A MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN He created sun. no virtuous hurt and resolute mum are free by God's decree when carrier: Charlottetown. Sonssnerslde to I. I. I. sue. other Provinces and U. 8. A. 013.00 per snmuss. 015.00 per snnusn. Elsewhere Read Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dev? Everybody CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1952 In .em7 Ill. sorrow. opprtsdon. pain and H033. the spirit of the good is unsubdued. V MAXIMS, OF A MERE MAN. 16 PAGES Homing Daily rouaoa seal the Guardian, Five Cook GREAT BRITISH KING COMES TO REST WITH ANCESTORS Reds Make New More Than Half Worldis People Pause For Brief Time In Homage To King (Canadian Press) More than half the world's peo- ple dropped their tasks for a few moments Friday to pay silent homage to the memory of King George VI on his funeral day. As Londoners sat huddled on mid sidewalks at midnight wait- ing for the funeral procession to begin. Australian and New Zea- landers were already streaming through streets bathed in mid- summer sunshine to attend mem- oriai services. The tributes followed the sun around the earth from east. to west, embracing people of all races, colors and political creeds. In Russia. officials of the Sov- let Foreign Ministry joined diplo- mats in a memorial service at the British Embassy in Moscow. on the battle front in Korea. Commonwealth guns were silen- cod and men climbed out of froz- an foxholes to stand. with heads hared. for two n-iinutes' silence. in the jungles of Malaya, wher- ever possible anti-bandit. fighters halted in their tracks. izuns at the ready. to remember their King. British officials in strifc-riddled Egypt charged that 1'-Jizylitlan ter- rorists took advantage of British troops' attendance of a memorial service to blow up a military train. Dispatches told how the. peoples of the world-both the great and humble-paid their last respects to his memory: Canada: In Ottawa and across the country citizens gathered in both ceremonial and simple iri- .:....m..??...j.. Coming Events "Skate in Long Creek rink to- night. "seedel SendTfo-rIfree catalogue. Arthur Vesey. York. "Dance. Mim:cw- I-fall. Mon- day. February 18th. night. Tryon "Victoria rink Saturday Charlottetown U.C.C. vs. Arrows. Skate after. g"Junlor hockey Stanley Bridge Rink tonight, st. Ann's vs. Stan- lry Game time 8 P. M. Skate after. "Orokinole Pally. Hull. Tuesday. February Bpringvale W. I. Brookfield 19th. "Malpeque llall. Tuesday night. February 19th. Sponsored by women's Institute. "Rummage Sale. Trinity Church l-lall. Saturday, February 16th. Bambi Group. . "Farmers. ask about the shur Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part- :culars contact your local feed mill .”League game tonight Hunter River rink. South Rustico vs. iiunter River Shur-Gains. Skate after. "Y. P. U. Crokinole Party at Winston Wood's. Mt. Herbert, Mmldly. February lath. Everybody welcome. "For Snapshots that will not fade mail your Films and Negs !lve.I..,to Garnhuzn Phovo studios Charlottetown. "Hockey match long River Rink lonilht. Graham's I-toad vs. Bread- slbane. Game starts at 8.30. If not line. first fine night. "Don't miss the bargains at Clearance sale of all rubber foot- Welr. overalls, shirts and sweat- gfaduzt W. 0. Myers, Stanley "Annual Box social. Holy Name 5001"-Y. Georgetown. nbmlry 30th. Pictures, Lost a beautiful story. Lunch. y "Buying pigs and feeder cattle. ilondlv at Fredericton. Paying :0-00 For pair for good pigs. over 0 lbs each: will also buy smaller ;'::l- Knud Jwgensen. Frederic- ”!