iWIlf!'l'ali1I. Maxims OFA MERE MAN a----:--- leper .MAXIMS ' fora i MERE MAN --mg ..:-'1?-”l-ii”-?-"-5”?-o'-7-'3"-'l?-i?1f' ' ' , - , ..l:..:"r..".:.:.:.:.:'.;? '”""' "” Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . ”.;'1f":.'f":.'t”3..':::”.:.1'”..'l”& l'."."'::';'.:..”x"::'.?.. Cl-IARLOTTETOWN, iCANAD'A,- IWEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1952 12 PAGES .lf.:'”l."..'..2.:l..lf il'.':'"32..L"" EDEN HAS 4- POINT PLA I Railways Claim Savings In New Rates System Live Fox And Mink Show Gets Underway In City; Report Quality Very High The 22nd live fox show and fifth annual live mink show of the Prince Edward Island Fur Breed- ers Association got underway at the Provincial Exhibition grounds yesterday morning. About 260 foxes consisting of standard sil- vers, white-marked silvers. plat- inums and pearl piatinums are entered by top Island breeders in the various classes. They are described by Judge George A. Callback of aummeraide as "very good." The mink in various shades from standard to whites number about 200 and these have certain- ly improved in quality very much since the first show was held some five years ago. Then the breeders had mostly standard mink, with only a few entries of mutations. Now they have been in close contact and co-operation with leading breeders in the Un- ited statesland have in the var- ious cagos real quality animals, some of the best of which could be shown at the biggest exhibitions in the U. S. A. and would be aer- ious contenders in the prize list Can't Be Duplicated The very bad weather on Mon- day may have cut. down the num- ber of entries as several corn- petitora who were just wavering as whether to enter or not decided to drop out. However. the show now in progress is one that can't be duplicated anywhere else in Can- ada for quality animals .and as far as silver fox and mutations are concerned it can't be duplicated on the American continent for the reason that the old and successful breeders and exhibitors of the past have held on to their best foxes and are therefore not slipping in quality I) .-in” tltym. ,. a glanceovcr-gttl,I ilaol list will that that one of the entries, Thom- as Neilson of Little ahamogue, N. 3.. won the grand championship for silver adults with Royal 513'. This fox was also the grand champ- ion adult silver at Amherst last. week. The d champion silver pup was W llowgrove Miss 30G, bred and exhibited by Ernest Mill. Ken- Toontinued on Page a"6ol. 5') "NAVY" - Harold dm-:-MAN Charles Green, above, is a one- man "naval" force for Queen Elizabeth II. The veteran' barge- man handles all problems of water l.r;llSp?tl.ii1I:l0n i0; Lghc Queen. as c dd.,,gr, hr s er, Kirig.-l'Genrge VI."-tfarvflzn.” who bears the title of "Queen's Water- man". will wear this ornate coa- tume at the Coronation ceremon- Would M23. Immediate Boost Bul Saving laler OTTAWA. Nov. 11 -(CP)-The railways said today a proposed new-system of setting rail charges would result in freight rates lower than under the present basis. Though the method calls for im- mediate rate increases. the Rail- way Association oi Canada con- tends that eventually it would bring about economies making lower tolls possible. The submission was made to the Board of Transport Commis- sioners by John L. O'Brien. coun- sel for the association and the Canadian Pacific Railway, as the C. P. R. opened evidence to back up the railways application for the radical shift to the "rats-base, rate-of return" system of fixing earnings. The C. P. R. Proposal Under this proposal, the board would determine the net invest- ment in the "yardstick" C. P. R.'s rail property and allow rates that would yield the company a. specif- ied annual return on the invest- ment, At present, freight rates for all railways are set on the basis of the Canadian Pacific's current financial needs as. decided by the board. The C. P. E. says it should be allowed a 6 1-2 per cent return on an investment base of 51,146,000,- 000, and provincial counsel oppos- ing the move claimed yesterday this would call for a freight-rate jump of between 30 and 33 per cent. However Mr. O'Brien said to- day that at the moment the re- quest is for a rate increase to yield a five-per-cent return. (On an unofficial calculation. that would take. a freight-rasedns crease of around 20 per cent. -The railways now have an application for a nine-per-cent boost before iesyln London next June. "iE'o?iTlnued on Pa-E2-5'col'.'47 Coming Events "Armistice ultltfhee. Morell, to- night. Burns' Orchestra. "Dance in I-Iowa's Hall. Friday. November lath. "Bingo, I-Iope River hall nlzht. Prizes. geese. to- "Dance. Kory Hall. Georgetown, Wednesday. November lath. ! "Bhur Gain Amateur Cavalcade. Won Baptts Hall. November Ittb. "Card and crcklnole party Fri- UOI. Nov. 14 in Margate School. "Try our Purina Finance Plan. for feeding your hogs and poultry. Dillon & Bplliett. "Raeaular Dance. winaloe station Hill. Thursday. Nov. 13th. char- lottetonians Orchestra. Canteen. "Card party and dance, Earns- ilzllirfle School, Wednesday, Nov. "Bazaar and Specialties, south Granville School. Friday. Novem- ber lath. I P. M. sale of candy. "Ham and scallop supper Long 9'"! Hall. Wednesday. November l2t.h. sponsored by Rink. "Dance. St Charles Hall. every fhuraday. 