Donald. New Dominion. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN The Guardian. Three Cont; [lensing Dally Imulded 1881. C Read Eveybo overs Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Q CHARIJOTTETOWN, 'CANADA, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1948 y. 14 for MAXIMS 01A’ MERE MAN . ' A point may be reached where bearance censcs to be a virtue. PAGES Churchill \Va'rnsi 0f A Danger Balls Defeat 0f I Reds In Italy Historic Event i (By The Canadian Press) IONDON. April 31 - Winston Churchill said today that Italy is temporarily safe from Communism but “there will never be a settled peace in Europe while Asiatic im- perialism and Communist domin- ation rule over the whole 0i Cen- trafand Eastern Europe." The Conservative leader address- ed a convention of women mem- hers of the Party at Albert Hall. The defeat of the Communist: iii Italy “is an historic event," he said. 'ltaly....has saved herself for the time being from the Bol- shevlk dictatorship of Stalin." Repeating his frequent plea for European unity. Churchill said "Therecan he no hope for the world unless the peoples of Europe unite together to‘ preserve their freedom, their culture. and their civilization founded upon christian ethics. There can be no return to prosperity unless they help each other to the utmost." He forecast that the recently formed Western European union of Britain, France, The Nether- lands, Belgium and Luxembourg "may soon become an organization for common defence in which the nilght and authority of the United, States will be the decisive factor." Europe's press generally interp- reted the election as a. sign that Communism in Europe has reach- ed its peak and is on the wane. Churchill warned. however, that "we must not delude ourselves" about Communisms strength." Discussing American financial aid. he said Europe must "turn to the best advantage the life-giving stream of succor which is flowing toward us across the Atlantic Oc- can." The effect oi American aid “may make us thankful, but surely it should not make us proud. Least of all do I see how any Socialist can be proud of living on the charity of the greatest capitalist. free enterprise state in the world. whose system of wealth production they deride and denounce on ev- ery occasion and urge us to quit forever." Cominglivents‘ "Dance, Orwell Cove Hall. Fri- day. April 30th. o "Cord Party and Dance. Kin- kora Hall. Monday, April 26th. "Dance. Spring Valley Hall, Fri- dfly. April 23rd. Rollie Maclienaiefls Orbestra. "Dance, Simmerfield Hall, Thursday, April 22nd. Rollie Mac- Kenzie, Orchestra. "I will not be grinding any grain after April 29th. Lem Mac- "Reserve Thursday night, April 2a for dance in Rustico Hall. Good music and» refreshments. "Variety Concert and'Dance in Bradaibarie Hall, Tuesday, April 27th, in aid d! Library. “Deuce tonight. Ooimitry 0W. hsveilerg Rest. Modem and Old Ticne. Be sure to attend. "Just received shipment" of American Belting. A. P. Morrison. south Granville. ' "Booking another Alberta 30W oats. cleaned. Rush your Qilldln Q Boyle. “Farmers, we can still accept your clover bsed orders at our low prices. Rush your order. McGulgan and Boyle. OUR car choice Double re- order. Mc- iminm, sue. Mai-kit mus- ing. SIMNIY. 24th, 1 P. m. Guide Local Alsociati . » Good used ‘hi-NM. some specials. _i__ \ "Choice quality oats on bend. rzlcllosnemdlsxayai desire. aoeor grade. - "M. book orders at once. Live- "Mk Feed Agency‘. “Receiving and loading hogs ell “W "idly at our pens. Railway- Wiiu-f. Thinking service where possible. Phone i407. Livestock I Board. "Konstantin-main. am: m- "Illie 0i b will their “Deacon "nukes" Ban Imports 0f Potatoes (By The Canadian Prev!) OTTAWA. April Zb-Fiiiance Minister Abbott announced to- night that. importation of po- tatoes and sweet potstdes of all kinds will be prohibited from tomorrow until June ‘l because domestic supplies are adequate to meet all needs. The ban will not lpply to need potatoes. He said that "as ‘present stocks of domestic potatoes are adequate to meet all needs the importation of high-priced new potatoes can not be Justifled at this time." - Stocks of potatoes in Canada at April 1, he reported. total- led 192,494 Ions, 45.000 tons more than the average stocks at the some date for the last five years. Italian Election Results Now Almostfiomplete (By The Canadian Press) RONIE, April il-Premler _A_l_.cide_ do Guperi promised thousands of.