I010 "3... tfcvoutly Hi0! Ill’ illifl It ‘Th6 nudism. Three Cont; liming Blur Pounded ran. DAIRYMEN GWEN r Worst Typhoon In 3ll Y its: ii. f. rgowlalsoiu lsiisagy For Action . 35o t The U. The boat ThePe CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, AVE T0 APPEAL Coming Events "St. George's picnic Wednesday, July 27th. .__- "Ice cream and dance DeSablc school, July 26th. ____ “Oovehead Parish Picnic, Wed- nesday, July 27. "Dance at the B iflht Wednesday, July 27. r "Tracadle parish picnic Wed. header. July 21th. "Reserve Augus Farmers Field Day, "Dance New London. Friday. "Dance, St. Teresa's School, to- Spot t 8th for Junior at skyline Dance Hall. island Delegation Attends Moncton liearingslttday Mr. S. H. Burhce, president of the P. E. I. Fisheries Federation will head a delegation of five Is- land members at a one-day con- ference in Moncton today centred Wider Powers Urged For Railway Transport Board By John LeBlano Canadian Press Staff Writer The Royal Commission on Trans- portation was asked yesterday to remove “c0nfusi0n" in Canada's freight-rate set-up. B. Graham Rogers, transportat- ion director of thc Prince Edward Island Government's Department, of Industry, made the suggestion as he testified in the Commission's general inquiry into Canadian transportation problems. Mr. Rogers, one of several wit- nesses appearing before the Cam- lears Hits Shanghai Zildiiiiiitldineless. Rice Crop is Heavily damaged By Fred lhmplon Communist authorities in typhoon- lashed Shanghai today began or- ganizing the clearing of silt, mud and wreckage left by the worst storm here since i915. ‘The loll: at least 29 dead, 33 injured, pos- sibly 200,000 homeless. The typhoon churned in across the East China Sea Simday. Shanghai was deluged with 3.94 inches of rain. in 25 hours. Water up to aix feet deep surged through the streets. A tenement collapsed in the crowded Chapel district, killing at least 14 persons. In downtown shanghai a. three-storey restaurant and an old hotel caved in. Com- munist authorities said more than half the huts making up lower residential areas in north-side dis- tricts were destroyed. . High winds ripped down trees and power linas. Short circuits started fires in which l0 persons perished. Five were electrocuted by fallen wires. Despite Shanghai's heavy dam- age, it is behaved tho typhoonls greatest havoc was in surrounding agricultural areas. Acres oi truck gardens were destroyed or damag- ed. In the lower Yangtze valley, the rice crop, within 40 days of harvest time, was hard hit. Meanwhile. another typhoon movnd toward Japan after passing Iwo Jima. If it keeps up its pre- sent direction and intensity, it is expected to hit Shikoku Island in southwestern Japan or the dense- -populated Kobe-Osaka ares. of Honshu, farther northeast. SHANGHAI, Jilly 26 — (AP) —- end factory. Australian Government today lost its battle to nationalize the coun- try's banks. The judicial commit- tee of the Privy Council dismiss- ed the French Paper Reports ~ USSR Hes Atom Bomb PARIS, July M ~—-(AP) “ " WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1949 ‘Iimtoamotneofknolrlellw- nowsbirch. 