5 MAXIMS - OI‘ A MERE‘ MAN MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Atholnssllfl! oats duly ‘<‘“ w Th. “pagan so you}; 1| rears; tutiraztrm‘ Réid by Everybody W... .s~..:.-.::=-.::..::'.:.":::." "' ~ ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew filliha%“""eaaii‘l“'at.“'ai.a _ - CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, JANUARY 2'1, 1941 ‘ 1o PAGES gyeggygwmg", U. ,_ , m, 35 ARE KILLED Plane (hashes, l2 Killed At iiroydon Airport (By The Associated Press; LONDON. Jan. 26—A passenger airliner crashed and burned at Crolrion Airport Saturday in a mist-shrouded takeoi! for mast Africa, killing 12 0f its N occu- pants. The dead included an entire family o1 four and three nuns. one of whom chose to per- ish in the flames rather than im- peril a rescuer. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon 00nd. their iM-year-old ‘son Peter, and nve-month-old daughter died in the crash, as ddd the family's young governess. Stunned relatives and friends of the victims watched the plane falter for a moment as it went into the air, then crash into an unoccupied Czech Airlines plane. Both planes burst into flames which barred rescuers. Surviving were seven passengers and four membe a of the five- man crew. Capt. Ted Spencer. pilot and head of the Spencer Airways. operators of the‘ Ameri- can-bullt Dakota piano. was kill- ed. He had arrived in Inndon early this month offering 8:000 miles fughta to former service men planning to make their homes in Africa. 1t was the second major plane crash in Southern England in two vrcoks. A British European Alr- ways plane crashed Jan. i1 in heat, killing eight occupants. 1N CRASHES 0F TWO n03 Potato Stocks At lieeord iiigh In u.s. BfiTON. Jlln. 26 -- (AP) — Stodrs of potatoes for sale reached a r¢¢0rd high for the United States of 150,230,000 bushels Jun. 1. with nearly turn-thirds" of the holdings in Maine. the United States De- partment of Agriculture repdrted today. ' . The coop m hand for mesdiend- bins is o6 per cent greater than on Jan. i. i948. and 42 pe-r cent over the 10-year average, the depart- ment said. "Reduced plantings" for 1947. the Department added, are indicated by “very preliminary reports." Mon Leaps 86 Stories To loath, lnluros Woman NEW YORK. Jan. 26 - GAP -- A man identified by police as vid H. Gordon, Jr.. leaped to his death today from the 06th lloor- of the lknpire State Building, evading ef- forts by guards and another spect- ator to prevent him from jumping. The man cmshed on to Mrs. {Frances Coover. 51. who was walk- ing along 34th Street. Mrs. Coover was taken to hospital where she was reported suffering from mult- iple fractures. Grain Elevator Urged F or Charlottetown At Winsloe Farm. Meeting Liverpool Lohstor Fisherman Drowned LIVERPOOL, N. 5., Jon. fl- lOPt —- Entangled in his lobster trap mooring lines. John Edward Whynot. 39. was found drowned in nwbv Ragged i-I-arbor Saturday. The body had been it the water about an hour when. it was dis- WWFQd by other lobster fisher- men floating near Whynofls over- {ufurd dory. Coroner Dr. J. Smith decided death was accidental. Coming. Events "Dance ‘in K. of C. Hail. Sourls. Tuesday. January oath. Clifford Orchestra. "ljhckvy East Royalty tonight, sheds Taxi vs. Royals. Skate er. "Rcoeivinl Hogs at crapsud for Canada Packers Ltd. every Tuesday until 11 A. M. R. N. Dawson. t "Milton rink tonight. Hunter RWY Rvyals vs. Milton Hornets. Game starts 'at 8.15. “Dance at Bertranfs Mills. Bonshaw, Wednesday, Jany. 39. Good floor and good music. "Charlottetown Bombers versus New Gllltow All Stars at New Qllilow Rink tonight. dame ill"! a130, "Attention farmers o! f"!!! We want a quantity of Bgarlilttle- Eastern Packing 00., "Arriving at Albany soon. car baled shavings for bedding, insulat- A request to the Dominion Government to make easier the flow of Western grain io the Maritime Provinces, lo remove present restrictions and to erect and equip with loading and un- loading facilities a grain elevator at Charlottetown during the sum- mer of 1947 was made'in a strongly worded rcwlution passed at a largely attended farmers’ meeting held at the home of Mr. Roland Beaten, Wlnsloc, on Hi- day night. Mr. Lemuel MaeKinnon. Win- sloe. presided at the meetings/fr. Andrew B. MacRac. East Royalty. acting as secretary. Following is the resolution: "Whereas. at this largely at- tended meeting of farmers at