0.30 to 1. Ohalssonh or ehestra. "There will be a Legion Meet- lnl in St. Peters' Legion Hall. ""!?8dIY night, November lath. at 8 ocloek. "Annual meeting of the Kingston ""0031 Canadian Legion will be held in the Legion Home, Charlotte- Wn. Thursday. Nov. is at a am. "A Meeting of the Progressive Conaervatlve Association of North Wmahlrc Poll, at William cosdy's. On November lath. at I P. M. "Variety Concert. st. Peters Bay 300' Name Hall. Wednesday, Nov- unte: mil. starting at no P. M. 4, Sponsored by st. Peters 0. Y. 0. -m-es ("Will be loadln hogs at the Sollowlng points each Thursday. llmmaralde until 130 p.m. and llfaaainaton until 8.00 pun. Mao- wen and Caseley. V ...... "Chicken salad supper. bazaar. at oqnuu clmallan church school mcom. Thursday xlgznoroon. 3.80 toga. Tickets on sale WAS!-iING'I0l., Nov. 11 - (AP) - some late figures on last Tues- day's piesldential election today pushed the total major party vote to 59,643,605. Returns from 142,465 out oi the 140,370 voting units gave: Eisenhower 33,043,529. Stevenson 26,600,076. Eisenhower's percentage 55.4 Sailor Gets Six Tears In Flag Incident RIO DE JANEIRO. Nov. ll - (OP) - A sailor accused on raising the Russian flag on a.Bi-aziiian warship was sentenced today to six years in prison. The sentence, imposed on Jose Pontu Tavares, was the heaviest of nine paued under a Brazilian ism outlawing the Communist Par- W The state charged that Tavarer. raised the Soviet flagon the war- ahip Minas Geraia. LONDON. Nov. ll -- (CP)- Prime Minister Churchill's Con- servatives tonight easily defeated a Labor motion of non-confidence In his Conservative Government It was the first test of strength in the new session of Parliament. The division was 813 to 219-A margin of 34 votes for the Con- servatives. In presenting the challenge yes- terday former Foreign Secretary Herbert Morrison had charged that the government lacked ll strong enough economic policy to withstand the shocks of a pos- sibla'"world slump." The Labor motion wan to amend the government resolution to adopt an Address In reply to the speech from the Throne Nov. That speech. prepared by the government. gave notice that in coming months the Conservatives intend to tie-nationalize the truck- ing and steel industries. Clement Attlee. Oppoaltion leader and former Prime Minister criticized the government for, not taking a lead in dealing with world economic problems. Wm! which Britain's finances were 0.8. Election Figuresl South Koreans Regain Top Of Pinpoint Ridge SEOUL, Korea. Nov. l2-(Wed- nesdaylm AP)--South Korean in- frmiryme in five hours oi savage Eligliting today re-captured the frost nf shell-ripped Sniper IRILIRP. from Reds who had push- ed them off last night for the inn. time in 29 days. Associated Press correspondent John.Rsndolph reported from the central front that the South Koreans won back the crest, Piu- point illll. at 10.05 a.m. They were-l still battling the Reds flor- ccly just to the north of Pin- point. About 1,500 Chinese Reds drove the R.O.lC.s from Pinpoint Tues- day night, attacking behind a terrific artillery and mortar bar- rage. It was the same sort of headlong attack that had virtually wrecked two Chinese armies--numbering up to 80,000 men -on the central front within a month. The battle was fought in pitch darkness. A drizzling rain and law- crlng clouds around the height doused Allied flares and hampered air and artillery support. The Reds opened the attack at jcasii; uEl'ErTPTgCe'lwl'c3l.