14 PAGES MARGARINE Entrance Examinations Solr, Paris weekly newspaper, says in a copyrighted article in its cur- rent edition: “USSJL Has Atom ." The paper reported that on July 10, United States detecting devices "revealed without possible doubt that the Russians had atom bombs exploded in their faraway Asian territories." Samedi Soir as- serted "that is the reason why President Truman called an urgent conference at which participated the highest civil and military duthorlties . " News in Brief NANKING, July 26—(AP)—The Chinese Communist high com- mand has ordered its armies to Poultry Producers Will Seek Stabilized Prices (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, July 28—Desp.itc a current climb in egg prices, poultry producers said today ~they fear a recession in egg and‘ poultry prices in “the near future." For that reason, a national s evening by the Education: Provincial Scholarships Charlottetown: Robert Nelson, West Kent. Prince County: eque. Jerome Quinn, Klnkora. Queen's County: Jacqueline tewart. try products through an or- Earl Brucc- High Bank- derly marketing system. capture the Nationalist provisional capital of Canton before Aug. 15, it was reported authoritatively to- day. WASHINGTON, July 26—(AP)— Senator Brien McMahon (Dem. Conn.) today announced that a third high policy conference on sharing atomic secrets with Great Britain and Canada will be held in the Capitol tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. ADT. TORONTO, July 26 — (CP)—- Some 4,500 production workers at the Massey-Harris farm implem- ent plant here walked of! the job today and set up picket lines at three entrances of the big west- LONDON, July 2'1—(CP)~—The government's The two-day conference which ended tonight recom- mended that Provinces set up provincial marketing boards. These, in turn, would organ- ize a central marketing agency underFederal legislation pass- ed at the last session of Par- liament. Called by the Canadian Fed- eration of Agriculture and representing every Province except Newfoundland, the con- ference urged that every ef- fort be made to get the United Kingdom to agree to continue the Anglo-Canadian egg con- tract next year. lt said in a statement that it anticipated “an emergency in the near future in poultry and egg marketing" and that it was concerned “with the possibility of a serious set.- back in market prices in the. near future." lt was equally, disturbed Bell Scholarships Prince County: town. Queen's County: Sheila Maclnnis, Spring Park. Richard Ferguson. Hampton. King's County: Isabel Maclsaac, Sourls Convent Catherine Wood, Rollo Bay West. J. D. Seaman Memorial Prize for highest standing in the two cxaminations in English, presented by the Teachers’ Federation: Mar- ion Schurman, Central Bedeque. Th1‘ Hon. Thane A. Campbell Prize for highest standing in French: Kathleen Coffin, Rollo Bay West. The L.0.B.A. History Prize for highest standing in History: Mar- leen Warren, Prince Street. Highest marks in each subject: English Literature: Marion Bnblorlpflnlll Delivered 86-00 Mall 55.00; other Provinces b Prince Of Wales College The following results of Prince of Wales College entrance exam- inations, 194D, were released last D t of Robert Lalfcrty, Queen Square. Marion Schurman, Central Bed- Cummiskey, Mount. conference of poultry produc- Pauline Cummiskey- Mi?“ m era announced tonight it will Stewfub ' seek stabilized prices for poul- Kings Cmmw‘ Kathleen Coffin. Rollo Bay West. Arthur Pendergast. Kcnsinglon. ' Georgina Cairns, Lower Free- Privy chiral Will ilear Case This Autumn OTTAWA, July 26— (CPI - I battle appears to be shaping ug between the women who buy muv urine and the dairy formal whose butier product is being hit by the lower-priced substitute. The battle is expected to take place next autumn in London where today the Privy Council awarded the first round to the farmers. the Canadian Feder- It granted, atlon of Agriculture, who represent the dairy men, leave to appeal tho Supreme Court of Canada ruling on margarine which swept aside I 62-year ban on the manufacturt and sale of butter substitutes. H. H. Hannam, pmsident of