Winsloe, assembled for the ‘pur- pose of giving considered thought. to some important problems in-‘ cident to agricultural work. and "Whereas the Federal Minister of Agriculture at Ottawa. the Hon. James G. Gardiner. is press- ing upon us the urgency for in- creased production of livestock. particularly that of hogs and livestock products. and “Whereas the importation of grains. concentrates. miilfeeds, etc. is absolutely essential to at- tain thia objective. but rather difficult at present to uccoonplish in sufficient quantities as requir- ed, and "Whereas producers should be reasonably assured of the avail- ability of such raw products be- fore making heavy Dffidlltlfl! commitments. and "Whereas the only assurance our farmers can have of thfl‘! belnl sufficient quantities of such livestock feeds. as already "19"" (Continued on Polo ll Ovi- 9t tent, of the loo. etc. Order early. J. George MacKay, _ Protest Entry 0f Polish immigrants Alli-mist‘. NS. Jan. as -(OP) --'1‘he Amherst branch of the Carr- uiiui legion Saturday forwarded to Prime Minister Maekenlie Kim and immlflttion authrlties at Ot- rtawathe text of a resolution op- posing the admittance of Polish farmer immigrants to Canada. (some 8.000 Poles who foulllt with the Irliiah 5th Anny ln Ital! have been placed on In f"Arrivln| at York. sir of mixed "d. unloading Ion and Welder. Jan. arr-as. Bar Ic- Lllllblin, Qtanhope. so -'__‘- Loading Hon ev Tuosda at Albany. Write or- yam for ‘kite!- ngwvlol. gtlflafltfldWlflflltlflil "w. h- ‘Ivu Georumlgtartet prices. J "Cdllfllilll R0“ fd’ Ctillfll mil“! Mo. mu i‘: . sauna. Milo Boy. Fortune Jri o, Bay till. Allllfldll Dtllldll. on "1 - Dmlltlto-vrn. Qtrathoona. “The Walton's Inter Church s1 women farms and ‘another 1,000 ore ex- (By The Canadian Press) HALJEAX, Jan. N-A tin-gl- rrled general strike among Mari- time coal miners would, if car‘ tied out. black out towns in Cumberland County depending on steam-generated electricity. N. T. Avard. Amherst, N. 8., president and director of Canada Electric Company. told the Nova Scotia Public Utilities Board Saturday. “If the strike in the coal mines comes about it will create a ser- ious situation," Mr. Avard told the Board when he appeared at‘ a routine hearing. (A report Saturday from Ottawa after a series of meetings which failed to settle the wage dispute between the United Mine Work- ers (C.C.L.) district 28 and Do- minion Steel and Coal Corporat- ion aaicl the Union was standing by a "no contract-no work" at- liiudn. The Union's contract with Maritime coal operators expires Jan. 31.) The public utility chief said his company's generating plant at hfaccan, N.S.. had only enough coal to operate for a week at most. Some Centres Safe’ Meanwhile, o t h e r" generating points in the Provinces mainland indicated they would be able to hold out through a possible gen- eral coal strike. J. B. Hycs. general manager of Nova Bcotia Light and Power Company. which supplies tile Halifax area said that because water stocks behind company dams were hilgh, there ‘was little likelihood of hardship in the area where only one filth of tile elec- tric power is steam-generated, The steam plant at Halifax had enough coal to operate ,for 30 clays at least.’ . .... ., In the Pictou County industrial.) nrca George i-‘t. Saunders. man- ager of the Plctou County Board. admitted the board was "a bi‘. alarmed about t-lie whole business" but had "made plans in advance." Although '10 per cent of Pic- tou‘s power was steam-generated; u large supply of coal was said to be on hand. Cape Breton Island, Nova Sco- ia‘s largest coal-producing nreo. would be hard-hit in the event of n strike unless the minors made provision for supplies of fuel to gcnoruilng stations. Capo Breton depends almost exclusively on steam-generated electricity. liorantia Miners Strike May Spread NORANDA, Que, Jan. X -—-(CP) —The- Norancia ia/bor picture was complicated today by a. threatened general strike of all miners and smeitennen in the district. Mayor M. Paul Cuddihy of neigh- boring Rouyn said tonight that situation was “teuse" following the general strike hint thrown out by RH. Carlin, dircclor of District No. 8 of the Mircrs‘ Union. Expect Legal Battle in iiiok Murder ilooe HAMILTON. Jeri. 2G — (OP) — A legal battle appeared in brunet! for tomorrow in Wantwttl Coun- ty courthouse when the Crown geek, a postponement of the torso murder