“ cheering Romans tonight his vic- torious Christian Democrat Party would carry out its pledges for Italian social reforms, The Christian Democrats, sup- ported by the Vatican, were within reach of an absolute majority in both Houses of Parliament. Their victory over the Commun- ists produced an abrupt Commun- st turncbout on the MarshallPlan 1 l iid foreshadowed a possible break- up of the communist-led Popular Front. Mario Soelba. Christian Demo- crat Miruster of the Interior. claimed his party would get 307 out of 574 seats in the Chamber oi Deputies, and 130 s: the 237 seats in the Senate. Scelba gave this as the "prob- able" distribution of the seats in the chamber of Deputies: Chris- tian Democrats 307, Popular-Front (Communist and Socialist) 182, Socialist Unity (pro-Government) 33, National Bloc (rightist) l8, iMonarclilsts 14, (pro-Government) 9, Italian Social Movement (MS. I.) 6. South Tyrol Party 3, Sar- diiiiim Action l, Peasant Party l. For the Senate: Christian Dem- ocrats 130, Popular Front 'l4, So- cialist Unity i2, National Bloc 0. Monarchlsts 4. The tally loft eight. seats unaccounted for. BOEII. WAR VETERAN DIES KIRKLAND LAKE, 0n‘... April 21 —- (CP) -- Brig-Geri Albert E. Swift, 79, veteran oi the Boer War, First World War and of Siberia, died yesterday. Gm. Swift won many military decoration; includ- ing the French Legion of Honor. Conservatives Plan To Revise Platform l In Next Few Months By D'A.R.CY ODONNELL OTTAWA, April lii-(CP) -A committee will be established to draft a restatement of Progressive Conservative Party policy. The restatement is expected to include a. declaration in favor of the banning of the Communist Party in Canada. A wncludling session of the three-day annual meeting of the Progressive Conservative Associat- ion of Canada decided that a re- statement of policy is needed. Before the decision was made. the delegates went on record in favor of the Communist ban. ‘The move was not made without lively discussion. _ Some delegates felt that the ban would run counter to the Party's stand in favor of a bill of rights. However. Quebec delegates said one reason they came to the meet- ing was to have the Party support a ban of the Communists. The Quebec delegates finally won their point. Despite the move, the delegates also went on record in favor of a Canadian bill of rights. Condemn Gov’t. Policy Main resolution to come out of publicity coznmittee meetings was one which read: "This meeting condemns the Fascist techniques employed by the Liberal Party in obtaining pub- licity through such Government operated bureaus and commissions as the National Film Board. tlie ClBC. the Canadian Information .S¢i'"1¢°-MPB"P§Yfr;9¥<i-h¢ saw- psi‘ Affairs Departmentr-lnd 0th‘- er agencies “operated at the ex-T pens-e of the taxpayers of Canada." An organization committee re- commended that all constituency organizations undertake to nomi- nate candidates at the earliest pos- sible date for the next general Federal election. It urged that the organizations give full co-operation to the women's and young people's branches of the Party. The same committee recom- mended that facilitiw. be provided for additional field organizers to operate under the jurisdiction of Ivan Sabourin, ‘leader of the Party in Quebec. "The policy committee will work or. some 28 resolutions submitted to the meeting and draft them in- to planks oi the Party platform. ‘The new policy manifesto will be issued not later than Aug. 1. Thus the party will hate their new platform before the public s few days before the Liberals. who will meet here Aug. 5 to choose a successor to Prime Minister Moc- kenzie King and to reds-aft the Liberal platform. ' llo Solution To Saint John Tdflbhflfilllifllll SAINT JOHN, N. B., April 21- A meeting between the Board of School Trustees and representativ- es of the Saint John Teachers As- sociation today failed to block the ilic end of the present school term in June after a prolonged salary dispute with the City. By EDWARD CURTIS PALESTINE, April bl -- (AID- About 5.000 Arabs have moved our. of llllfo in the beginning of a Jewieh-Anb fight fortiie big port city, a high ‘British