tht C,F.A., ssldths Privy Council do cision was "gratifying". mean that the C. F. A. “in co-oper- ntion with the dairy farmers" will be able to pursue their original Objective-to restore the margar- lne ban and so protect the farmer and his product. The decision was not so gratify- ing to the Canadian Association of Consumers, representing some 35,- or more margarine buyers- mostly women~which wants Can- ada to continue having the priv- ilege of buying the lower-priced product. ' Mrs. F. E. Wright, president of the C. A. C., said the association would make "every effort" to can. “"119 the flkht against the C.F.A. appeal. A Justice Department official said until the Privy-l Council de- Cldi‘! Hgainst the Supreme Court ruling. the manufacture and sale of olcomargarlne. margarine, but- terine or other butter substitutes remains legal. . "The Privy Council can either uphold or throw out the Supreme Court ruling." he explained. "If it decide-s against the Supreme Court * U. ‘I. If,“ RULING opinion. then it. is certain the ban grgund u, p,.op0,€d--Dm-r~,§~xnissioners on the second day of lllht. Webster's Orchestra. Governmen: plan to assist nth: 1's P" E~ I- hefliifll- expressed fishing industry. At the meeting m! hODe that the threeonan body "Reserve Wednesday, Angus, fisheries officials of both m.» Do- ""11" m"- W-FA Tulle“ lrd for St. Andrew's Picnic. __.__ "Ice Cream, lTance, School Iona. East, July 29th. minlon ancrmkrnvinciai Govern="‘w°i“d 339M853" m" m‘ merits will meet with representa- 1°11 1" “B13119 WWW’ two; 0g Cgngdg’; s“; was, fishing lie said that when last year's 2i- industry. per-cent rate increase was awarded Accompanying Mr. Burhoe are m9 rauways- the 3'19"“ m3" Mr. James Burden, vice-president "lot/IBM "i918 WOI-lld b9 Just Ni 1n- July 35mg may” orgheshl_ of the Federation, Messrs. John B, crease of that amount. However. Myrick, Tignish. Leon Johnston, some rates had been jumped by 30 confus- "New" "Dance, Eliiotvaie School, n1- Ill’. _ Mo t _ <1 P 19,11 t, 5 . or 40 pe ent, ince th i c. .1-_ __ , since last Saturday. His father. 1:33:23 §';,,,‘,’°'{;‘§,‘,‘d’,°,§‘§;‘f"“" is. “rfnrll... tn: $Z'.n..§“i's effected rceclllngs rates a Bogota: sighed byutshgarilbiuglnlgrghsufiinl‘; Pm“ D’°“1"' h“ bee“ 1mm"? ' ' ' to outline the Government's pol- standard 1011a could be hoisted by the June 21 elections-is building 1'" Vi°‘°"“ m" ‘°."°"1 “a” “d you!" you, mm, w (“mum 3y more fully alnd to lnvlge sugges- grfirterlzmargins-l d l d u‘ to become the alternative to the JPFMI“! f" help "i ‘he ‘Wich- » ons rom t e ndugtry efgre the . 03ers 3.50 ec are e 1,155 1 in {he t 1 u _ —-—-—-—-——--- mo” studio’ chaflmtewwu‘ proposed program is finalized, Boarttih of Transport Ccmmisslon- be“; Lewis, rflxirtlonglecsegfietaxy. KILLED 0N R0455")! t . . "5- 9 "Built-fur? body of the said today the a ' ——'— nLIJQiiiLit‘ glicim-czv“ S"Amh°"“' Con ress To Hear a '°““’*‘Y‘"“*°"“1 be all“ Wider or accompnsnlagwwlnnafi-m Till}; MIDI-AW 0M- Juv ¢6—<¢P> ' 5' ' R g o R . powers so that it can set rates to be diggusgeg at, the party's “M. Tfne youth was kiili§d and three " ' _ ass st industry or equalize product- 1 n 1 (,1 u, v era m’ Wkly n ured when Agglhggrtzgr Road plcnld wed, QPQHS II IISSIG 1011605: ‘l? ovzcggm Bgoggapmcal o a-eejréecu vo mee rag here next gemlzgk by‘: hvehlclewis m?’ gem ' ' an c a c s van ages. At "w m y; S e 8 B WHY flea!