trial of William Boholuk and Donald Maohean and (Menu counsel for the two men counter with demands the joint trial pro- oeed or their clietnts be discharged. Bohoauk and Maeliean. in iaAl now nearly 10 months. are charted with the torso killing of John Dick and the Crown is basing its re- quest for a postponement. on the feet lt is not may to proceed pending e Supreme Court of Can- ada review of the case 0f Mrl- 31-» eiyn Dick. baughter of Machean who has been convicted of the slay- ing and granted o new trial. Soak Revision 0f tihlmo Exoll u lot , ruuuux, Jan- oo'- (CPJ-A meeting of the Chinese Soclpty of Halifax, "on behalf of all Chinese in the Maritime Provinces," today lent a telegram i0 Prime Mlniltot Mackenzie King and members of the Iodorei Government asking their support in "- ‘oion of the F" Inclusion Aet." “We feel lure you will agree that the Chinese who are rosldln la Canada should be ptmltoo _oo bring m their wives and fonttuee to that they may take their full pisoe ln_tho social, ptrpetoreol cruet formed by intermittent thaws HEADS WOMEN ‘BOBBIE?’ New commandant of London's metropolitan police women. Miss Elizabeth Bother took over her new duties this year, Benn-e the war she was a magistrate and member" of Hampshire county council. 0n leaving the W. A. A. ‘IX. slie became deputy police commandant. British House To llebate Two important Bills IIONDON. Jan. 26 - (C?) - Parllament will be asked this week to approve two of the Government's most important bills of the session against a backdrop of serious eco- nomic pboblems. _ Tomorrow the House will debate second reading of ,an agriculture "bill giving uogrlcti-lture lvfinister Williams peacetime conthbi over firming operations, including the right to dlsptlseesg formers held to be inefficient and those who do not comply with the cropping dir- ectives of county committees. On Wednesday, second reading will be call-ed on the more contro- versioi town and county planning bill which 5315 up Lewis Silkln, town and country plaxming minister, as national estate agent for all of Eflsland and Wales and which takes away from landowners the right to do as they please with their prop- erty. Horse llero 0f Many Western Films is llead HOLLYWOOD. Jan. zh-Ohom- pion, cowboy"f'1im actor Gene Au,try's sorrel horse and cqtiine iicrn of dozens of western films. is dead at l7, their studio nn- nounced Saturday. Old Champ was Autry‘s inseparable screen companion from 1934 to 194.2, when the animal was retired. Sask. Same birds.“ t Find Going Tough . REG-WA, Jan. 25 -- (C?) ~- A11 appeal lo Saskatchewan residents lo feed game birds, many nmv dy- lng of starvation, was issued tcclay by Provincial Game Commissioner 5.1’... P-ayn-ter. Impenetrable snow has sealed food from Hungarian partridge, pheasant and Drtllflfl chicke-ns as well a5 song birds which normally remain in the pmvincc sharing the winter. Montreal Mon Killed iiy Robbers MONTREAL, Jan. 36-A 74- year-old second-hand store prop- rietor. Leon Fcigenbaum, d-lved in hospital early today four hours after two holdup men had pump- ed three bullets into his thigh, abdomen and left hind. Alone in his store on downtown Craig Street. Feigenbaum was shot when he defied shouted in- structions of the gunmen and attempted to reach the door to summon help. . When the men fled. Feigenbaum made his way to Honest Harry's second-hand store, five doors from 'constitution, the rights ilitawo Awaits Reaction To New Proposals By DARBY ODONNEL-L orrsws, Jan. 2o-_tcvl=i_rtn. ance Minister Albbott, feeling that the Federal Government has gone practically the limit in new tax- ation agreement proposals to the Provinces. today awaited further reaction of Provincial Premiers to the offers which would cost the Dominion a minimum of $206,- 168,000 annually. New Brunswick, Manitoba and Saskatchewan have already in- formed Mr. Aibbott that the new offers. communicated to all pro- vinces within lhc last two weeks and made public Friday, were ac- taxation agreements. Premier Drew of Ontario, term- ing the proposals different than those originally made to the Pro- vinces, has called for a new Dominion - Provincial conference. To this Mr. Abbott has replied that he cannot see what useful purpose could be accomplished through a conference at this time and that he has found no gen- eral desire among the Premiers for such a conference. Duplesall’ Attitude -- 1n Montreal today Premier Du- plessis of Quebec said he and his colleagues would study the latest tax proposals of the Dominion Government "in the light of the of the Province and the rights of the central government," but he said also the taxation rights of the Provinces "should not be replaced by subsidies.” Mr. Duplessls. who received the proposals yesterday, added that in thashort time he, 1188mm able‘ to give to reading them "what sruck mc...'