Maxims of a Mere Man Ifnot advice, take warning. 12 PAGES 77:9 Guardian CI-IARLUFTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1956 OUR KILLER - Framed by its Lancaster predecessor. a PZV Nep- tune stands poised on the runway Courier Injured In Hitching Up Box Sleigh Mr. Donald MacPherson. Dar- lington, farmer and rural mail courier. underwent an emergency operation at the P. E. 1. Hospital yesterday, the result of injuries he sustained the day before at his farm. Mr. MacPherson had apparent- ly been in the process of hitching his horse to the sleigh when he slipped upon a patch of ice and full across the box of the sleigh. Unable to help himself back to his feet, his cries for help attract- ed some school ' children.- children summoned aid and Mr. illacPherson was taken to North Wiltsflire. From there he was rushed to Hunter River on the C,N.R. sec- tionrnen's motor trolley. He was given emergency treatment by Dr. Murchison and later placed aboard a freight train bound for Charlottetown. When first admitted to the hos- pital it was thought that his in- juries were not too serious. but yesterday afternoon it became evident that Mr. MacPher-son was suffering from internal hem- morrhaga. Following the operation it was reported that the patient was resting comfortably. Destroyer On Rescue Call HALIFAX. (CPl-The Canad Ian destroyer Nootka is racing to aid t h e explosion - damaged freighter Antonios in the Atlantic 220 miles northwest of Bermuda. the navy reported Thursday night. The Antonlos, believed to in . 7,200-Ion ship of Liberian reg- Islry. reported an explosion in her forcpeak stores compart- mont. She was not believed in danger. however. No injuries to crew members were reported. The navy said her captain asked for a ship to stand by. The Nootka. u... anded by Lt. Cmdr. E.lli. Chadwick of Halifax. was l50 miles east of the Anton ios when she received the call for help. The tribal-class destroyer is ex- pected to reach the stricken freighter about 1 a.m. AST today. The warship. on a training ex- ”4'IW ti-ainln ISPC-ii 0 I am ailm-----o . s at RCAF Station Summerside. A RCAF Station Summerside next New Neptune RCAF Station Summerside has announced that a number of P2V Neptune aircraft are expected to arrive, at the airport next week, and be permanently based there. The Neptunes will com lement the Lancasters presently in use and will be used by Number Two Mari- time Operatlonal Training Unit in their training program. The arrival of the Neptunes, the most advanced anti-submarine air- craft in use today. will introduce several changes in the training pro- gramme carrled out at the local station. though its function, the g of crews for maritime re-” connaissance worltrwill remain the same. ACCOIHDSIIYIII5 the arrival of the new sub-killers will be an increase in the number of personnel on staff at the air station. The strength in- crease is necessitated by the over- all increase in aircraft strength and the greater maintenance problems raised by the highly complicated anti-submarine gear that is carried For R.C.N. At Summerside number of these modern anti-sub- week to complement the Lancasters marine aircraft are expected at presently in use at the station. The Sub-Killers I partially offset the departure of the RCN Avenger Squadron. The new personnel are expected to ar- rive at varying intervals during the next few months. Similar Neptunes are presently in use by the Royal Canadian Air Force at RCAF Station Greenwood. by the USAF, RAF and several ot- her NATO countries. The twin engined patrol bomber is roughly the size of at Lancaster but incorporates technical develop- ments that are required for effici- ent execution of Maritime warfare. One of its Wright tur!:.. T linpower plants used by the World War 11 Lancaster. Accompanying the boost in external power is the most up to date equipment avail- able for war against an undersea killer. Presently protected by a high security classification. the interior of the Neptune houses every device used by modern airforces in track- ing, locating and killing in the Neptune. This increase will submarines. RAIL DISPUTE OTTAWA (CF) - A three-man conciliation board seeking a solu- tion to the big contract dispute be- I tween the railways and 150.000 non- operating employees turned in itsp report to the federal labor depart- mn Thursday. Chairman Eric Taylor and the union representative on the board. were bclievrd to have teamed up: in the majority report, indicating. a better brcnk for tho employer-s than for the railways in the board's I rocnmmendnlions. , However. there was no informa- tion on the contents of the re-port.l which the department planned tol make public Friday morning. The recommendations are not bindinv! on the rlisputnnis. At best. accnrtling in cxpcctaiions hcrc. Iihcy could form the basis for a resumption of long-deadlocked negotiations that might lift the shadow of a strike threat that has : Predicts Break For Employees into a health and welfare fund for employees. 