‘ a eur- 1» n“ it?» _' . . . l d d Wednesday. Good music‘ hack up “s p,“ for a sumvooovm direction are limited we to the Liberals m the next s op enne yers, , ie rom Mr. Rogers said he could some difftculties in working out the pdnciple he proposed. but he hoped the Commission would find a solution to the problem. He was under examination yes- terday on points put forward in the P.E.I. Government brief sub- mitted to the Commission Monday. as it opened hearings in Charlotte- town in its national tour of in- vcstigatlon into transport matters. Suggests Federal Subsidy Jerome O'Brien, president of the (Io-operative Association of P. E. I. suggested that the Federal (Continued on Page 6 Col. i) . Wide Field Covered In Transportation. Hearings arms aid program =by telling the United States Congress everything it knows mbout Russia's military preparations. The State Depart- ment's press officer. Michael Mc- Dermott, told reporters today that "such information as we have will be made available" to- Congress. "Dance in St. Peter's Legion Hail every Tuesday night. Cliff Peters Orchestras "Bonshaw Institute Lawn Party, Stephen Mat-Leeds field, Friday, luiy 29th. MacNellYs Orchestra. _____.____.._.__.. NEW DELHI, July 26——(AP)-— India's petrol consumption recently was brought to .'\n absolute mini- mum by a further cut of 25 oer cent to save sterling resources. Last year India imported 480,000 tons, mainly from the Middle East __,__ and the Netherlands East Indies, “Dance Mt Stewart Legion at a cost of 90,000,000 rupees (SR-ll tlall every Thursday night, music ooaoom- ' by Al Blanchard. "Movies. Hunter River. tonight. False Colors. starring William Boyd and Hopalong Cassidy. "'Ice Cream and Dance in Al- bcrry Plains Hail, Friday, July 29th. Webster's Orchestra“ a "Dance Graham's Road, Thurs- lay night. Rollie MacKenziEs Or- theltru. _ \ "Dance, old-time and ntodem. Ellis Bros. Central Royalty. Pri- day, July 29. "Dana's in Si. ‘ihresab School. Wednealay night, July 27th. Wob- ltefa. Orchestra. . "Pres Movies in Wheatley River’ Hall. Thursday. July 28th. Bale 0! Ice Cream. ' Ilflgg, potato groIQ f ghlpplnf, Newfoundland trek. 00- operativea, bus transportation, the ferry services and the obligations assumed by the Dominion Govern- ment at Confederation. all came in for discussion during the cross- examinatlon of witnesses called by counsel for the Prince Edward Is- land Government before the Royal Commission on Transportation hero yesterday. ' “I On the mntlnued insistence of the chairman for an answer to his "it must have been _to meet the competition of the Wood Islands’ ferry." Mr. Turgoon: "Then it was not ordered by the government but to mGBt ilifl com, 1.1011. Recommending the “cncourlle- ment of water service to New- "See "Miss Annie Roonic" starr- ing ahirley Temple. Showtfir It Vlrnon River Thurflil-Y- 31ml" Friday. 5t. Charles Saturday. l l l ht l 40.000 d. An exchante occurred between foundland from Prime Edward Ia- will also attend. I: 212100? lxlelilgblgl’. 50,500 $33G:- the chairman of the 00111111141011 land," m. 0.1. Reddall. shipping rvr-up estio m", p”. ,, m“... ch-rge o; "The Inter-Community Choral and counsel for the O.N.R. on the manager of the Crown mm y. pan Club will hold an Ice Cream Social the Prince Edward Island Industrla at the Community Hill. WW"- Phunday svonlnt. Jul? 7W1- "Ior your Dancing plentif- eofne to the Islanders I‘ Dlub. ‘travellers Root. every Thurs- queillon on the reduction of truck rate on the Bfldfifl-Wfmefliinf Corporation which operates the ferry on July 1- u coo-too MN. Eskimo in this service. mn- w. Turseon arm Wlgy recounted the transportation au- were than truck ram Millie“? flculties of Island produce merch- an. O'Donnell: "l presume the ants in trading with the outporta Government. u owner. Mull“ in Newfoundland. I-h believed that for pvomnr- '3" Mimi"! "I W" 1'1"!" "l" ails. upagzneg, R:'dm5£ from n ranted a shipping service, and stat. l u“. w." cooper, 1.0mm Mac- Aul- - "n i‘ ed the advahtlgee gained noon to 7 p.m. Lunches after 7. Choice of beef. ham. fresh p06. fresh lobster, fresh garden vege- tables, ice ersem refreshment booth, merry go round and games to amuse. Beautiful Irwlldl- CW5’ uley show in Kelly's dross Hell. “MIMIC!” July 27. Dance If!!!