officer snid today. The bottle for the northern city began in earneot with the crock- ling o1 gunfire today from Redu- Oeri-rieLJ htcwnlmifweyup Mount Germ . The British Array still held control om- the port sren with its oil installations, their headquar- w-scntopoflidountCoisneinnd a strip linking the bwo oiou. The port will be used for British ev- acuation until about Aug. 1, "Al it stands now," said n kitidi ‘official, "(he Jlwl prob- ably will be able to gel-n con- trol. ‘There are some who believe tin am can do it in four oi- five ‘hymn brink source estimated members one that there are 0.000 of Arab I'll] in flsifabiittbntfbo Iewebeyero- ma, "allfljlfflltlfi. om . v . 1K K YIN". Jewish I- Arab Battle Forl-laifa Underway bier, '|. Swine the llberlllmi inforcld their Idlitfo V! 8M. codinsii g d Jewish militia, at Tiberius, per- mittecfnn Arab convoy in enter the old city today and take out pcuonol belongings of idle Arabs who had left. Jews in Tiberius nid their next step would be to let up l Jewish civil ldninirtrntlon- ((In Jerusalem, Jacques 1o Ray- entntive of the Red Cross. a nod thlt two refugee compo were being estab- ikhed thereto protect about iii.- 000 women and children who seek safety frcm Pelesflnei bottles. Government l-Ioun. nay the res- idence of elie I-iigh Commissioner, and an adjacent hillside will be one ares, and an area including the YMCA, the King David He- tel nnd the Tent Ssiietl Monu- tery of the Pkjanciocan Order will be the other. (Lt-Gm. Gordon ldseMillAn. kitten iiiili commander, said occupies at that tine. Iesoid the British Palestine Government wonidiuvenouncborieynei-dse Arab region ethane-Jordana!- l|.S. Goal Strikes Banned For Next 80 Days Operators Seek A Injunction Against Pension Plan. (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON. April 214cm L. Lewis was slammed twice more today-with a new court order to end the soft coal strike and with a lawsuit to hold up the payment of miners’ pensions. ' On top of Tuesday's $20,000 fine for Lewis and the $1,400,000 fine for his United Mine Workers, Fed- eral Judge T. Alan Goldsborough issued an "80-d-ay" preliminary in- junction under the Taft-Hartley Labor Act. Then the pension plan dramat- ically announced by Lewis and Senator styles Bridges (Ren-NJ-l.) on April l2 came under fire. Ezra Van Horn, coal mine exec- utive and a trustee of the Miners‘ Welfare Fund. sued Lewis and Bridges. the other two trustees. to block their arrangement. for S100- a-cnonth pensions to 62-year-old retired miners. Judge Goldsboroughs injunction orders the Union to end the strike and keep it ended. Goldsborough ruled that the strike hasn't ended, the diispute is unresolved, and "the national peace and safety are still in peril.” _ I-ls ridiculed the argument of W. H. Hopkins, the Union lawyer, plan could be called .a "setlement" zis long as miners were still idle. lifeanwhilmminers in the soft- ooohfieido ewerer" mainly staying home again today. Nearly 800.000 of them we're idle. more than three-fourths of the total. On Friday. Goldsborough is due to pronounce sentence for civil contempt of court. The Govern- ment has hinted that it will ask for further penalties if the miners are still idle then. Subpoenas Served In Butter Base (By The Canadian Press) OITAWA, April 2I-Subpoenas have been served on behalf of the Prices Board to Canada Packers, Ltd. l-lalifax, and the Vallev Creamery Co., Ltd, Kingston, N. 8.. in connection with the recent Halifax butter probe, a. Prices Board official said today. The official declined to disclose what charges were being laid. These would "have to-come out in court." It was understood the par- ties were to appear in court Fri- day. Boy, liog llndflsh ilook liause Trouble TIMIVIINS, Ont, April 21 -— (CP) - A boy, a dog and a fish hook- decision of 223 city teachers to re- all hooked up together — 8B" sign. Tjmrnins firemen an unusual job The teachers voted to resign at today. The youngster was sorting out ll tangle of fishing equipment when I. stray hook jabbed him in the loin of the paints. The lad strugg- isd to pull free. ‘The dog helped. When firemen arrived they found the dog's lip hooked to the hook and both were strusllifli- First the boy's i)!!!" "S" °l free and then the barb was striDPQ ‘ from the hook to remove it from the dog's