-fockcv at Sandy's this after- noon. Dunstaffnage - Msrshfleld ;clhool teem vs. Pleasant Grove. g'l.)'0f'f' game. This evening -Mldvs Juniors vs. W. E. .7enklns' llnrvesters; school team vs. Gil'll' team. r "Collecting Hogs for Canada C"9km Ltd. each Tuuday at Tliiaud and Carleton, When roads are impassable farmers are liked to deliver bags to our trucks :1 Crlnlud. and Carleton, up until M A. If. each Tuesday. under the NM arrangement afloat year. It - Dawson, Phone No. is-11 or 11. butes to the King. State officials led in a hushed ceremony on Par- liament Hill. The huge Great Bell in the Peace Tower struck at half- minute intervals for 56 minutes. Then a two-minute silence fell. broken by the first shot from a 56-gun salute. United States: President Tru- man led official Washington in a special commemorative service arranged by the Bishop of Wash- ington, Dr. Angus Dun. in Wash- ington Cathedral. British Ambass- ador Slr Oliver Franks read the lesson. and prayers were offered for the King. the Queen. and the Royal Family. Other cities held similar services. New Zealand: Sirens and guns summoned people to observe a two-minute silence. Thousands listened to relayed broadcasts of the funeral commentaries. Australia: Everything came to a halt at noon throughout the vast. sun-baked continent. In Mel- bourne's vast exhibition building. thousands gathered to hear. Prem- ier Robert Menzles and other lead- ers in a special memorial service. Hong Kong: Humble Chinese fishing folk rubbed shoulders with dignitaries at memorial servlc?s. Singapore: Two weeks .of court mouniing has been ordered by all nine rulers in the Malayan Feder- atlon. South Africa: Churches were Pretoria, a large congregation at- tended a service at the Dutch Reformed Church--but one black- draped. pew was empty. It had been occupied by the royal family when they were in south Africa. Premier Daniel Malan attended the service in Capetown. Suez Canal: More than 70,000 Britons in the zone stood in sil- '7c3.ninm.-IE3 Col. 67 Piano's Pilot Dies. Passenger Takes Over CANDO. N. D.. Feb. 15--(AP)- The pilot of a light plane slump- ed over the control stick and died of a heart attack yesterday but the. ship was lauded safely by a passenger who know how to fly. Ross Case. 50. collapsed when the ship was about 50 feet off the ground. Ansel Chrlstopherson took over in time to avert a crash and brought the plane back to the local airport. Iranian leader Shot Near Tehran TEHRAN. Feb. 15 e-(AP)- Hos- sein Fateml. Prime Minister Moh- ammed Mossadegh's nationalist side. was shot todiy by a fanatical moslem youth. Fatemi. 38. was taken to hospital. where physicians said his chances of survival would not be known for several hours. They said the bullet punctured his intestines. The young gunman fired at point-blank range as Fstemi ad- dressed nationallst followers at s cemetery near Tehran. Authorities identified the assailant as n mom-l 1 LONDON. Feb. 15--(l'tculcis)- ber of the Moslem terrorist organ- ization. jegpyan Islam, which al- ready boasts the "assassination of one Iranian prime minister during the last year. Proposals For Conference No lmmedilile Comment By Allied Officers (By Olen Clemente) MUNSAN. Korea. Feb. 15-(Sub urday)-(AP) - Communist truce negotiators today proposed that the concerned governments them- selves decide the agenda of the post-armistice conference. North Korean Gen. Nam Il pre- sented a one-paragraph proposal at a 15-minute plenary session at Panmunjom. It called for a political meeting within three months to discuss withdrawal of foreign troops and "peaceful settlement of the Kor- can problem." The Reds inserted the signifi- cant word "etc." at the end of their proposal describing topics to be discussed. Vice-Admiral C. Turner Joy, chief Allied negotiator. said "Etc. could mean a lot of things. I will not interpret. anything until I have had a chance to study it." The top truce teams will meet again in Panmunjom at 10 a.m. Sunday ts p.m. EST Saturday) to discuss the Red proposal. When Saturday": plenary ses- sion ended siaff officers began meetings of prisoner exchange and truce supervision. Tell of Canadian's Heroic Dealhin crowded from early morning. Inl Cairo liiolsc HAVANA. Cuba, Feb. 15 -(AP) -Canadians here today said per- sonal letters from Cairo, Egypt. told details of the heroic death during the Cairo riots of J. Mec- Leod Boyer, Canadian trade com- misaioner. The letter said Boyer died try- ing to convince a. woman to jump from the second-storey window of the Turf Club. set afire by the rioting mobs. Boyer. a native of Victoria. N. 13.. died Jan. 26. "Boyer was seen at the window trying to persuade Mrs. Crawford to jump." wrote one man, who saw the incident from another building. "Then. after some time. both were seen to fall back. They died of nsphyxiatlon. lie