\vas that Ot- tawa asks the Province to cede definite rights for a definite time but the estimates of what the Province will receive are based indefinitely." No reaction has yct come from Premier Mncrlonald of Nova Sco- tin, Premier‘ Manning of Alberta. Premier Jones of Prince Edward Island. and Premier Hart of Brit- ish Columbia. Mr, Abihoft said he did not an- ticipate any objections from Mr. Jones or Mr. Hart as the new 0f- fers would provide them “"1111 more revenue than they would have obtained under akreemefbm accepted in principle last mont-.1. T116 Dominion. havini? mole "5 pfier, now would await replies from the Provinces. It would not run aficr ilic Provinces for such replies. 825,000,000 More The new offers would give the Provinces $95,000,000 more than under thc budget proposals last June and $70,000,000 more ilwu under the original offers in Aug~ m-(Ocoitinued on e55; 5 651.7)" Stolen Road Scraper Found I Victoria Driving Club officials were concerned yesterday ovcr the disappearance of a small road scraper which they had borrowed from the Provincial Department of Public Works for the removal of snow from the ice racing track on Charlottetown harbor ice o! Victoria Park. The scraper wal there Saturday and Sunday it was gone. Ofliciale of the Cluib turned trackers and followed the trail for some distance along the ice. heading up West River. Then they returned to the City and en- listed the aid of Royal Canadian Mounted Police who found the missing machine in a field some seven to eight miles up the river. Now the Club is offering a re- ward in an effort to locate the parties responsible ‘for the theft. To a suggestion that it was the work of a- practical joker, Club officials said that they thought not. The small rather-tired wheels. they said. were excellent his own establishment. ' for a horse-drawn truck woson. Oounelreaiiin lcaaedton tonoe of "fqroian firm laborer‘: ‘o loin in~ the observance the would snotty "mm the "litm- Wom Day a mm. , rue- norm» Ibo Bu‘ "iv- zm, 4on1, a stanols have ooottmd Ilebnsaryfltinzfl um, Canadian farm laborers beinc re- lfl All‘. 8.1! P1613418 Elm, attend by Polish fann laborers 5.10 01.1‘. Qllhl‘ Mil who. wash at a lower rate of 1117-" "Mm. ., moon. , rr fem plwolmoi wet-em bead- ‘Qqtfogu nut to British farmers 0m "measured raccoons in boilvwn forence. tho ras- our Dominion.” the mason said, l) M H! w. [flit/NU [0330 C. 1'\ N /\ DA FLOUR ceptable to them as a basis for! ilampholiton Finds This liard Winter CAMPBELLTON, N. B., Jan. 26_. (CPJ—-Exireme cold and shortage of power have combined iu give this north shore town what. old timers call "the toughest Win10: in half a ccnturyW-After- sub-zero temperatures during most of the last six weeks, the weather finally moderated today. Power has been available only intermittently as a result of scanty rainf-ill last summer and autumn. Homes ordinarily heated by elec- tricity have suffered the most. No new electric ranges have been con- nected this month. Conservation measures include reduced illum- ination and discontinuance of electric heaters for hot water tanks. Plane Returns From Freighting Al‘ Port Menier A Maritime Ceflfral Airways plane returned yesterday from Port Monlcr on Anticosii Island where it had been for several days carrying supplies for the Consolidated Paper 00., Ltd, which is carrying on large-scale lumbering operations. Capt. Carl Burke, manager of the airways concern who flew the Douglas O47 transportkosid that his prin- cipal job was carrying equipment, including logging sleds, snow re- moval machinery ,and tractor parts. Whatever food he carried was incidental, for although the last trip of a supply steamer to the port was cancelled because of ice there was no shortage of tlihcr food or medical supplies. A smaller plane from here will remain at Port Mcnicr for the remainder of the winter, carrying passengers and supplies. Already it has been there almost three weeks. Strong