, !Maxlms of a More Man ' A" little ship needs but a little sail. 18 FAG iii. Transport Piano With 42 Aboard Missing NEW YORK (AP)-A four-engine u 5. Navy transport plane with 42 persons aboard was presumed lost Sunday night. 24 hours after tak- jng off from Patuxent. Md.. on . transatlantic flight. A 2.000-square mile area into which the plane disappeared was in-arched by a giant sea-air team or navy and coast guard units. The commander of the eastern sea frontier in New York, where the search was being directed. Sunday night received a report that a flare had been spotted 205 miles off the coast of Virginia. Although the navy said chances uere slim that the flare came from plane survivors. it was reported ulllllri the 120-mile ribbon that comprises the main search area. This area extends from the east- ein seaboard to the Azores. Destroyers and spacially-equip- pert night search planes were as- signed to investigate. LAST HEARD SATURDAY The plane was last heard from at ll p.m. Saturday. two hours after it had taken off for Port Lyautey. Africa. and the Azores. il.gS. Destroyers. Sub Damaged In Collisions NORFOLK. Va. (AP) - Three U S. destroyers and a submarine were damaged in two collisions in hmiy seas early Sunday while lllrx were engaged in anti-sub- niarzne warfare exercises some 270 miles east of Norfolk. There were no personnel eas- iialties. an Atlantic fleet spokes- man said in reporting the colli- Rlfllls. In the first mishap. at 3:32 am. EST, the destroyer Norris rammed the superstructure of the sub- marine Bergall. In the second col- lision. at 5 a.m.. the destroyer English and W. L. Lind collided while making runs on is submerged contact. The Norris reported five of her mmpartnients were flooded. The Bergsil reported her stn)erstruc- ture was damaged but her hull was intact. l The submarine headed for the ithiladelphla navy yard accom- Danied by the submarine A ier. The Norris headed for Nor olk. accompanied by the destroyer oa- cort F. T. Berry. in the second collision. 31 feet of the bow of the destroyer Eng- ;..sh was bent and broken off. She ivported her forward watertight bulkhead intact. The Lind reported an eight-foot hole in her port bow. Bmii headed for Norfolk under as- oorl All four vessels were reported line in no immediate danger. Coming Events ”Dance Vernon River hall Tiinsrlay, Nov. 2, "Dance, Murray Harbor North. Thursday. Nov. 4. lunch served. "Regular Dance. Bonshaw Inn. Tuesday night. "Annual Hot Turkey Supper, U"Rililild Hall, November 3rd. Unl- icd church. "Moria United Church. I-Io: Chzrken supper, Morell Hall. Nov- 'mi)cr 3;-d, "Xleeting Crapaurl - Victoria Rnnrd of Trade Tuesday. Nov. 2. Creamery board room. "National Film Board. French ilivcr hall. Tuesday. Nov. 9th. -biionsored by W. I. "Regular Card Party. West Roy- alty Hall, November 1st. Lunch served. "The annual meeting of Win- jloo North Cemetery will he held '”"d-1y. Nov. 2nd in the church fit R00 pm. "Sandy's Marshficld still catar- "Hi to weddings. banquets. and "W51 gatherings at reasonable prices, Dial 7412. "Vt-rnflh Legion annual meet- ing Nov. 1st, Legion Hall. Mt. Albion. 8 o'clock. All members ra- uussterl to attend. "hint! Cardigan hall. Tues- day. Nov. 2. Turner's Orchestra llusiaim c.v.c. ,"The Annual Meeting of the Mirth Wiltshira Rural Telephone Co. will be held in Wilishii-a Hall. mlnmny-. November am. at s "Cleaning and Buying Timothy W! Clover seed at Charlottetown. Sllmmerside. Contact us for prices. - L. Morris. Kinkora. aummei-aide ""1 Charlottetown. "Ewing live capons. chickens 23" "ml. Monday. Tuesday and ”""Ndn.v. 8 until 12, It will :''-l' in sell to us if your birds it'll finished. this poultril GI Wanted. 3. L. Dickisaon. New asgow, ""0:-me to the old time riaaiina. fl? dancing and singing contnt in nkora I-lali, Monday. November Sm Send entries at moi to Mr. yh ml! Johnston. xinkoro. or W9 9001. Good cash pi-lass. off Cape May. NJ. 217110 HIV! said the plans carried crew members and 21 pagggn. 