had turn- ed his automobile over to one of the employees of the embassy so she could go home. and took ref- uge in the Turf Club. "Tho mob poured kerosene on the building. Those who had taken refuge upstairs began to jump out of windows. landing on the cem- ent archway below. Mrs. Reid jumped. and the mob tried to pour kerosene on her and burn her. But an Egyptian employee stood over her with a gun and refused to al- law any of the mob to touch her. Then we saw Thomas. the club secretary. jump." Ivan Kilpatriclr. manager of the Royal Insurance Company. and a club overseer were able to get Ehard toward peace." iPrincess Merrglsret's Friend lniured them hidden. and later to a hos- pital where they are recovering. "The new government is working bndr'6m't7ifnercBlackwood, 20. one of Princess Margaret's closest friends. was injured in an auto crash on her way back to London The authorities said an inscrlpt- from me Km” mm”. at wlnd. ion pasted on the youth's said: "we demand freedom for Naval: Safsvi." leader now in prison. The gunman was seized by the ll "9d'Y"l Hum her mother. the mm sor today. She was taken to l1OIDlllvl with Marchloncss of Dufferin, 43, also injured. Their car struck a lamp post nnsry crowd at the cemetery. He on the Great West Road leading SRVO hi! Mme only as Mohammad. to London and caught fire. Scores Of Allied Tanks Raid Red-Held Kumsong BIIOUL. Feb. 18 -(Saturday) - (AP)-An Allied raid by scores of tanks into the central-front town of xumsong killed nearly 100 G ' t wounded 30 more and blew up so Red bunkers. officers reported today. The rllti Friday into the rub- bled no-man's lsnd city followed an intense artillery barrage. Be- hind the firing. tanks pushed through Kurnsons and attacked bunkers and trenches. Kumsong is 27 miles north of the 30th parallel. Allied artillery Friday pounded Rod central and eastern-front. positions from which s series of ...?...........m.. hour 500 rounds had burst on Red positions in the Mundung vslley sector of the eastern front. It was there that 1,100 com- munist troops tried to breach the strong Allied defences Thursday night in a short but bloody bet- a. in other sectors the barrage: lasted only 10 minutes. - Approximately 200 Communist troops hit two Allied, hil-l positions southeast of xumsong on the central front and took one hlll.,Al- lied units later reoccuoied it. with- out opposition. A field di stoh said there were signs of ' rge losses." In the air. Allied phnu owqt - owner tonight DONDON. Feb. 15 -(Reuters)- The Duke of Windsor. who today followed the coffin of his brother the King to its last. resting place. intends to spend the next two weeks here. ”He has made no definite plans for his return but it is probable that he will sail for America. in secretary said tonight. The Duke is staying with his mother, Queen Mary, at Marlbor- ough House. Memory had been sharply stirr- ed in the capital by the first pub- lic reappearance of the Duke. is years after his abdication. as a principal royal mourner for the brother who succeeded him on the throne. the Queen Elizabeth Feb. as." his is Duke Of'Windsor Plans Two Weeks London Visit In his ad.mirsl's uniform. h'e seemed little changed from the sovereign Edward VIII. who in similar uniform. followed the cart- cge of his father George V in 1966. The Duke last night hid s. talk with his old friend, Prime Minist- er Churchill. Their meeting was believed to have been purely soc- l. The mass-circulation Daily Ex- press said today that although the Duke and Prime Minister were unlikely to have discussed the Duke's income last night. some state allowances might be under consideration. "King George is understood to have made an allowance to his brother from his own resources." the newspaper added. lleslaurani Owner Chases Robbers. MONTREAL. Feb. meat-cleaver wielding restaurant chased a pair of armed hold-up men from his store after they attempted to rob him. Paul I-laroyan was alone in his restaurant when the two men on- tered and. after ordering soft drinks, told him to open the cash register. They fled when he wav- ed a meat cleaver at them. Prince Charles Watches Funeral LONDON, Feb. 15 - (Reuters) -A sturdy little boy with