-57C Churchillis Conservatives Win Confidence Vote Rated the government's case at length. claiming the country was well on the way to economic re- covery under the Conservailve's financial policies. He said Britain had taken a "great stride" forward from the "shadow of overwhelming crisis of a year ago." when the social- ists were in power. He warned against complacency, however, and said every worker must continue to pull his weight. First priority. he said. must be given to earning a living as a country. in overseas trade Britain now had a surplus running at the rate of about 50,000,000 a year. She already had reached the target he had set for the end of this year. He paid tribute to .tha "great support." from the sterling area and U. S. defence ald. But even without the U. S. aid. be said. Britain would have had a trade surplus in October. The government's prime objec- tive" was to reduce taxation, which weighed heavily on antar- pr se. initiative and thrift. owarda this. the Civil Service had been out by 14,700 this year and now was smaller than at any closely hound. Richard Butler, Treasury chief. time for 10 years. x Manpower In Services 1 Tops The 100,000 Mark OTTAWA. Nov. 11 -(Ol?) -De- fence Minister claxton reported to- night in a Remembrance Day broadcast that the manpower of Canada's regular armed forces has topped the 100,000 mark for the first time outside the years of the two world wars. He didn't say just when this milestone was attained in the drive to build a strength of 120.000 by 1964 but it is understood reliably to have been shown on headquart- ers charis within the last week. There were 47,000 in uniform be- fore Korea, Mr. Claxton said in an address prepared for delivery as a free-time political broadcast on the CBC, compared with the "100,000 giving their full time to our de- fence today." This strength, he stressed. is devoted to the main- tenance of peace through the pre- Communities All Across Canada Honor War Dead Father. Mother Held In tllooling PERKINS MILLS. Que.. NOV. ll -(OP)-The father and mother of four children were taken into custody today for questioning about the fatal shooting of their 18'- months-old son. Police said Michel Charbonneau died at his home near here. 18 miles north of Hull. Que. Taken into custody were Roland Charbon neau..2'l,.and h wife,,c , . M. i ”Poll'ce ianrui fshootlnfbccurred Saturday night. -The child died Sunday. Mrs. chsrbonneau, surrounded by her other children, told report- ers ahe was alarmed about 2 -p. m. Sunday by something passing the window of her lonely log farm- house. she said she grabbed a .22-calibre rifle from the wall While passing it to her husband, it discharged. 3 Funeral Service For Israel's Firsl Preshlenl REHOVOT, Israel, Nov. ll. (AP) - Dr. Chaim Weizmann, ia- ther and first president of Israel, was buried today in an olive grove on his estate overlooking the Jud- aeen hills and Jerusalem, the holy city. The funeral service was the trad- itional orthodox Hebrew ritual, ac- companied by a military ceremon- ial. A guard of honor presented arms along the garden path over which the mourners passed. Four hundred representatives of Israel's public life and foreign dip- lomats were invited to attend the service for Weizmann, who died or a heart attack Sunday at 17. Sirens sounded a minute-long blast at 2:30 P.M.. the funeral hour. stopping traffic and work within Israel. ' Onicf Rabbi Yitzhak I-lalevl Her- zog presided and recited lo verses from the Book of Psalms. They were chosen so that the Hebrew initials of each verse spelled out "Haim Ben Ozer," which stand for Chaim, son of our Wieamann. The coffin. covered with the blue and white flag of Israel. was borne by eight colonels of the Israeli army, navy, air force and police on the short Journey from a black- draped catafalque in front of the President's mansion to the olive grove. The body had lain in state since Sunday. I Artillery fired a 2i-gun salute. Tiers of wreaths, topped by the widows wreath of 50 white dab- lias, aussOIllIdOd the, grave. Memorial services were, held to- day in Israel's hundreds of syna- gogues and also in many of its Christian churches. Bathing Suits l Going Formal? HOLLYWOOD, Nov. 11-(AP)- Bathlng suits apparently are go- ing -formal. The, trend was revealed at the opening yesterday of, national fashion press week. ' one leading designer, Rose Marie field. has recalled the Ed- wardian hour-glass era. The suite even have some feather boning. but It's removable; Bodicea are pointed, hips aounded, in some cases with draped folda. some of the new rabrlcs are elasticized antique satin, kallle, taffeta and grosgrsln. M vention of another world war. (With arm yveterans of Korea taking their discharges in the hundreds, the total of the three services has been hovering between 95,000 and 100,000 most of 1062 and for a time dropped back after hit- ting 99,000. The fact 1.900 married soldiers are due home from Ger- many shortiy and entitled to dis- charge if they want it may drop the total back again.) He urged Canadians l.o remember their soldiers and snllors in the Korean war ”at this time of re- membrance" and at Christmas. "We should