39'' lncludlnl eight civilians and two air force men. Th3 passengers included men on assignment to new station; and heir dependents. as well as some dependents on their way to join personnel on duty aboard. Two 13 Six Inches Snow In N.Y. Stare JAMESTOWN. N. Y. (AP) ..The season's first snow storm in this Founded 1872 Part of northern New York struck Saturday night. dropping from two to six inches on Chautauqua county Mothers Agree To Trial Switch In Baby Mixup LONDON (Reuters)-Two young mothers Sunday were reported to have bowed to scientific evidence that their babies got switched in hospital-but only for a 24-hour trial exchange. Mrs. Vera Bowers. 22. and Mrs. Shelia Reed. 24, have maintained all along that maternal instinct is a surer guide than the blood tests which scientists say show con- clusively they have each other's six-week-old baby boys. The mothers said they knew in- stinctively they had the right chil- dren-and arguments by their hus- bands couldn't change their minds at first. Sunday. however. the mass-cir- culation Daily Mirror reported the two young women have traded babies for a one-day trial. They will make up their minds today whether or not the change will be permanent. Even if the 24-hour trial shakes their maternal convictions enough for a permanent changeover. the two young women have still held out for one condition, The Mirror reported. It said they have drawn promises from their husbands that the two families will try to live in the same building so the mothers can aeozeach othar's sons when- ever they feel like it-because of an "element of doubt" they're cer- tain they'll never overcome. The babies apparently got mixed up shortly after birth when nurses put them in the wrong cribs. 318.000 Antique Shop Fire Ar Hebron. N.S. HEBRON. N. 5. (CP) - Ronald Brewester's antique shop and the barn he used for a storehouse were destroyed Sunday in an sis,- OOO fire. Fire departments from here and nearby Yarmouth saved Breweater's home but his antiques and second-hand furniture were lost. CED DROWNED BLOCKHOUSE. N. S. (C?)- Four-year-old Byron David Joud- rey was drowned here Sunday when he slipped from the bank of a stream near his home. The body has been located. it is not known if an inquest will be held. Today marks the retirement of Mr. Aubrey Brown. who for the pas". 04 years has occupied the position of stamp vendor at the Charlotte- town Post Office. giving him the longest service of any stamp ven- dor in the Dominion of Canada. year started as stamp vendor in 1900 when there was one mail in and one mail out each day and there was no rural delivery or let- ter carrier service. During his 54 years behind the wicket, he has found the public invariably honest and courteous. Mr. Brown himself was 9. pat. tern for the courteous employee to follow. Working from 8 am. to 'l p.m. he always had a. cheery smile for his customers and he never tired of answering countless ques- tions in the course of his business during the day. In future the position will be 0CCUDied by a civil service employee who has not been chosen, while in the meantime the work will be carried on by the present Postal Clerks. Postmaster J. J. Connolly said yesterday that the office on- cupied by Mr. Brown would can. NEW YORK (CPl - Queen ,Mother Elizabeth. with 47 other lleading world and ncademic fig- lurcs. received the honorary degree of doctor of laws Sunday at a special convocation marking the climax of bicentennial celebrations of Columbia University. The convocation. in the huge Cathedral of” St. John the Divine in uptown Manhattan's Morning- side district, home of Columbia. wasAa colorful gathering of ed- ucationists from all over the world. garberi in the rich academic gowns worn in the universities of a score of countries. The Queen Mother wore a black gown and mi)rtarboard with a gold tassle. and left in the rich purple hood of a doctor of laws. Among others receiving degrees were Chancellor Konrad Adenauer of West