lip. 2,4,»... terllqyll). m- ~' that the-Lewis-Bi-ldges- pension" llarrinian Named Roving Ambassador (By The Associated Press) WASHINGTON. April 2l—Presi- dent Truman named Commerce Secretary Averell l-larriirian to be roving ambassador under the Eur- opean Recovery Program. The new $25,000-a-yea.r post will take Harriman out of the Presi- dent's Cabinet. As roving ambas- sador he will keep in close touch with countries benefltting through the 05.300.000.000 E.R.P. program. Ranch Mink And Raccoon Prices Easier LONDON. April 21 —- (CP) —- ltanch mink and raccoon sold at slightly easier prices at. the Hudson's Bay Company spring fur auction today. Offefillgg of 257,000 squirrels were 100 per cent sold. with tihe top price 4s 5d (about 88 cents). P.E.I. And Sask. Lead All Canada (By The Canadian Press) REGINA, April 21—With the exception of Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan’: per capita contribution to the Cain- adlan Appeal for Children is practically double that. o! any other Province, C.E. Pickering of Toronto, national chairman of the campaign said Inst night. Ho said Saskatchewan and P. E. l. each raised ap- proximately 50 cents per cap- ita. The national objective wnu l0 cents per capita. Of P. E.I Five Confess In Passports Base (By The Canadian Press) LO , April Lil-Five con- fessed members of an international fake passport r1118. who the Crown said were involved in a "mona- trous conspiracy" to spirit aliens from the continent to Britain and Canada, will be sentenced immor- row. The case reached an unexpected dramatic climax when fiery,'be- spectacled Idel Weingarten, 4'1- year-old Polish-born engineer, and Frank Geigood, young London passport office examiner, suddenly changed their pleas to guilty. The three other, members are w. R. Barrett, another London passport office examiner; James Prior, Glasgow laborer; and A. E. Brown, temporary Glasgow post- man. Barrett plesded guilty- to one charge of corruption while Prior and Brown pleaded guilty to conspiracy to get the vital statis- tics and documents from Glasgow residents. Some of the aliens who arrived in Canada told Canadian police: that they had given Weingarten jewels and money. Woman Appointed To Staff At Mciiill MONTREAL, April 21 - (CP) — Appointment of a woman to a. full professorship at McGill University. second appointment of its kind in the institution's history. was announced today. Dr. Muriel V. Roscoe, a native of Contreville, N. 8., becomes pro- fessor of Botany. She joined iilic MoGiil staff in i940 as warden of the Royal Viczorla College and as assistant professor of botany. niurrsn cans FOR. canons LONDON. April ill-(f/‘Pl-lbr- pert of 0'18 British automobiles and commercial vehicles to Can- sda for the first three months of i548 exceeded by more than 400 per cent the corresponding figures‘ g 72...... VIOUUI jlklll 0 AIIAYI IIIII for i947. it was announced today. I Trade Union Spokesmen Criticise Union Act . Legislature Protests against the recent trade union legislation passed by the Prince Edward island Legislature were voiced last night by rep- resentatives oi trade unions and other; at a largely attended meet- ing in the Whelan Memorial Hall. The meeting. sponsored by three of the local unions of the Cana- dian Brotherhood of Railway BI!!- ployees, was presided over by Mr. Alex. McLean. The speakers were Messrs. Frank Gillespie, general chairman of the Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Employees, Moncton; Forman Waye, of the United Steel Workers of America, Sydney, N. 5.; J. C. Nicholson, director of the United Steel Workers of America, Syd iey; Sam Hughes. director United Packlnghouse Workers of America, Toronto; D. L, Mathieson, M.L.A., Charlottetown; Angus MacInnis, M2,, Vancouver, and J. J. Trainer, Charlottetown. The first speaker, Mr. Gllesple, said he was present at the mam ing as a citizen of Canada w had become alarmed at the pre- cedents which tho legislation in Prince Edward Island might estab- Officials oi the National Parks Branch, Department of Mines and Resources, Ottawa, will sake m1, rFsPonilbiul-Y 101' Zhe provision of Life guards at Dalvay. Stanhope, Brackley and Cavendish, i: was aiinoiuwed last night by Lt.