3. Three additional paid holidays a year. to make a total of eight. The unions have not estimated the over-all cost. The railways contend that if they granted the demands fully and followed their usual practice of extending such i i".Q-'iu&3'Znilrll'ea5”li”3lt:'i'iE':3' Neptune, the most modern anti-sub an'craft in use today is gradually replacing the Lancaster for marl- time work throughout the RCAF. Norway Refuses To Sell Arms OSLO. (AP)-Norway's Social- ist government declared Thurs-. day it will not sell arms to Israel or any other nation in the Middle East during the present tense situatlon there, The statement was made in the ' Thursday on another. BOTH SIDES GIVE PLEDGES Labrador On New Mission OTTAWA, (CP) - Her rescue mission to Greenland cut short, the navy's Arctic patrol vessel Labrador was headed south The navy said the 6.500-ton ship has been ordered to Pictou. N.S.. to free the coastal escort HMCS Wallaceburg, ice-bound in Pictou harbor. The Wallaceburg, which has just complete” a refit at Pictou, has been prevented from leaving harbor by heavy ice outside. The Ilabrador. scheduled to arrive there today. will attempt to cut a path to open water in the vicin- ity of Cabot strait. The Labrador was northbound for Greenland to free nine Nor- wegian sealing ships trapped in ice when .word reached her that the vessels had gained open wat- er safely. Escaped Jail Prisoner Found MONCTON (CP)-Francis Gaut- rcau of Moncton. sought for two weeks following a break from the Dorchester jail during a Good Fri- day storm, was found Thursday .living here under an assumed name police said. Gautrau was arrested in a room ing house where he had been liv- ing for three days under the name of George Warren. He said he was an ill employee of a local meat wake of a campaign by some sec- tions of the press for sale of 33 obsolete Vampire jet fighters to Israel for about 3430.000. 1 l processing firm. ' Gautreau appeared in court briefly Thursday and was re- manded to Monday. UNANIMOUS RE A request that the Trans. Can-I ada Highway be brought nearer to: the Village of Southport than the route now being considered was contained in a resolution llaS.s't3(Il unanimously at a largely attended meeting of the people of the Dis- trict held in Southport School last night. Mr. Roland MacDonald pru- sided. The resolution pointed out that the highway should be of the most benefit to the largest number of people possible.A three-man dele- gation consisting of Roland Mac- Donald (chairman) Dr. R.D. Mac Donald and Athol Roberts was named to wait on the Minister of Highways at the earliest possible date to see if the proposed route could be changd. Hon. Eugene Cullen who repres- ents the district in the Provincial Cabinet was present at the meet- ing and spoke briefly. He said that when the Trans. Canada route was being considered last fall. great concern was expressed by the peo- ple of Cross Roads. Pownal. etc., but not one word was heard from the people of Southport at this time. Some time later a delegation from Southport waited on the Min- ister. "and as far as I can judge the proposed route is going pretty near what the people asked for", said Mr. Cullen. Mr. Cullen said he agreed that it would be nice to have the road SOLUTION Southport Wants Road Brought Closer To Village as close to the village as possihli-i and assured those present that tho- cxlrn cost involved in makinv Illt' ;roa(l a little longer was not the c:.piuincd that the main thing tak- nunn IaL'l0I' taken into considr ni- ion by the Federal Government. 