remember that they are there in that far-off place fighting for us, fighting for ollr security, fighting for freedom lt- sclf. And on Remembrance Day we should remember especially those who have given their lives in that far-off place." (By The Canadian Press) Canadians honol'cd their war dead as Remembrance Day was observed in cities and towns throughout the country. Business organizations observed two min- utes silence. At 11 am. activity ceased and citizens stood with bowed heads on the 34th observance since the cease-fire of the First World War. In Ottawa, thousands gathered around the national war memorial and watched Governor-General Vincent Massey place the lvreafh. Later they saw Veterans Minister Encouraged By One Phase Of - Vishinskytpeech (By Norman Altatedter) UNITED NATIONS. N. Y., Nov. ll-(CP)-Britain today offered four principles to Russia as a basis for settling the war-prison- ers issue blocking aicease-fire in Korea. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden told the United Nations in Britain's first major policy ad- dress to the current General As- sembly that he does not despair that talks here can help towards a Korean settlement. Eden said he was "encouraged" by the fact that Foreign Minister Andrei Vishnisky of Russia had not said that prisoners should he forced hack to their homelands at the point of a bayonet. Vlshlnsky argued before the naaemhly's political committee Monday that all prisoners should he repatriated. The ll. N. com- mand lnalatll It will not use force to repatrlaie those prison- ers who say they fear to return to Communist hands. E(len”s Principles Eden said he believes these are the principles on which an agree- ment should be based: 1. Every prisoner has the right to be released on the conclusion of an armistice. 2. Every prisoncr has the right. to be speedily repatriat- ed. 3. The detaining side has the duty in provide facilities for repatriation. . 4. The detaining side has no right to use force in connec- tion with the disposal of prisoners. "In other words, after an armistice a prisoner of war may not be either forcibly detained or forcibly repatriated." Eden opened his address ex- Lapolnte place the cornerstone of the government's new s5,000,000 vetcrans,"Af-fairs Depot-tmern. builds lng. Government offices, stock ex- changes, banks and most schools were closed. At Montreal, soldiers returned from the Korean battlefront join- ed in observances at the Domin- ion Square cenotaph. Lieutenant- Cvovernor Ieaspard Fauteux of Quebec took the salute. 'More than 180 lvreaihs were placed on the cenotnph at Toronto by service clubs and organizatiolrs. In many centres veterans back to the Boer War joined others re- turned from more recent conflicts in honoring their fallen comrades. In Vancouver, a Royal Canadian Artillery parade to the Victory Square cenotaph was attended by live Sikhs who recently Joined the group. ' Parades and ccnotnph services featured Edmonton obmrvanoes. The armed services called out more than 1,000 men and women in Winnipeg for special parades. Roman Catholic Churches held special Mass. In Quebec City, services wew. held Sunday when wreaths were placed at the Cross of Sacrifice. The same day Canadian soldiers in Korea and Hanliover, Germany. paid tribute to Canadian war dead with two mlnutes' silence. Large parades were held Tues- day ill Halifax, Moncton, and other east coast centres. At Ottawa Mrs. Dan Mecann. on behalf of all bereaved mothels in Canada, stood beside the Prime Minister to place her wreath. She lost two sons. Notable among the floral tri- butcs placed at the base of the National War Memorial were those of Japan and Germany, tuo coun- trlexwtlth which Canada was once at war. But Russia placed no wreath. She has not done so for the last two years. iluehe? Legislature To Open Today QUEBEC, Nov. ll - (OP) - The first session of Quebec's 24th Leg- islature, its business program high- lighted by government legislation to reduce mounting traffic accid- ents, opens tomorrow. Lieutenant - Governor Gaspard Fauteux will read me Speech from the Throne outlining new legisla- tion inciuding bills to censor tele- vision programs, establlsh a trans- port department, tighten anti-mar- gerine laws. extend rent controls and abolish Montreal's circuit court. Traditional pomp will mark the sessions opening ceremony in the red-carpeted Legislative Council, Upper House of Quebec's bicamerai Legislature. , Georgia Lost-Civil War Veteran Dis: FITZGERALD, Ga.. Nov. ll - fAP) .