Germany, Dag I-lammarsk- jold. secretary - general of the United Nations, Paul - Henri Spank, foreign minister of Bel- gium, Earl Warren. chief justice of the United States. and Adlai Stevenson. Democratic candidate for the U. S. presidency in 1952. CAUSE OF TRIP The invitation to the Queen to receive the degree. commemorat- ing the granting of the university's charter by King George II in pre- revolutionary days. was the orig- inal cause nf her visit to North America. She will also visit Wash- On-ihe-spot Analysis See Trend For Democrats in U. S. Election Campaign (By Douglas 1!. Cornell) WASHINGTON. (AP)- A pre- ponderance of late October politi- cal omens points toward possible Democratic control of both Sen- ate nnd House of Representatives in the next Congress. But the blg. iinanswerabla question is what effect. if any. the fevorln-i last-minute. manning of the dll-(P3 by President Eisenhower will have. Political porlcnts have her!- wrong in the past-even up to fi- nal days of ii campaign. is "V 1948. And today there are those who suggest that perhaps the ap- parent Democratic trend is an OD- tlcal illusion, that it may it? gomgthlng synthetic manufactur- ed by the professional poliilcinns rather than a solid grass roots surge. But if the signs are right the great American electoral! ll ready to reject the Eisenhower plea to keep command of Con- gress In Republican hands. 'And the Democrats may come trium- phantly out of Tuesday: election with a net gain of three Senate seats and 15 to 40 or more House seats They also may net fiv- governorships. According this reading of the portenls. the new Senate would have 49 Democrats. 46 Re- publicans and 1 indepF!IdefIl- Th! lineup now is 49 Republicans. 46 Democrats and l indePP"d9nl- The new House would have 230 to 255 Democrats. 1.79 to 204 Re- publicans and perhaps one inde- pendent. In this Congress. with vncancles assigned to parties that last held the seats. the Republi- cans have 219. Democrats 215 and there is the ions independent. In the stats Houses. there would be 24 Democrats. 24 Re- to publleana. instead of 29 Republi- cans and 19 Democratic gover- non. strongly as some, Democrats hope and say. it could give the party even wider margins of control in Senate and House. That's the picture put together from jigsaw pieces collected by Associated Press bureaus and rov- ing reporters on the basis of traditional voting patterns, cur- rent polls. interviews with politi- cal experts and lenders. and per- sonal. on-the-spot surveys in key states. As the 37 Senate 'races pointed into the stretch-the Republicans already have won one in Maine's September election Democrats appeared to be leading in 25. Re- publicans in nine. and three look- ed like, down-to-the-wire toss-ups The neck-and-neck contests are for Repiihlican seats in California. Oregon and Idaho. By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Foreign News Analyst The feud between Tiio of Yugo- slavia and Moscow is rapidly turn- ing into a love feast. It could mean that some day United States for- eign policy might find itself in a Balkan trap. The millions of dollars poured into Yugoslavia represented a U.S. gamble that Tito was out of the Moscow fold for good. Yet recent events show Tito is warming to- ward Moscow and the Cominform. which booted him out in l940. If Tito went back. it would be on his own terms. with a tacit ad- mission from the Kremlin that the little Serbian dictator had been the winner. The terms would add up tn internal independence from if a tide is sweeping Alan! It Today Marks Retirement of Veteran Stamp Vendor At local Post Office ' Mr. Brown who is now in his 83rd 1 Queen Mother Receives Honorary Degree From Columbia University l tinue to be utilized as a stamp vending office as space in the main office was at a premium and wicket could not be arranged this area. in Mr. Aubrey Brown ington and Ottawa. . Sunday's convocation wound up. a busy weekend during which the: Quccn toured the United N.