. Gnffnev described the re- Thursday. crating. They were Bunburv. l-iaz- Thursday morning, Th, villncc Green and Southport, All nbour noon itiEisewhcre in the district cial forecasts issued by the Do- Publlc Weather Office here and valid until midnight Synopsis: - A few remaining sprinkles of rain will drift across Nova Scniis weather is forecast to become sunny again over Nova Scotia. there iwill be a few afternoon and even- i Since the order of the Board of Chanlle I Toronto Woman Found. Murdered In Own Store He said that rm-mer1.v the rall- ;insz showers. Regional Forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Variable cloudiness. Scattered showers in afternoon and evening. Lillie in temperature. Light winds. Low and high Thursday at Charlottetown 40 and 65. High tide today at 1.03 A. M. and 11.40 A. M. sun rises at 4.27 A. M. and sets at 7.56 P. M. MCA Alli. SERVICE Lv. Charlottetown for Moncion 5.10 A.lil.-11.20 A.M.-4.40 !'.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Monciaon 7.25 AM.-1.25 PM.-6.56 EM. Lv. Charlottetown for New Glasgow - Halifax 1.40 A.M. New Glasgow only: 1.40 P.M. New Glasgow ls Halifax Ar. Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11.00 AM. from New Glasgow only 4.20 PM. from New Glasgow anti Halifax. l Charlottetown - Sydney flights every Monday. Wednesday. Friday. IOBDEN - CAPE TORMENTINB FERRY SERVICE Leave Borden Dean 0. T. 9.10 A.lil. I035 A.M. 1.00 PM. 2.40 PM. 4.80 PM. 1.80 PM. SUNDAY SEIIVTCE .14-ave Borden Leave C. 1'. Mo A.M. loss AM. 1.00 PM. it.” PM. 0.45 PM. 8.00 I'M. WOOD ISLAND! - CAIIIOU JIIIY IIIVICI ' llicasdsrl rum have Wood Blenh- Prlnoa Nova lama. I p.lI. Chan. A. Dunning I! an. I 53. nova caribou- Olaa. A. Dancing Ian. 1).: ggtrrlssos Nova ..:..:. asap. lp.aa. I