Earthquake Felt In Nicaragua MAlfAGUA, Nicaragua, Jan. 26- (AP) - All Nicaragua was mwak; ened early today by the longest earthquake felt here since the de- struction of Managua in i931. No damage has been reported immed- lately. In Washington. Georgetown Un- iversity officials reported that their srismograph registered a "fairly strong" quake startimg at 5:27 .M EST. and ending at ‘i AM. today. An official estimated the quake at approximately 1,788 miles southwest of Washington. He said the maximum motion of the quake was recorded at 5:20 A M. The volcano Conchagua. in El Salvador near the Gull of Fltmssca. erupted today for the first time since i825. Smoke coltunns poured from the 3,000-foot peak, and ashes and cinders vtere showered on the nearby coltntrysldc. DIAMOND JUBILEE OHATlM-M, N.B.. Jan. 26 -~(OP) -Rev. Sister Currie, 84, will ob- serve on Wednesday the diamond Jiillee anniversary of her enLrIlQ into religious life. A special M s in her honor will be celebrated ed- nesday morning. Sister Currie was a teacher at St. Joseph's Boys school ltere from 1912 to ma. U.S. Consumer Prices In New Reductions QWIROIQIZ. NEW YORK. Jan. fl-(APL- The thud of many falling prices was heard across the United States last. week and promises of more to come sounded like good news for consumers in-INT. Decreases in wholesale lines for the most part have outstripped retail drops. Once these are translated at the retail level the value of the housewifds dollars automatically will rise. The Associated Press index of 35 wholesale commodities showed the greatest aggregate drop in the last two weeks ofgany like period since before 1936, with one excep- tion. This came in a single two- week span last summer when prices were fluctuating widely during the Office o! Price Ad- mrinistrations oi‘! -again -on-again act. One pro-mincnt economist prc- dicted a further drop of 26 per cent in food prices during the next l2 months. The National Retail Dry Goods Association held out hope of at least “par- tial progress" toward what it called consumer demands for $2.50 broadcloth shirts, $3 house dress- es and $1.96 sheets. Even more convincing evidence of coming price decreases in some food lines came from the futures markets, where traders grow fat or thin by contracting now for commodities for delivery at a fu- ture date. At ‘he close of Saturday's mar- kets in Chicago. you could buy butter for June delivery for 52.75 cents a pound. Wheat for Sep- tember delivery was a shade above $1.74 a bushel as against Saturday's $2.19 cash spot price and September oats were quoted at less than 50 cents a bushel compared with Saturday's 81 cents. Al Bapone Dies At 48 MIAMI BEACH, 111a,, Jan. 2d - (AP) - Scarface A1 Capone. 4B. gangland leader who feared a mob- sters‘ death, died Saturday night amid the luxury of his private villa. with his family gathered mound. "I don't want to die, shot in the street," he once said. When death came at 7.225 pm. of pneumonia and heart failure, complications of an apoplectlc stroke, he was in his own bed with expert medical care at hand — and behind high protective wall; that long had guarded him from poss- lble revenge. The body today lay in a funeral home here while members of his family discussed burial plans. No one was allowed to see it, and the ftmeral home said there had bean no callers and no flowers had been received. Death came suddenly of heart, failure. said Capone's physician. Dr. Kenneth S. Phillips. who had treated the prohibition era gang leader sinoe he emerged from prison Nov. 16. 1999. Capone's widow, Mae. collapsed upon his death and is herself in serious condition. The gangster who "look over" in Chicago and built an empire of lawlessness had become a weak in- dividual since he served 'l 1-2 years in Alcatraz and other federal pris- ons on income tax evasion charges. Rdorai records say Alpfronae Capone was born in Naples. Italy, Jan. 17, 1899. He left the poverty- strlcken home of immigrant par-l ents to gravitate into gangdom an‘ t the streets of New York. Expect Parliament To Sit Six Months I The aotvemment, the mem“ a say. claim controls are being lifted in an "orderly fashion." The Pro- gressive Conservative and Social Credit parties claim that govern- By DMRCY (TDONNELL OTTAWA. Jon. 26 — (GP) Some members of the Commons. a/rrivlngdn ottevwn for the openlns of parliament next Thursday. are predicting that the session will last until late June or mid-July. The members. wine oi’ whom re- call the days when sessions lasted a bare three or four months, claim Hie business of Government has plieoted that short become so t- aesalons are gone- fort"?