-.itions.l attended a dinner at the Waldorf- Astoria given Saturday night by the university. dedicated a window in the cathedral while attending divine services. and vlvisitad the- tceming Negro district of Harlem to see a church attended by imtives, of the British West Indies. Sunday night the Queen Mother dined privately with her hosts. Sir! Pierson and Lady Dixon. at Wave Hill, their Riverd.-ile home, and! planned to rest. Today she wiiii resume her New York sightseeing and will dine privately with F. B. A. Rundail. British consul-general in New York. before going to the big Commonwealth ball at the Tihl Regiment armories on Park ave-l nue. l Saint John Mid- Killad In Accident rnconmcrou. (CF)-One manl was killed and another seriously in-l lured Saturday when a small Eng-, lish-type car in which they were riding rolled over two or three times on the slippery broad road at Tweedsmuir, four miles south- of Geai-y. The fatality victim was Russelli Miner. 21. of saint John. and in- jured is Duncan Bell, 19. West Saint John. Bell is in the Victoria, Public Hospital here where he wash taken by ambulance. Dr. F. A. Mc-l Grand. Fredericton. Junction coro- ner. said an inquest would be held. 7 Typhoon Heads For Island of Formosa MANILA. (AP)-A typhoon with winds of 115 miles an hour swungl northwestward Sunday toward ' Formosa after steadily building up in intensity in the Pacific betweenl the Philippines and Guam. l the huge storm, which is 240 miles wide, would strike the Bataan islands between the Philippines and Formosa Tuesday. L E Y S I N, Switzerland (AP)-. Pi-of. Auguste Rollier. R0. pionecrl of high altitude open air treatment for tuhcrculosis. died Saturday. He fn u n cl e cl Switzerland's princi- Krainlin interference. pal high altitude health centre at Leysin in l903. That would not be much of a price for the ”ncw look" Moscow regime to pay in a fierce tug-of- war with the West over that key- stone of Mediterranean military strategy. In fact. the admission of wrong, seems already to have been made by the Kremlin, which ex- hibits nervousness ovcr events in Europe. ENMITY VANISIIES Moscow is bent on breaking up the Balkan accord signed August by Yugoslavia. Greece and Turkey. Although Yugoslavia rejects the North Atlantic alliance to which Greece and Turkey belong. she represents a link in the chain be.- tween its Western and Middle East- ern numbers. 300 Driven from Ottawa Apt. Block By Fire OTTAWA (CF)-More than 300 persons were driven from the 90- suite Strathcona apartment block in east Ottawa's Sandy Hill district Sunday by an early-morning fire which caused damage estimated at Sl75.000 to 5250.000. No one was injured in the two- alarm blaze fought by about 100 firemen for almost three hours. Many tenants fled in night attire, with four having to escape down fire department ladders. Some evacuees were sheltered in nearby embassies and homes of diplomatic officials. The fire was believed caused by a faulty refri- gerator motor in one apartment. Sees ioMChan-ge in Russian Policy LEAMINGTON. England (Reu- tersl-Anthony Nutting. minister of state for foreign affairs. said Saturday it would be folly to imagine that the "new tactics" of the Soviet Union heralded any fundamental change of policy. "Stalin used threats. Malenkov. most subtly, seeing the West re- arm. uses cajolery-but that is the sole difference between the two," he told a Conservative party con- fcrence. Irishman Ends 0 Talking Marathon Then Collapses OLDHAM. England (Rcuter.0- Kevin Sheehnn. 