3 lie said the tourist industry was iPolice Seek Car After Two Two cases of hit and run oc- curred Ybsterday evening. in both cases the same car was the hit and run vehicle. The first took place near the corner of Euston and Great George Streets when a car proceeding east on Euston was sideswiped by the car which failed to stop. The second I occurred at the j lliiAncl R: Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew lllll)i)l'Iillil hut lIl(' fl'clg'lit being llllillttll oVvl' the 'ilCli was also a Mr)" linporlunt illiiI.lL'I". Mr. Cullen on llllil t-olri'li-rzilr n was to build the road with the shortest distance Continued on Page 2 Col 4 Accidents corner of Prince and Fitzroy Streets when the same hit and run vehicle struck a car going south on Prince. At a late hour last night City Police had not yet located the car or operator, although the number of the car was known to them. Minor damage resulted to the two vehicles that were struck. In Hope Pacts OTTAWA (CP) - External Af- fairs Minister Pearson said Thurs- day that the main objective of the new regime in Russia is to remove OTTAWA, (CP)-Angus Mac- Lean Progressive Conservative member for Queens said he rt.- grets the budget had nothing to say about tariff problems of two important Maritime products -potatoes and processed fish sticks. He had hoped for assurance of an adjustment in tariffs to pro- vide more equity between United States and Canadian potato growers, he said Thursday in the budget debate. Processed fish sticks had been expected to bring great benefit to the fish- ing industry but a high U.S. tar- Iff had wiped out much of that benefit. There had been no satisfactory recognition of present Maritime problems. The Atlantic provinces had entered Confederation on the assumption all provinces would be equal. Now they found this was only a theory. OUEENS MEMBER SPEAKS . I Regrets -Budiget-O-miffed Potatoes, Fish Reference "Instead they find they are the little fellows. off at the far end of the Canadian table." Mr. Mac- Lean said. "when the platter gets to them they find the best has been well picked over, if not removed entirely." One example of the Maritlrnea' lessening importance in national affairs had been the dwindlingof its Commons representation to 5 members out of 265 from 34 seats out of 181 at the time of Confed- oration. EVOKES LAUGHTER One of the few bursts of laugh- ter in a dull week-long Budget debate was evoked in the Com- mons by Mr. MacLean when criti- cizing the principle of Federal Government, "matching grants", These grants. he said, were off- ered to provinces which simply did not have the financial ability to take advantage of them. i o W. gener- ally. it would cost about 5160.000,- 000 a year. On the conciliation board besides Mr. Taylor-a Toronto industrial relations consultant with an ex- ceptional record for settling major disputes-were David Lewis. Tor- onto lawyer nominated by the unions. and Paul Smith, Montreal lawyer named by the live major railways involved in the dispute. It was reported Mr. Taylor and Mr. Lewis joined in the majority report. with Mr. Smith turning in minority findings. The majority ovcrhunu the dispute. lrecommcndatlons always are ac- 1-mu:;p;.wAy nmu, lcr-pied by the government as the The uninns- uhich gniucd their MIICIHI report- ercise in Bermuda yvgtei-3' hmlast pay increase in I952 after at been due in Halifax Saturdav. ll19'""'RI milk” U"? V93” hcmre” are seeking this time a three-way packxgc deallz t i 1. gcnora lil-pcr-ccn wage n- o crease. which works out to an average 25 cents an hour. . 2. An additional eight cents an VANCOUVER (cpi..A group of hour to be paid by the COIHPMIH fnur businessmen from Communln l (Vt-clio':lvw:vl:i:i. in V'"l("IllW”' l'llIII iihis wcckcnd are on the last leg of .1 tour cc:-lilnl: wcsicrn Canadian mnrkets for their goods. The nunrtct is ready to sell any- thing from sets of fragile china to motor cars and cement. Coming Events Trinity W. A. Cake Sale at Hol- man”: this afternoon. Dance St. Peters Bay. Holy Name Hall tonight. Burns Orchest- rs. Regular Saturday night dance. St. Peters Bay Hall, Messers. Or- chextra. See "Molly Darling" St. Mary's Hall. iourls, Wednesday, April 18. 3:80. Come to the play "its An Irish- mans Dream". put on by sour-1. Dllym at Moi-ell Community Hall. April it. dance after. Hockey North River Rink to night. Final game between Corn- atlnl .Bn.dph;-,IunpshIre "III: R. R. . Game l:8. Skate after. Sbowllll at Mt. Stewart Frid no,-;l.:;meu-"so This Is PIPI3 H&Mn "E Cz-echsAS-eeki Constable In Montreal Fired MONTREAL, (CPD-Acting po-: Th leader is Josef Kleprlik, lice director Parifiqtle Plante'rcpr"sentiniz textiles and leather Thursday tlismisscll cnnstahletgoods. Victor Pt-rron from Ihe forcc forl Thcir concentration on western brutal treatment of a prisnncr. .Canada was backed by V- 5- "Toleraiion of an)" in l"IlunllllnIl.T'"l'F'"3- rvnrrwnllns shippina in- or brutality of any kind by mom-Atcre.