- new starts 0 p.m. shipping to the eouth more of New- fmmdland through Charlottetown. uovio fwd tit-l “manta. e n compo on e 0MB- end other eltoblllhed ser- vfcle or 1k. O'Donnell, Mr. Rad- "Now in stock. Dill!!!" m" Ineteriala and liquid onrr. m“ ___.._._.__._ farmer's yard and placed it in a Malcllhmwflghttlr-Gailgrh Ferdinan- and enioy yourself. 5:] gated ‘that’ anyway: cmnn“. n" m. n, n m, gum,’ mum,‘ na o0. M10 - "—" "h" " .._._ , . u’ m’ .._.._ "A meeting of the rate pave" noon on the south shore of New- “EBAY __ (c?) 4 x w“ h" “fling! mm“, mum eowm M hum; hop at the of Park Corner school district will gmmflmg u“; y,“ m; “on 40m f d -fi- "m our commlmon i" mm‘ - 4 m French River hall on “m”, secretary o the In tan ovlnolel 7 I foil points non Thlfltilzli =;m'r':‘|"y_ July u’ n g PM 0m. A. t, m. mum “h, from Farmers Union, said hare recent- fhought to what this carload of n“ ‘mm’ "'""""'§.§:m em- ma. the Deplfllnent of m- Nmmuhm ,,, m, “mm”, t; that three Canadian kchnicienl turnips would have cost. had they u" t ' “M” nuunldl until uoltlon will be present. The rate- wn“ ‘m’ "m." ‘u; “n; are helping to eetabiidr en Indllfl produced under the lyltem ‘a’ amt “m.” until I time of Boring Brook ere lnvff- ' __ ,trsctor factory. The plant ll c- implored by the railway. and Pr‘! %‘:g ‘M _ ‘ M o, “mm (Continued or "s." “‘ - r"'~d — begin productffl in 1050- how vnfair is the division of the QQF. Plans To Expand Organization OTTAWA, July 26 =99 I election," adding . "The reason for Liberal victories in the last few elections there has been no alternative l» cause the C.C.l<". was not coming up fast enough and the Conserva- ives were on the way down." The executive the week-end will year plan of stepped up organizat- ion and education Lewis said. In s. statement earlier he referr- ed to reports which he has receiv- ed from provincial sections prepar- atory to the post-election execut- ive conference. "These dicated three things: for the first time of the C..C.F., the party has come out of an election without debts of any serious nature; secondly. that memberships are at the post-war level, and continuing to increase since June 27; that rather than morale of the movement, the elect- foo result! hive increased the de- termination to expand the organis- "ation and education activities over question, Mr. O'Donnell admitted,’ the next three years." The executive meeting will be attended by party heads including M.J. Caldwell, national leader. 13.13.. Jolliffe. Ontario Lloyd Show, C.C.F. provincial secretary in Nov: Bootia. Reginald Bolsvert. ed provincial secretary for Quebec, lrlcle Helpless A: Husband Drowns ORILLIA. Ont.. Jul! 20 -(CP) ~Oon|table John Andrew Johmon, 80-year-old ‘lbronto policemen, was drowned in the Severn River. w 15 miles north of hero, lut nigh while his bride of two days watch- ed helplessly. l-iis body was rsoov- ered iii minutes after he had fallen from the bent into the fsltullevlnl wafers of the river ifppea of 1947 is unconstitutional. MANAWAKI, o... —-(OP) ——'I‘he he said m an interview’ n-Lultlple injuries tu the face and b dy. is that meeting during map out a. three- mctlvlty, Mr. The manner in which Prince Edward island turnip producers are being mulcted by exorbitant railway rates has been drawn strikingly before the