25-year-old Irish- man from Limerisk. completed his 127-hour talking marathon here Saturday night and then fainted. Prnmptly at the B p. m. dead- line. he collapsed in the middle of a speech of thanks to the 450 people who crowded into a ball- room here to watch him. A few minutes later. after being attended by a doctor. he recovered consciousness and began to weep. Speaking huskily he told a re- porter: ”Physicaily I feel quite fit but I'm exhausted mentally. What I need now is relaxation. "I made this attempt because I'm A square peg in a round hole. I have never been able to find a job to suit my talents. "I hope somebody will employ my oratorlcal powers as a result of my success here. I shan't do it again and I refuse to be exploited commercially." Sheehan. formerly a male nurse in an epileptic colony. started speaking last Monday and touched on world affairs, religion, life,af- ter death and epileptic children. During the marathon he lost 28 pounds. He had only liquid food and 120 cigarcts a day to steady his nerves. About l,(l00 people paid one shilling each to see him during the week. Father Killed In Shooting Accident FREDERICTON (CPl-One man ing accidents. James Guy I-lanlcy. 53. of Soiith-lugs. The Island herd was parti- abdomcnallcularly strong wound after his son. William. 28. took every championship ribbon in accidentally fired a rifle. No in-ifemales except the reserve junior. died of Nelson. an quest will be held. Percy Norton. 13, was wounded above his left knee when A shotgun was accidentally l0TmPd 3 iv-sr ago. She is also in discharged by his hunting compan- WV"-lime lrlllri champion at Char- N of iotietown. inn. Rankine Watson, 16. also McAdam. At an astonishing rate, the en- mity of Tito and Moscow is chang- ing to friendship. Only about a year ago. Belgrade officially accused the Soviet army of rape. murricru theft. cowardice and tcachery dur- in Second World War campaigns in Yugoslavia. About the some time Moscow was calling Tito a Fascist clog. Today Belgrade officially lets it be known that "the liberation of Belgrade by the Joint sacrifices nf the Red Army and our fighters is going to be a symbol of the frat- ernity of the Yugoslav and Soviet peoples." Today the Russians recall in their official press the message of Tito to Stalin in October. ID44, say- ing that "the Red Army, together with the People's Liberation OHABLOTTMOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1954 The-died and a youth was seriously in-,"rm-,- had twenty one ribbons. one Manila. weather bureau predicted ijurerl Saturday in separate shoot-jmnrp than the Himmelmnn herd nf McAdarn,it0Ok the senior and grand champ- Russia And Tito Getting Chummierl ggrain classes although they dom- l trusted the potato show. ,Won By .comcs strong enough to hr fit for AMHERST. N. 5.. (Special) -A beautifully uniform sample of Bliss Triumphs won for Reid Underhaw of Souris RE. the title of Maritime, Potato King 1954. ii was the second year in a row that a red variety won the top ribbon of the fair. Pontiacs won last. year. Harold Lewis of St. Peters won the re- serve grand this year with his class winning sample of Katahdins. island snowmen took top prizes in every seed class, in addition R. L. Burge of Five Houses won the class for table stock potatoes early and intermediate varieties. The class for late variety table sto:k went to J. B. Kaiser of Centreville, N. S. The only other potato c-lass won by it non-Islander was the one for junior clubs and it went to 5.. Huntley of Canning. N. S. The New Brunswick potato champion this year is Alvin Keenan of Woodstock. His Netterl Gems had placed no better than ninth in the class for any other variety" while. This class was won by John C.rMacBeth of Forest Hill. cham- pion at Dundas the past two year-s., The Nova Scotia champion is Al-, lan Forbes of Old Barns, he won; it with his Cobblers that placed sec- i 0nd in their class. Other Island class winnersl were, Harry Lewis of Howlan in sebagot-s,l Norman Campbell of Coleman in! Green Mountains, Alexis MRCLOai1i of Elmira in Irish cobblers. Reg Mellish of New Perth topped the class for swede Purple top table turnips and Balfour Road of Summersldc. RR. 3. won first place in the class for fall rye. Generalivl speaking Island sliownien ran poor; seconds to New Brunswick and. Nova Scotia. farniers in seed anrll ISLAND VVINNEBS Potato class winni-i's. (Only Is-i lanri nairns