-Col W. W. Reid, Provincial Director of Physical Fitness who interviewed Officials on behalf of the local branch of the Red Cross Swiimnuiig and Water Safety Committee on a business trip to Ottawa. In addition to providing life guards, Parks officials will supply all the necessary equipment 1... eluding boats. paddle boar , ropes, rescue rope guns, first aid equip- ment. fl-ud watch bower. Necessary storage space for such equipment will also be provided. It was Pointed out "that it would be impossible to watcn twenty-one miles of beach so that an area in each of the above mentioned beaches will be marked off and enclosed with lines and bouyg and placed under the super- vlsloii of a qualified life guard. The life guard will be necoriunend- ed. in each case, by the Canadian Red Cross and will hold the necessary qualifications. In Daily Attendance Life guards will be in attendance daily during the swimming season and the public notified of their location. hours of duty, and made acquainted with alarm signals. In order to insure the securing, of properly qualified young men for life guard positions it has been found necessary to create special civil service positions which, it ls said, will give employment for. a five months period. l Applications, it is understood, for such positions which must be supported by Red Cross recommend- suumpiioii Delivered sees. _ ‘ Dllil $5.00, OHIO! PIOVUICGI fi U. l. VOTE 0N FREIGHT lSSUE AGAIN DELAYED (IN COMMON In Asiatic Imperialism Life Guards & Equipment For P.E. I. National Park / iii-q Government; Confident 0f llictory (By John IAIIDGT“ ,- OflTAWA. April 2i (OPT- Vvestern and Maritime members w- day spun the Commons’ long‘ freight-rate debate through its eighth sitting, shutting oft votes . on two non-confidence motions un- til tomorrow. After several daily attempts to bring the issue to a head‘, it ap- peared certain-this time, positive- iy-that the House would count: noses tomorrow on whether or not the Mackenzie King Government will stand or fail. The Government, confident now. of winning and anxious to get the question cleaned up, moved today to accelerate the votes by obtain- ing the waiver of a standing rule that would have barred them oo- morrow. Without this. the debate would have had to go over until Tuesday. In today's abbreviated session-- tiie Commons sits only afternoons on Wednesday - seven speakers were heard. They were from all four of the major parties, but only the West and Maritimes were rep- resented. . Those who spoke today were William Bryce (CCF-Selklrk), Mr. Stanfield. H. W. Hcrridge (Peo- ple's (CCF-Kootenay West), T. V. Grant (L-Kings), John Black- m o 1‘ e (SC-Letlibridge), Mrs. Gladys Strum (CCF-Qultppelle) and Mr. Argue. Th’. Grunt (II-Kings) lair] w he had received no protests from the Maritime Provinces against tiio rate increase. He said that when the Con- sermtivcs» were in qiowew the? —— gave the railways more reven- ue by cutting the salaries of railroad employees and reduc- ing services. The Liberals did it in the open by awarding n rate boost. He would nnt support ihn Opposition motions. aticrns are being mode to Lt-Col. T. M. Powers, district represent- ative of the Civil Service Ccirn- mission, Halifax. I Whisky From Sawdust And Petroleum Waste CHICAGO, April 31 —— (AM- Whisky “made from wood, aged in wood" was urged today by a chwilstry professor. The stuff would be just as good as whisky from grain-and cheap- er-Dr. Robert B. Aries of the Polytechnic Institute of Brookly.i llsh. The Act. Mr. Gillespie claimed. prevented trade unions in this Province from‘ affiliatlng with a federal organization and destroyed the workers’ bargaining rights and freedom of speech. Under the legislation, the Provincial Sec- retary, Mr. Gillespie said, had dic- tatorial powers only p-ssessed by the heads of totalitarian regimes. There was nothing to prevent the Government from going further afield and denying the some DllV- ileges they had taken from the workers to other organizations. Mr. Forman Woye, of the United Steel Workers of America, Sydney. N. 5., said the last time ho had been in the Province, he had'coine told the American Chemical So- ciety. Good whisky could be made from petroleum wastes, too, Aries sa-c. He thinks the customer probably couldn't tell the difference. Dr. Aries estimated that a. ton of sawdust would yield 50 gallons of alcohol, and that 10,000,000 