- "General" William Jor- dan Bush. Georgia's last surviving confederate veteran, who had hoped to "llve as long as Moses"- i20 years-died at his home here today. He was 101., His death leaves only eight survivors of tile defected southern army in the war between the states. - pressing the hope that Secretary- Ceneral Trygve, Lie, who offered his 1-e?sig'rtationlVMonday' In'- the interests of world peace. "Can yet. be persuaded to reconsider his decision." This was greeted by a loud applause from dele- gntcs. (Continued on Page ...-..M.......M Huron To Be . llecommissioned OTTAWA, Nov. 11 - fCPl -The Tribal Class destroyer Huron. fol- lowing an extensive refit with weapons of the most modern type, will begin a new commission at Halifax, Nov. 17. the navy an- nounced today. She will bring to eight the num- ber of destroyers the navy will have on active duty. The Huron, originally commis- sioned in 1943, has an extensive second World War record and also a tour of duty in Korean waters on her log book. ' During the war she escorted con- voys to Russia and was part of the loth Destroyer Flotilla in the Eng- lish Channel and Bay of Biscay, engaging in actions with the en- emy. She became inactive after the war but later was l-e-commission- ed and went to Korean waters for a tour of duty in January, 1951. when she came back she- was placed in reserve for refit and modernization. when recommlssioned Hl.ll'0I'l will be under command of Cmdr, Rich- ard C. Chenoweth, 39, 0.B.E., of westmount, Que. now deputy di- rector nf naval plans and operations C0673)" T0 SETTLE PRISONER ISSUE Observance In Charlottetown citizens from all walks of live participated in large numbers yesterday in the ob- servance of the solemn ritual of Remembrance Day yesterday, which as on other occasions was under the auspices of the Canadian Leg- ion and which saw an exceptional large turnout of service men and members of the armed forces. Headed by three Divisions of Legionalrcs. followed by members of the Air Force Association and units of the various armed forces. Naval and Air Cadets. the parade marched from the Legion Home to Queen Street. Kent, Great George and to the Cenotaph, where the solemn and impremive ceremony of placing wreaths in memory of the war dead was carried out. Chaplains in attendance were Rev. .1. T. Ibboll and Rev. T. P. Butler. Rev. Mr. lbboit referred to the war in Korea and said that the only hope for our present generat- ion lies in ”tlle form of collective security which can only come to-us through the Fatherhoodl of God and the Brotherhood of man." l-lather Butler, in speaking of the present conflict in Korea said that the boys who had given up their lives in that theatre, had no desire to be heroes, all they wanted to do was finish their job and get back home to their loved ones. At. 11 o'clock a salute was fired by the 28th L. A. A. Regt. to her- aid the traditional two minutes Impressive Remembrance Day Charlottetown Cheque Swindler. Gels 3250.000 TORONTO. Nov. 11 - (GP) C Toronto police said today they suspect an internationally-knowr. cheque swindier as the man whc engineered the defrauding of tin Bank of Nova Scotia. of I2o0.00t with bogus certified cheques. The police. who haven't yet been called in to help with the investigation. say the awindlel ithey suspect is wanted by botli Scotland Yard and the United states Federal Bureau of Invest- igation. He was reported ,seen here two months ago. The same man. an Englishman was blamed for defrauding a Van- couver bank of s5,000 last year. Private insurance company in- vestigators today were reported hot on the trail of five Toronto res- iderlts said to have hidden in room- ing houses in Montreal. SAVED FROM DBOWNING SYDNEY, Nov. 11-(cr)-Par-" nell Burns, although unable to swim, saved a man from drown- ing today. He jumped into the chilly Sydney River to grasp Eldridge Lewis. who, had fallen out of a boat. Burns managed to hoist Lewis back into the boat and several passers-by helped Charges Air Not Gettin.g , By DENT I-IODGSON -.J'(CansdialL Press Staff Writer) SEIGNIORY CLUB, Que.. Nov. 11 - (GP) - Canada's air enterprises are not getting as good a deal from the government as her ground and water transport companies, a Mar- itime representative claimed today. .I.t a meeting of the Air Indust- ries and Transport Association. C.F. Burke of Maritime Central Airways, chauenged the head of the Air Transport Board, J. R. Baldwin, with the statement that railways and water transport are being given an advantage in government polic- ies. Mr. Baldwin. who as head of the Air Transport Board has strict powers over Canadals commercial air businem, was non-committal in reply. Mr. Burke. It native of Charlotte- town, criticized the Government's policy-as reaffirmed yesterday