listed): Sebagocs-i. Harry Lewis. Jr., Howlun; 2. Ray Murray. Howlan. RR. 1: 3. Judson Smaliman, How- lan: 4. John Lewis. Howlan. I-'t.R. l; 5. Albert Boawall. Charlottetown, R. R.: 6. Earl C. Thompson. Summer- side; 7. Fred and Frank Coffin,. Souris. R.R. 4; 8. Reg Mellish, Newt -Perth; 9. John D. Chaisson. Souris; RR. 4: lo. Arthur Digman. How- lan. RR. 1. V Green lifountnlns--1. Norman: Campbell. Coleman: 2.Clinrles Reid: Charlottetown. RR. 8; 3. Judson Smallman, Howlan: 4. D. W. Poole. Cardigan; 5. John L. Richards. Tignlsh. RR. 3; 6. George. H. Nes- Hereford Gha islan AMHERST, N. ispcciah Prince Edward Island I-Iereiords took most of the championships in the Judging Saturday at the Mari- time Winter Fair but a herd from Annapolis Valley walked off with most of the top placuii15- Tl"? Sanderson-Borden herd from North River and York Point took five of the championship ribbons but the E. H. Himmclman herd from La- have in the. Annapolis Valley won ten first placings to the Island herds. Actually the total number of ribbons favored the Island herd. but the latter had most top plac- in females. They Their Renl Princess Stanway JD lonship. A fool. site had also per- The reserve senior was Elation- Arniy, with stupendous heroism. liberntcd Belgrade." There is yet anoihcr siraiv in the wind. Tito has been talking. about "peaceful coexislcnce" in terms which sound a great deal like Mos cow's. The Leninist idea of peace- ful coexistence--nnd Tito claims to be A lleninist is that it is neces- sary until the Communist world he- the inevitable clash of the two sys- tcnis. Tiin. willingly or otherwise. has become part of Moscoii."s pr-ace offensive. it may bear rich fruit in Yugoslavia. it is certain there are many Communists there who would want to return to the Moscow fold. just as it is certain that Yugo- slav: have close cultural and racial ties with the Russians. .PHnce bitt, Hunter River: 8. John Bulger. Bloomfield, R.l'i. l: 9. Neil James (Continued on Page 2 col. 6i M r. Reid l'nderhn,v - by the American Cancer A'Clo'iiers Edward Island Like The Dow PRICE be , R.R. ! Oldest Country Correspondent 100 Years Old SOUTH PARIS. Me. (AP)-Mrs. Jula Chadbourne, who HZUM3 she's probably the oldest country correspondent in the United States. celebrated her 100th birthday sun- day. "Call me Hurricane Julia." she said as she blew out the big candle on her birthday cake. "Like Carol and Edna I'm blowing hard. After all. I've been awaiting 100 Yell?! to do ivhi-5-" She received 100 roses and many cards. including one from Pres- ident Eisenhower. Mrs. Chadbourne still turns out copy for the Briclgton News. for which she was a regular corres- pondent for some 40 years. She also is clerk of the North Bridgton Congregational church. She succeeded her husband after his death 12 years ago. Mrs. Chadboume is considered society to be the country's oldest cured. cancer patient. She underwent sur- gery when she was 8. mere 80. Expelled Missionaries Say Red China Trying To Shut Down All Churches By GRAHAM JENKINS HONG KONG (Reuters) - Two Canadian Roman Catholic mission- ary priests, expelled from Commu- nist China. described Saturday how the Communist Ell.ll.h0Fll.iCc subjected them in abuse and humiliation before finally forcing them to leave the country. The priests. both Jesuits. are Rev. Maurice Garneau, 39. of Que- bec. and 57-year-old Rev. Edward Laflcche of Winnipeg. They were expelled from China last Thurs- day. and are resting now at a Jesuit seminary on Aplichau is- land. near heref Before th eir expulsion. they worked as teachers at a Jesuit school for 850 Chinese students at Suchow. northern Kiangsu prov- ince. Gai-neau, in an interview told how the Communist regime is try- ing to shut down all Christian ClllirCl1('S. cvcn though it professes to countenance religious freedom under its new constitution. ”Siaunch Catholics in China now have to live in obscurity and keep quiet." Gnrncau said. mpionships d Breeders cite K. lst. the junior champion