- Although this will be the third session since the end of the war, members predict thaw the effects of the Tea: still will be evident in the legislation which will be‘ sub- mitted for ratification. ‘Pheybelleve that debate on war- aeated price controls will be as lengthy and as heated as possibly my during the session. To support their argument they point to the views of the variants parties PEANES Sweden's Prinoo And Famous Singer Killed COPENHAGEN. Jan. 26 —-(AP) -Thc American soprano Grace Moore met a fiery death. along with Sweden's Prince Gustaf Adolf and 20 other persons. in the crash today of a Royal Dutch Airlines DC-3. Th‘? 15 Passengers and six crew- members died within minutes after taking off for Stockholm. The plane, barely aloft, smaShed back: on. to the airport and went up in. flames. There was no chance for anyone to escape. Miss Moore. the Tennessgg choir. girl who soared to stardom in musi- cal comedy. the opera and the mov- ies, nus en route ‘to Sweden for concerts after receiving an. ovation from a crowd of 4.000 Copenhagen concertgoers. She was 45. She had left her husband, Valentin Pan-era. at -M0ugins. France, where he has been ill. The Swedish Prince, 40, Crown Prince Gustaf Adolf. was killed while going home from a hunting trip in Holland with Prints Bernhard, the husband of Croun Princess Juliana of the Nether- lands. Nine-mortthnld Karl Gustaf. only boy among the dead Prince's five children, becomes second ‘n. line for the throne of Kira; Gustaf Adolf, 88. The Royal Dutch Airline K.L.lvf. announced that the plane's chief pilot was 54-year-old G. .1’. Geysendorffer, its oldest pilot. The Dutch line employs a number o! Canadian pilots. The airliner was on an Amstere dam-Copenhagen-Stockholm ruh. IQ arrived at 2:50 pm, picked up pasu seugers and took off 41 minute! later for the Swedish capital. 1m- mediately after the takeoff 319d when the piano was.or1ly~150 feet: aloft. it banked and crashed burst- ing into flames. The 22 yf-rsons aboard were killcd immediately. Their bodies were so charred and mutilated that they‘ were virtually indistinguishl- (Continued on Page 5 Col. 4) son of‘ Aiioflieit ‘fiiNtR titer ant-s mt, 1k: taoufnv Sara is when fin. iuar is ioclteo u? roe (m: ulnar g Y..." TORONTO. Jan. 26 — (CP)-< Minimum and maximum tempera-n Lures: Vancouver . .. 36 4H Edmonton 16 22 Regina 18 ‘.2 Winnipeg 18 28 Toronto . 36 45 Ottawa 28 Z18 Montreal . 30 38 Qucbct- , 20 3]. Saint John 26 31 Monctori . 2.2 2S Halifax 1i.) J4 J...’ 2' Sydncv 25 ‘l1 Yarmcuth . ‘.14 37$ HkLIFlAX. Jail. ‘.16 - (C? —- Weaiher synopsis and official ln~ land forecasts issued by lhc Du- C.C.1". claims that the government amiroi policy is lessening tho value of the workers‘ dollar and threat- ening to set the machinery of 1n- flatAoa-t into motion. The member; are not sure inst when (he control debate will get underway, but legislation authoris- ing the continuation of the price ceilings has to be ratified before March s1 when the transitional emergency powers act expires. besides a maJor debate on wit! controls, manbors expect contro- versial exchanges on plans for ra- diatribtttion of seats in the Com- mons. on inunlgratlm. and on the government ‘a agricultural policies. minion Pirbiic Weather Office at; Halifax nt 11.15 pm- A S T., Suzi- ciny. _ Synopsis: Easterly winds are bringing moist mild air from the Atlantic to the Matritimes. causing overcast skies with occasional driz- bie. Disturbances over Central Canada and off the Virginia Coast. are expected to move east bringing showers to the district Monday. Forecasts valid until Monday‘ midnight: Prince Edward Island: Overcast. Intermittent freezing drizzle becoming showers in lilo afternoon. Somewhat milder. Light: winds becoming south 20 in the af- terncon. High Monday at Char~ lottetown $5. ' High tide this afternoon at 2.30 and tonight at 2.18. , Sun sets this afternoon at 5 and rises tomorrow morning at 7.25. First quarter moon January 29th. 1.01 P. M’. Summeraide tide eighteen min- um later than Charlottetown. , ‘OAR Y I'll! l "PIINOI EDWARD ISLAND” -1'ial1y except Sunday. Leave Borden at 9.05 A.M. been Torment-ins at 3 P-M