seri- ous blue eyes watched the King's funeral procession from a window in St. James; Palace today. He was Prince Charles. Lhrec. heir to the throne and grandson of the late king. The Prince looked down on the procession from beginning in enpi. yet hardly knowing what it was all about, s:cing only the spien. dor and majesty of- the pageant. He was with his nurse, Miss Helen Light-body. Funeral Sidelights 15---(CP)-A BARNES. England. Feb. 15 - (AP)--William Caudle and his wife. both about 70. collapsed and died within a few moments of each other today while watching the King's funeral procession on tele- vision. ABOARD THE AIRLINER ATHENA. OVER. THE BAY OF BISGAY. Feb. 15 -(Reuters) - Speeding through space at 308 miles an hour. the crew and pas- sengers of this British airliner to- day observedthe. two-minutes sil- ence in memory of the King. Like other British pilots the world over. Capt. F. A. Taylor kept a careful check on British time as he took his plane on its way to Lisbon. Just before 2 p. m. be entered the main pasenger salon. The 40 -pasengera rose and stood with him in silence. BIN APORE, EE.h- J5 -iReut- crs)- fleet of 33 Russian fishing trcwlers steamed ' ly into port today with hammer-and- to join in mourning for the King. The fleet. on its way to Vladi- vostock from the Baltic Sea. will leave Sunday after taking on sup- plies and water. LONDON. Feb. 15 -(Rcutera)- News items on the King's funeral procession almost entirely pushed out. other foreign and domestic news in the British press today. London's three evening newspap- era. with a circulation of more than 3, 000. carried only a total of 151. co umn inches of non-royal news-about five per cent. IDNDON. Feb. 15 -(ReulArs)- Ambulance workers along the route of the King's funeral proces- sion dealt with 000 casualties to- sharp Communist attacks had our North Korea. Ono nussisn- day. They were mainly minor been launched. niedo Jet was damaged in s cases of fainting but 10 were taken The guns opened up a few hours brief ole between 10 U. 3. Debra to hospital. some after noon. 1:: less than half an jets and 30 Min. with broken arms caused in ' , sickle flags fluttering at half-mast ' "Canada Mourns Death Of King; Impressive - Ceremony At Ottawa (Canadian Press) Canada paid silent, solemn hom- age yesterday to the memory of its late. beloved King-George VI. The gentle hush of a. two-min- ute silence fell across the land as capital, city and hamlet held quiet memorial services for the sovereign. He was buried a few hours earlier in St. Georges Chapel at Windsor, Eng., burial place of British kings for centur- ics. The clay was one of general mourning throughout Canada. Schools generally were closed. Banks were shut. Other business places were closed either for fill, or part of the day. Theatres re- mained closed in most places un- til evening. The airwayl. too. quletened. The CBC, except for broadcasts of the funeral services in Britain and the memorial service in Canada. was silent. Private stations were not required to leave the air. but generally programmed only soi- emn music. Solmen Ceremon, Ottawa, the capital. led the na- tion in its last. tribute to the King with a solemn ceremony in the grey-stoned Hall of Fame in the Parliament Buildings. There. before a drapfd. purple ,velvct curtain at one end of the .hali. leaders of state placed lwrentiis. Outside. before the build- ,ings. a great crowd stood bare- iheaded as tho two-minute silence was observed and cannon began firing 56 rounds in a salute to the departed monarch. The Parliament Hill ceremony started with the telling of the 1.100-pound Great Bell of the carillon high in the Peace Tower that rises above the Parliament l3uiidlngs..It tolled for 56 min- utes-once each 30 seconds-to mark the 56 years of the lungs life. The crowds-estimated at 8.000 persons-gathered early to thronif behind the lines of servicemen stationed before the main build- lag of Parliament. Inside, a 100-man guard of honor. representative of the three armed services. lined the Hall of Fame. Diplomats. cabinet minis- ters. members of Parliament and other officials stood silently in reserved areas along the hall. At 2:53 p.m. EST. massed bands stationed in a nearby committee room played Chopin's funeral march. "A-bide With Me". "God Save The Queen" and "0 Can- ads." The halls quletened. The two- minute silence. marked by the firing of a single gun, began at 2:58. it ended at 3 p.m. with the first of the 50-gun salute. Officials Place Wreaths High-ranking officials placed wreaths. five in all. before the velvet curtain. which was flank- ed by officer representatives of the army. navy, air force and R.C.M.P. Each stood with head '-(E:WiT?d'ETiEe'is'ToiTs7 Toronto Manager Of Eastern Trust Dies TORONTO. Feb. i5 - (CF) - Donald Johnson Block. 