-ls. who said: bers of the Montreal police dr- .. ”We have made a lot of contacts partment cannot be eountenanced :in eastern Canada: now we want at any time under any circurn- 'to act into the western mhrket." ,tM,ce,g-- ping. 5ald' in Montreal they contracted to He railfird the sentence of lm- It'll 130M” "W" OI Poflllnd Cb 4' to dismissal rccommcnvled mcnt. representing about 32.000.- by a police disciplinary board1000. 8 ul double the Value of which Wednesday found Perronlczechosovakfta INA exports to guilty of kicking a drunken pris- Canada. oner down a night of concrete The Communist c0IIIliI'! room"! steps. causing a compound frac-thought fllikilll tom of wheat and lure of his shoulder. and leavinl . 00.000 ton! of bark! from Canada him Needing in a cell. for IPPTOKIMIM! 3N.lll,. Peronis dismissal is subject I0 Ghlv CMIEIFIII IN mlchlnffi Thirteen Portugese farm work- ers arrvicd in Charlottetown Thurs (lay night from Halifax. where they hail (Ilscmbarked direct lrnm lhcir hnmclanrl. The men wt-re brought here at the request oi ls- Iand farmers who have not been able to obtain farm hcip. Notifi- cation that the men were coming to Charlottetown came rather un- expectedly. and not all of the farmers who will employ them. were at the C.N.It. station to me- ei them. Mr. Sinclair lliacLeod of the National Employment Officerwas on hand to greet the new-corners. and to assign them to those farm- ers who had been able to reach the city. It was not possible to get in touch with all of the farmers Farm Workers From Portugal Arrive For Work On Land concerned by telephone. on the short notice allowed. Several of the farm workers were held over in ('harlottclown until their new employers could be informed of thcir arrival. ltlr. Mullins of the Immigration service Halifax assisted in the distribution of the workers at the station. Farmers who made arrange- ments to employ the Portugese were: Cyrus Martin. New Pcrth: Arthur Hughes. Bedford: Lcitll Macillilliam West Covchead: John J. MacDonald. Glen Finnan; Mer- rill Murphy. Vcrnon River; liarry Tweedy. Earnscliffe; Howard Tweedy. Earnscliffe; Roy Young. Giving an example of how they work. he told th e chamber: "These grants are just the same as if the Aga Khan came to me and said if I wanted to buy a lot of nice things. to go ahead and he would pay half the cost. Itls quite obvious which of us would go broke first." AGE OF SAIL He recalled the prosperous era of the Marltimes a century ago when sail was in its heyday and ships from the provinces went all over the world. It was true that the age of sail was then changing to one of steam and steel and this was no fault of anyone. At the same time. Mr. Maclsean said. none of the Marltimes had ever been very enthusiastic over Con- federation. They are set off from the rest of Canada geographically. economically. politically and so- cially. As time went on they be- came less and less important in the all-Canadian scene. Mr. MacLcan called Government for a complete re- alignment of taxing powers be- tween Federal and Provincial Governments. the new alignment in be on a basis of fiscal need. ile said that legislation providing special aid such as the Prairie Farm Rehabilitation Act. should be applied equally to all parts of Canada. Further. be appealed for decentralization of industry on a three-fold basis of economic. sociological and defence reasons. KING DOMS OF NORTH on the the West's fear of aggression so that it will relax and fall apart. He told the Commons external affairs committee that recent: de- velopments in the U.S.S.R., which he termed "surprising" and ”no- table." have affected the basis of East-West relations. The new regime in Russia-"and it is a new regime"-had shown some mellowing in internal and ex- ternal policy. It apparently be- lieved that a more civil approach to the West was more likely to succeed. Premier Bulganin, Communist party secretary Khrushchev and their colleagues apparently be- lieved that if they could remove the Westls fears, based largely on memories of Stalin, the free na- tions would relax and fall apart. OBJECTIVES UNCHANGED But, Mr. Pearson warned. long range Soviet objectives are still un- changed. These aims included dis- solution of the North Atlantic alli- ance and withdrawal of the United States from Western Europe. Soviet policy was being pursued. at least for the time being. by a variety of methods short of global Pearson Says Russians Seek To Lull Western Caution Will Collapse war. It was probably agood thing that the Russians had discovered the secret of the hydrogen bomb. Because they knew its affects they would be less likely to start an all-out war. Mr. Pearpomsaid the Commu- nists now are turning their chief attention to the Middle East and Southeast Asia. They were promot- ingadiscord and trying to diminish Western influence and prestige in those areas. IMPORTANT SPEECH Dscussing new Russian tactics, Mr. Pearson said Khrushchev'a re- cent speech before the supreme So- viet may be as important to the free world as Hitler's Mein Kampf. His department had drawn the following conclusions from the speech: 1. The present leaders of Russia were full of self-confidence and be- lieved in the correctness and ulti- mate success of their policies and tactics. 