Transportat- ion Commission, now sitting in Charlottetown, in a brief-flied by Mr. R. E. Mutch, president of R. E. Mutch and Company. Ltd, and of Northumebrland Ferries Ltd. "We enjoy a so-caliedv competit- ive water rate with Boston and New York, and turnips destined for nearby centres therefore find their way to these points, and are frequently delivered by truck to the nearby towns and cities." the brief states. "Shipments to ‘these centres ere practically all by rail, and the rate to Boston is 0i cents per 100 pounds. and to New York 70 cents, plus a 6 percent sur- charge in each case. In addition to the freight charge. there is a heater charge of $17.32, or an icing charge of $88.00. "The turnips are loaded in bags of 50 pounds, net weight, and the reports," he said, "in- First, that in the history highest and finally, damaging the leader. and newly-appoint- $374.71 plus icing ‘or heating. Thus a our for New York. shipped with ice, will colt $412.71. The hrmer Mutated I "The farmer who provided the land. the seed, and the fertilizer. and the help to prepare the aera- aga; who planted, harvestetLand stored, and then sorted and bag- ged the Clflbld of one thousand bell, received as his reward last season 8250. This was all that was left to him. after the loader who transferred the ahlpmen‘ from the at Wendell’: against a ruling of the Australian high. court that the, banking act July 28- (CP)—A full-scale search party ls being organized to hunt for 12- year-old Victorin Drouln of Man- iwaki, missing from his home 1 over the present “extremely high prices" for eggs. What waaaeedei-‘l. i} leid- BY“ "m" bllity of prices to avoid fluct- uations to extremes of high and low." Teen-aged Motorists Killed On Crossing (By The Canadian Press) lCP)—-Two adian National Railways old car at Daihousle Junction Dalhouale. They were enroute to Camp- bellton, and it is believed the car stalled on the crossing. An in- quest will be held. Turnips More Profitable To Railway Than Farmer receipts from the car, when the grower gets $250 and the railway $412.71!" Ontario's Advantage The brief points out that On- tario turnips which may be deliv- ‘ered to New York by truck or by rail at a specially reduced rate, set the market for this commod- ity. and the_P. E. Island product must pay the rate above quoted. enabling the railways "to use the handsome profit made in carrying a trainload of, our product, to wfi .__ _____ (Continued on Page 5 Col. 6) Freakish By Micheal 0'Msre _ England, July i0 - (CP) - Traffic in the English Channel today was as congested as at a busy street intersection-and twice as freakish. The North, a "Viking ship" stood ready to invade the Kentlsh coast at Broedatain Just as the for- rs of its crow had done 155 centuries ago. Farther south, a man sat on n raft. ltoping he was headed for Le Ihvro, France. ‘ Somewhere in the Channel was n kayak wltlfe priest and e news- paper man aboard. ‘ ‘ And for l4 i-I hours a 31-year- old Netherlands housewife, Mrs. Willy Orou van Rllsel. was in the Inter. heading from Cape Gris Pies, France, to Dover. However, latte tonight nho had to be taken W . Off Ospe Gris Nos. Mrs. Willi Creel van Rljsei, 3i, was attempt- lfll to make the first Channel swim of i040. l0 Danes aboard was ahead of DALHOUSIE, N. B. July 26— teen-aged motorists met death tonight when the Can- north- bound Ocean Limited struck their The victims were Ernest Valdron. 