was Elntioiiettcls Skye Queen 4H and this youngstcr, a junior 31'-RT" yearling l-leifcr, was good enough to take. the reserve grand ribbon as well. The scr..or and grand male vllanipiovishtp ribbons ivere won by an island b:-cd bull sired by The Ace. He was Highland Bray Ace's Lad 217. The grand champion was bred by Tom and Miller Sniiricrson of North River on l.ilCll' lliglilanii View farm at North River. The Ace was the sire imported several yea:s ago by the P. E. Island Herciord Breeders Association from W. A. Crawford. Frost's Cacrlcnii R.iiich iii Nanlon near Cnlizriiy, Albeita. l-linirnelman siinwccl the Junior champion male and the reserve. The Highland Bmv animal is owned now and was shnu ii Saturday by W. G. Dul- ton of Windsor. N S. The rcscive senior and reserve grand cliampionsliip bull was shown by Mia. Anna M. Hornr of the Monte Vista stock farm at Eniiclri, S. The Jun.nr clinntliion and reserve grand female for the Sand- ci'son-Bordcn hcrri is sired by Court Lionheart Tome 64D. their senior herd sire. They were unable to show this animal this year because for the first time the Maritime winter Fair is not allowing beef bulls to be shown that are more than three years of age. It is a ruling that is in force at many of the. other big fairs. The dam of the junior champion is Eiationette K 1st. The row that won the reserve senior championship but was beaten by own daughter for the reserve 5" gianrl ribbon. The Sanderson-Borden herd is owned by Fulton Sanderson and his son Johnny Shndnrson nf York Point and Robert Borden of North River. Fulton and Johnny did most of the showing here. Mr. Borden is presently on a trip in Montreal. One of the early sales at the big fair involves an Island Breeder. Hammond Sanderson. Charlotte- town R. R. 7. who bought a young bull from E. H. Himmelman. He is Nova Duke 4.1. a second prize win- ner in the class for Junior cuvel. The Quebec priest. who. first went to China in 1939. said the Communists began expelling Eng- lish teachers at his Suchow school in 1950. When the purge started. he was permitted to stay and teach English and look after tho school's physics laboratory be- cause the Communist educational authorities did not have anymu (Continued on Page 2 col. 0) I WHEN A Cum. SAYS! Si-ic i-iAsN-1' A wine. To WEAR l'T'S USUALLY A FLIMSY EXCUS7 roaouro (cpl.-Minimum and" maximum temperatures: Min. Maia Dawson . . . . ... - - . . . .. I0 33 Vancouver 34 53 Victoria so 61 l Edmonton . 30 46 Calgary 2H 49 IS:isk;iloon 24 35 IR:-ginn 2R 34 Winnipeg .. 29 37 Toronto . 31 48 Ottawa 26 till Montreal .. 35 42 Quebec . . . 35 39 Fredericton . 42 51 Saint John .. . 43 S1 Moncton . 45 55 Halifax . 52 57 Chafl0H.CIOVi'I1 . 54 50 Sydney 5-'I w , Yarmouth . .. -- 48 5.5 I St. John": Nfld. . . . . . .. m M l HALIFAX. (GP) - The weathel office here stays a disturbance moving eastward from northweatn ern Ontario has slowed down and fine weather is expected to con- tinue in the western regions on Monday. The weather for the eastern Maritimeii is uncertain. A disturb. once between Bermuda and Cape Hatteras shows signs of moving northward. In this event it will cause rain near the Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia. and there is A chance all the southern Maritime: will be affected. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy. clearing in the evening: little change in in-iperature: light wind: low-high at Charlottetown 40 and New Brunswick: Variable cloud- iness. clearing in the evening. little change in temperature: frost in early morning: light winds; Monclon 35 and 50. Fredericton I2 and 48. Saint John 3.6 and 48. Ill- mundston and Campbellton I0 and 45. High tide today at miailottetown at 12.52 s. m. and 2.87 p. In. summe aids tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Sim rim! today at sat a. in. and sets at 5.03 p. rn. Maritime Potato Crown Awarded To Reid Unclerhay OFSouris Island Seed Potatoes Score At lAmherst Fair L. 3? ii 'I l. ,. 3 :-u..L