2. The principle of collective leadership now was pretty firmly established. at least for the time being. There were several despots instead of one-Stalin. Khrushchev appeared the dominant figure and might some day try to set himself up as the single Russian ruler. Continued on Page 2 Col 5 BUENA VISTA. Colo. tAPl- Two expcditions set out in Inl- nralio's Rockies Thursday to res- cue Elijah. the snowhound horse. despite a warning by the Colorado humane society to leave the shaggy animal alone. Elijah was first spoiled by air! In February. forlornly stranded in. deep snow on an isolated 12.800- foot ridge on the continental divide. Since that time the horse. named for the prophet who was fed by ravens. has been fed by an air- lift of hay and outs. Two Expeditions Set Out In Effort To Rescue Horse pack train wrangler and manned by a Denver Post reporter. a photographer and a copy boy. Thcy were equipped to spend the night and travelled by snowshoes. If they find Elijah in good con- dition. they will leave him there until spring. If he app:-ars to be suffering. they will attempt to lead him down the mountain. The other expedition is staffed by Denver television station KRTV. Meanwhile. Mayor Ben .Iorgen- scn of nearby Gunnison. issued a News s l o rt e s and pictures notice that rescuers are to "leave The Marltimes, Mr. MacI.ean said. should as a matter of right.l participate in the new wealth now, being derivcd from (.'anada'si Northern lands, iluge sections oil the north had been ceded to the Provinces of Ontario. Quebec and Manitoba when the Federal ad- ministration had no real right to Earnscliffe; Frank M a c I n n l s. Cherry Valley. give the lands away to any Prov- Continued on Page 2 Col 1 WASHINGTON (AP) -- Atomicl Murray said Thursday the Unitd States ought to stop testing big ll- bombs. regardless of what Russia does. "We should not wait for the t bliahment of an international control agency.”be told a senate foreign relations sub - committee which is studying various disarma- ment proposals. The commissioner. atpdntaa of president Truman 300 as fre- quently been a one-rnaa minority Itealsaretahrts. III- the formal approval of the etty's COMNWIE "10 Milt .,,cuuv. tug. vaaiaa castle sic tacaaala. th ft -m berltoule 2'.?..l..l.'..i'?uu. range atomic. Port, "a theory of moderate aad discriminating usemf force against a that may be minor in degree! of ..manulm-luring weapons Mai to AEC MEMBER TESTIFIES Asks H-Bomb Tests End I. A limit on the size and number energy commissioncr Thomas E.l"f ”l9l'm0-nuclear. 01' hydfoilfn. bombs to he placed in the Ameri- can stockpile. actuated by both moral principles and the question of military use fulness. SMALLER WEAPONS He said he was 2. More emphasis on a wide very small nuclear. or rapons which would sup- aus-esslon. Including aggresatn On the question of the morality. blast. sear aad rrna eats. but rat- bin hcashtftofemphxiafrusalarle b jib f3. l inate huge areas. Murray said 'thcy use of force in warfare is subject to the dictates of moral cons- cu-nce." "I am altogether opposed to any school of thought that would move on toward weapons of ever-lncreas- ing magnitude. while at the same tlme disclaimlng the intntion of usng them . . . " Senator Stuart Symington (Dem.- Mo.l asked Murray whether he Droposed to go ahead indefinitely of what Russia does. "Absolutely." Murray responded Murray said he wasn't proposing a reduction ia a aroused wide interest in the horse's. the horse alone." .lorll0l15l'rI S-lid plight. the Colorado liumnnc Society has Ono expedition which started out brcn (coding the horse by plane Thursday was led by a veteran Increasing -roaoxro (CPl .. I7. vclopment l of defensive strength will require more and more effort and sacri-' fire by Canadians throughout the. foreseeable future, Defence Minis- tor (Iampncy warned Thursday. y lie told the Empire Club of Can- aria. . , . we and our allies must huild up such strength as will on- ahlr us to retaliate against any attack so swiftly and so surely and l wilh such awful destructive force that no nation will darn to invoke' all-out war for fear of being itself. destroyed. y "Thc dcvelopment of such strength has already. for several- ycars. cnllcd for grcai and con- tinuous effort and sacrifice on our part. it will continue throughoutl the forest.