tons of sawdust are wasted annually. ‘The alcohol would cost about on:- third of that made from grain. CORSHAM, Wlltshire, England- (CPI-The Pickwick estate, repul- ed to be the birthplace of the Bath innkeper whose name Dickens made famous, was auctioned rc- centiy. Most of the teiiaiils bought their cottages from £100 ($400) (Continued on Page 5 Col. 6) and upwards. ' Manhun. DETROIT, April 2.1 — (AP) -— A great manhunt, spurred by 8111.600 in rewards, was on in Detroit today for the gunman who tried foklll Walter P. Rculher. Even the Comm ' Party chipped in a I600 reward. The red-balm! president of ‘Inc United Automobile Workers (CI- f - O.) survived a shotgun biut Tues- day night the‘. nearly tore off his right Um. His doctors said no was out of danger, would recover and would not lose the arm. The assailant fled into the night ‘ after firing s. blast from a shotgun info the kitchen of Renter's home. mother's own U.A.W.-C.1.0. put a $100,000 price on the would-be killer's head. The city of Detroit _ added $10,000. Heather's old local, the West Side Amalgamated. where he storied up the Union ladder, put up 81.000. The Coin- miinists contributed I500. although Reisthsr was their bitter foe. The Wayne Coimty C. i. O. Cwncil boasted l‘: by 0100. Reisther we: heavily guarded in u. Ndth Side hospital. Eight doctors worked over him for 2'4 hours late Tuesday and early Wednesday to save his life. Io he'd no idea who shot him. mm, he said, it. was “manage- 1.". $111,600 Reward Spurs t In Detroit merit, Ccirnonunists or s screwball." His private secretary, Mrs. Gwen Marunsoin. said two recent un- signed letters threatened ‘him wioii harm. But he gets lots of thorn, she added. so she threw them sway. Police Commissioner Harry s. Toy ordered the Canadian border between Detroit. and Windsor. Ont.. sealed against any escape attempt by the would-be assassin. Toy ordered a roundup of “the many friends and enemies of the labor leader. l-lis officers were ordered to bring in all known Communists also. But he pointed the finger of suspicion at no one. "We are leaving no one out oi lilils investigation." Toy told re- porters, "and that includes manage- ment." ‘Boy's only clues appeared to come from three neighbors of Reuther. They agreed that a "short" rnen sprinted iihrcinh the darkness outside the rnodeat mother home after the gunfire. A rod sedan we; idling at the curb. The man iurnpsd into it. It. roared sway. heather was a twp-fiend foe of communist; within his Auto Work- era Uhldn. Hit Omflfiilt Party headquarter: celled his shootin seven days‘ talk, one new proposal New Proposal While the debate continued silo: e 5 C01. 3) (Continued on Pa; Monsr lS (as M051’ . llifofiiiilif Roof’ Lot Most FAMltT. i‘ darts 9 TORONTO, April 21 _ (CW-r biinfmiim and maximum temper- aturesz-Vpiii-uuvci‘ 47.56: Edfllfilll * ton 3-4, 30: Calgary 30, 44; Winni- peg 3'7, 70; Regina 37. 70; ‘Ilorcntil 43, 59: Ottawa 38. 57; Montreal 38. , 54; Quebec 34, 50: Saint John 1'3. . 44; Moncwii 3i, 3'1; Halifax 30, 41f Charlottetown 32, 36; Sydney ‘H, 37; Yarmouth 40. 46- HALFAX, April 21 — (C?) < land forecasts issued by the Do-s , mlon Public weather Office to-I night. Synopsis; Rain. drizzle. fog and , snow were reported owr ' Maritime; Wednesday These ended for the most pzirl mum‘ temperature for was 30. By evening_eool afi- fro and the weather tario moves into the the weather should continue ole on Thursday. Temperatures w during the night but bright sun chine will bring about seasonobl tumerotureg during the day, Forecast for Maritime sree, vali id until Thursday snldnighf. tkiued clear Nita-eddy and b coming milder. Light winds. 1n early) ‘Thursday morning 5nd hi; -ln.the afternoon at Chnriotietow 2-. and so. , " High use sob rddmlng "n Mi and tonight It 11.20. sun m: this mining at 6M "n despicable and depraved m." rises tomorrow enorni fa 5.03.... Pull mom April 3m‘: 9M A. weather synopsis and official inc Q th! , morning: r "- early in the day and it was cloud! ' ‘ in the afternoon with tempera- . tures in the 40s in most places. A1 f, Charlottetown however the maxi-f : Quebec covered the whole distri _ _ had cleared i As a iiign pressure area from 0m f. Marianna l s be below freezing in all region! " Clear during the night with bot ' low, freenlng temperatures. Omit ‘