18, and Wallace Savoy, l7, both of were. In The English Channel Schurman, CentraFBedeque, 95. English Composition: . R o b e r Nelson. West Kent, 92. Latin: Frank Weatherbie. West Kent, 86. French: Kathleen Coffin. Rollo Bay West, 94. Arithmetic: Sidney _ Campbell. West. Kent, 96. Mathematics: Isabel Macisaac, Souris Convent, 97. miskey, Mount Leard, Plsquid East (equal), 80. Street, B7. Geography: Robert Nelson, West - Kent, 90. Hygiene: Robert Nelson, West Kent, 88. Successful Candidates In conformity with an an- nouncement made by the Minister of Education two years ago, the names of successful candidatesare I Continued on page 3 On 93rd Birthday AYOTT Si. LAWRENCE. Hert- fordshirc, England. July 25 - (Reutcrsr-George Bernard Show was a prisoner in his own home today besieged by the press on this his 93rd birthday. The play- wright. who "hates birthdays," rc- cnaincd adamant about giving in- terviews to crowds of rcpfiflvfi BM photographers who surrounded his home here. kill-rap av rnacron GRAND FALLS. N. B. Jul)’ 26 fCPl-Nine-ycar-old Albert Gag- non was killed today when he fcli , under a tractor near his home at Ennishone. ' Seen .__.____.____________ authorities said. and would have to "storage" up and down the Channel for 48 hours before land- ing Thursday. The invasion will commemorate the foray against the British Isles by the Danish hordes led by the brothers Hon- gist and Horsa in 449 AD. The Danes‘ only casualty during the eight-day trip from Copen- hagen was the seats of their pan- —-worn out by hours of rowing and sailing in the open replica of the Vikim longboat. Jan Van Der Linden. Dutch writer. and his compatriot. Rev. Philip Meerburg were appareptly making good headway in their at- tempt to break the Channel speed record for canoes. _ From the south came the report from the master of e ferry that he had encountered e young man, perched on a small raft, who ark- ed to be given the course for Le l-lavre. The eccentric mariner drifted smoothly on his way after receiv- ing the bearings. He offered no it Rural Science: Jacqueline Cum- Stewart, Linda History: Marleen Warren, Prince sfofed." i 4m: cRhffigR 4a: an its atcgeg ‘ill! ilonng TORONTO, July 26~—(CP)—~Mlnl\ mum and maximum temperatures! Victoria 54, 61; Edmonton 49, 85; Regina 50, '78; Winnipeg 59, 90; Toronto s7, 89: Ottawa 62. 917 Montreal 67, 88; Quebec —-. 39i Saint John 58, 68; Moncton 58, 79! Halifax 59, 72; Charlottetown 61 70: Sydney; 54, 70; Ynrmouth -—— 65; Si. John's 42, 61. HALIFAX, July 26~—(CP)—-Offb rial inland forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax: Synopsis: Tuesday evening there were atill some clouds over the Mnritimes In the north shore region thert were still a few showers and is the southwestern sections of thi district patches of fog were begin ning to blow into shore. Warm nil 1| expected to flow into the dil m” mm m, west to give fim warm weather Wedneldl7- Regional forecasts, valid until midnight Wednesday: Prince Edward Island: A few fog patches during the night. Weill!!! tiny sunny and very warm. Light winds. Low early “Rwlncsday muff!‘ ing and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 5B and 30. ' High tide tnday at 12.11 A. ‘l and 11.20 P- M- Sun rises this and sets at 7.47. Swimmers-do tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown- morning at 4.5l nonnsiv-ronmcnrms rum! WEEK DAYS Ly. Borden LY. Cliw Tflmmu“ mo am. 10.35 AM. non mvl. M» PM- (230 RM. 7:30 EM. 0.00 EM. 10.30 RM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Torment!!! 9,1. 4,", 10:3! AM. roe p.m. M0 P-M- ms us. 8:00 PM- WOOB ISLAND! JIARIBOII DAILY Fill! Leave Wood lolantls 7 A.M.; 9 AJL; ll A.M.; l RM] 3 ELL; 5 PM. explanation as to why he chose The Viking chi-p with schedule. this particular w" "f travelling. been Caribou 1 aim: s an: n am; t no. a mt a rm °" hm" evbstltuiss.._.will. be re.