-cable future to require? more and more of the same. . . . Mr. Campney devoted the major part of his speech to a description of some of the hardships faced in building the mid-Canada radar warning line. part "of the conti- asatal Ileana min. The I170 Efforts Required For Defence, Campney Says .F.arly Warning) line in the Arc- and would arrange its rescue. 000.000 line is being built by Can- ada alnmz thc 55th pnrallcl. CIVILIANS T0 MAN LIE IThe Minister. who toured the mid-Canada and DEW (Distant tic last week. said the project "staggers the imagination." More than 1.200 mcn now were working on tho 2.700-milc mid- Canada line. which will comprise dozens of unit stations and a num- bcr of main stations. When the line goes into operation. as few as two men will be required at unit sta- tions and more than 100 at main sites. For the most part. Mr. Campney said civilians will man the line. ”Hundreds" would be hired and trnined for the job. An advanced training course for RCAF and civilian personnel had started kveralmllllltonlh ago. For testing and in W0 simulated sections a the line had been developed. one at Montreal and the second la the Ottawa 5 :. PRICE 5c Still Hope War Can Be Headed Off In Mideast Grave View Taken Of Air Incident JERUSALEM (APr-lsrncli and Egyptian jet pianos battled Thurs- diiv liiilh ovvr the Holy Land. Israel claimed one and possibly two cm-my nlunos shot fl(llt'Il. Egypt said one Isrzicll plane was blast--tl from the sl-'. s in this first i:lL'l'lfll (-onilmt of l . (inc I”.-..'yptiaii jet craslivil 20 mile ' . e Isrncl, an Israeli mil- it'iry spokr-smun sold. The pilot. Mohammad Latif, was quoted as saying his plzmc was on a patrol mission. He was taken to a hos- pital with head and icy: iuluries. A search was organized in Is- rael's southern tic-scrl fur a second Egyptian plane reported hit. ls- ralis closc in tho l)l1r(lvr said they saw four Egyptian planes fly north and only two return. FIGHT OVER DESERT The dogfight raged over Israel's Negev desert. Both countries had just promised to forego force ex- cept in self-defence. The pledges were made to Secretary-General Dag Hammarskjold of the United Nations in Cairo on his mission for peace in the Middle East. Despite the air battle, reports from Cairo said hopes for Ham- marskjoId's I i brightened -I bit. The semi-official Egyptian news agency reported Israel had agreed in principle to pull back forces from the frontier by 500 metres (slightly less than a third of a mile). This was one prime point pro- posed by the UN Security Council last week when it asked Ham- marskjold to undertake the mis- SIDII. Israel said two of its fighters intercepted four Egyptian planes and shot down a British-made Continued on Page 1 Col I z: It Premier Malheson To Be On Panel Premier A. W. Matheson will participate this evening on the weekly Mount Allison panel dis- cussion d t f by Dr. W.S.H. Crawford. head of the Martha matics Department of the Uni- versity. Taking part with the Is- land Premier will be Premier Hicks of Nova Scotia and Prem- ier Flemming of New Brunswick. The subject to be discussed by the three Maritime Premiers will he "Are Dominion-Provincial Ra- latlons Satisfactory." 3ill'iEfilIlES lltnl A t.lv.L ittliltlzs A has lncttftta on links: it: liens on ttmuc. TORONTO. (CP i-Temperature bulletin issued by the weather office! Max Day 'l:i wsori 45 Vancouver 56 Victoria 99 Edmonton 60 Calgary 62 Regina 42 Winnipeg 38 Toronto 58 Ottawa . 60 Montreal 54 Quebec 47 Fredericton 44 Saint John 41 Moncton -'99 Halifax ..... .. 29 38 Charlottetown . . . . 26 35 Sydney 34 Yarmouth 03 St. John"! 33 IIALIFAX. WEIVIIOT pressure cxicnding from LIMI- dor to the Marltimes is about Ita- tionary and little change in weather is expected today. Forecasts: Northern Neva Scofla. Prince Edward Island: Cloud! with I few clear Intervals: little chain in temperature: northeast I5. Low-high at New Glasgow and 38. Charlottetown ll all High tide today at Chartottstuwa at 12:21 a.m. and title a.m. merside tides eighteen It Ch lottetewn. "izlira 21:2. toftrsy at s:ss.e.u. am sets at sass an. valln public . :