by Transport Minister Chevrier -- of making air enterprises "stand on their own feet." He said that - e government maintains such transport facilities as canals and proposes to aid the St. Lawrence seawny project on the basis that these facilities serve the public interest. At the same time, the Government expected commer- cial nlr companies to ”pey as they go" on every project, including de- velopment of air fields and other aircraft facilities. Mr. Burke's remarks hlghllghtecl a discussion between the commer- cial operators and Mr. Baldwin, the Federal Transport Department's ruling authority on all matters per- taining to flying. The retiring chief of the Air Staff. Alr Marshal C.W. Curtis, at headquarters. "tcoriti..u'ecl orfpaie '5" col.'7l'4 Power From (By Sam Dawson) NEVV YORK. Nov. ll-1.-AP)- Thc day of elcctrirlty from the atom at an economical cost may be coming much falter.ihan first thought. Ont-. leading Industrial chemist. Dr. Charles Allen Thomas. presi- dent of the Monsanto Chemical Co.. thinks it. may be only four or five years off in the United States. ' Others think Britain may have it sooner because production of electricity by present methods is more expensive there. The current cost of building a new electric plant in England is so high power would be comparatively competitive. U. 8. power com- panies have the benefit of greater natural water and other re- sources. Companies Interested Companies looking into the possibilities of producing an Im- proved atomic reactor include, besides Monsanto. Dow Chemical, Detroit Edison, Union Electric and Union Carbide 1 Carbon. Now that Britain has an atomic plant. aclentlata hers estimate she could build a generator and sup- that atomic-produced - Atom May Come Within. Few Years lply rnmmcrr-lal power to indus- llry at nhnui 1 U2 cents a kilo- wall hnur-n figure competitive there but higher than present American costs. Dr. Thomas. however, that present. nlnmic power will soon he brought lower. in a paper read M the St. Louis meeting of the National "Academy of Sciences, he foresee "the possibility of newly-designed reactors. almllar in some respects to those now in use, that will simultaneously produce plutonium for the atomic stockpile and elec- tric power for civilian and in. duairlal consumption.” The new type reactor would use thinks costs the great heat generated in split- ilng the atom to operate tur- blnca for electric-generators. Two Great Roadblocks There are two great roadblocks. The first is military aacurity which keeps secret many of the facts that industrial scientists would have to have before they could apply atomic energy to their lmluatry'a problems. The second block is the If!!! expense Involved, ll of the gov- ernmental monopc over the ma- teriala used in eton-its plants: Enterprises Equal Deal Mosoovi --Reaction ' To Lie Resignation LONDON. Nov. ll. - (APV - Moscow radio said tonight Trygvs Lle's resignation as aecretary-gen- eral of the United Nations was a revelation of "his complete pol- itical bankruptcy." ' The broadcast gave the first Moscow reaction to Lle's surprise i resignation yesterday. It was bas- ed on a New York dispatch of Tass. Soviet news agency. , -The radio bitterly denounced Lie for his support of United Nations in resisting Communist forces in Korea. "Trygve Die was shown up in an agent of aggressive circles, of the U. S. A.”, said the broadcast. "His efforts to help the U. S. A. to hide with the U. N. flag the American aggression in Korea gave rise to waves of indignation throughout the world.” Wilt (ms (olmiwt Nests is A SILENCER. Yuk Rooms 0 I HALIFAX. Nov. 11-(CP)--Offl. cial forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Wealh-r Office here and valid until mid- night Wednesday. Synopsis: Skies remained cloudy over the Marltlmes Tuesday and there were a few very light snowfIur- rles. At a few places the temper- atures remalned below freezing all ,day. A weak disturbance crosslnl Quebec will cause snowfiurrles in New Brunswick. Prince Edward Island and Eastern Quebec Wed- nesday. In Nova smile a few light rain showers are exepected by evening. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Cloud)". scattered anowflurrles in after- noon and evening. Not much change in temperatures. South- west winds 20 ahiftlnl in even- lug to northwest 15. Law and high Wednesday at Charlottetown 3 and 37. at 0.8! A. M. and 1.02 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 1.30 A. M. and 2.10 P. M. Summerside tlda 'ght.een min- utes later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 1.00 A. M. and It! II. 4.4! P. M. q . High tide today at Oharlottetown