31. To- ronto manager of the Eastern Trust Company since last April, died today. He was born in Amherst. N.S., was graduated from Dslhousle Univ0rslty and joined the corn- psny in Halifax. Dr. N. S. Black of l-Illifsx is a brother. Burial will take place in Am- hgau U) S.D.U. Debaters Defeat ML Allison Debaters of Saint University last night added an- other wln to their growing string of Mount Allison the local college hail last night. The Bein-ts won the unanimous decision of the three judges as they upheld the negative of "Re- solved that a political union of the three former Maritime Provinces should be effected." Speaking for Saint Dunstan's were Emmett Roach and Clair Callaghan while Glen Bariilett and Ken Bagneau represented Mount Allison. Mr. Brendan O'Gre.dy was chair- man for the debate while the three judges were chief Justice Thane A. Campbell. Judge H. L. Palmer and Mr. Plus Callaghan. Russians Pay Oblique Tribute To King George LONDON. Feb. 15 - (Reuters) - The Russians paid an oblique tribute to the King today by eas- ing up on their jamming f West- ern broadcasts during the funeral of the late monarch.- The BBC had announced in all its Russian programs, since Tucs- dsy that transmissions in Polish and Russian would be cancelled today between 2 pm. and 2:45 p.m., the time when the King was laid to rest. The BBC explained that the wave-lengths used to pierce the Iron Curtain would be used to increase coverage of the funeral in England, French. German. Ital- ian. Greek. Finnish. Danish and Norwegian transmissions. "A check showed that on about half of these additional wave- lengths t)hQja.mmers. for once. remained silent." an official state- ment said tonight. YugosTl;;Tl-losl Worst Storm In 100 Years BELGRADE. Yugoslavia. Feb. l5 -- (Reuters) - The famed Orient Exzpress. which crosses Europe from Paris to Istanbul. was held up today by I snow- dnift on the Yugoslav frontier in the worst storm in the district for 100 years. DEAN or sf-:NA1". OTTAWA. Feb. 15 --(OP) .- scnator Thomas J. Bourque of Richibucto, N. B.. now is dear: of the senate both in age and length of service. Until the death this weekof Sir Allen Ayiesworth in Toronto. Sen- ator Bourque. 87. was senior in length of service only. sir Allen. 1923. Senator Bourque was appointed in 1917. Duriste.n's when they defeated representatives University at 97. was npooin t,ed..to..i.he..scnate...in . By Alan Harvey DDNDON. Feb. 15 -(CF) -Ten days of mourning for a beloved King reached a. sorrowlng climax today as Geoign VI. perhaps the last. of the Wlndsors. came home to his final resting place. In a parting tribute to the man who did not seek a kingdom yet added lustre to it. Britain rallied to two great state occasions-e. live-mile march of grief from London and a simple funeral ser- vice within the walls of Windsor Castle. fortress home of kings. It was a milestone in the Brit- ish story. a ritual moment mark- ing the transition from father to daughter-from one respected reign to another already hopefully hail- ed as the augury of a new Eliza- bethan age. Solemn Procession The day's events. watciierl by mourners in their hundreds of thousands. started with the sol- cmn procession from candle-lit lwcstminsier liall. where the King lay in slate three days. and ended with a moving Church of England service at 2.20 p. m. (9.- 20 AM. EST) in the Gothic chapel of st. George's Windsor. As the hushed. 25-minute service drew to a close, an attendant handed Queen Elizabeth a silver gilt bowl containing earth from Queen Victoria's mausoleum. The young Queen stepped forward and lsprinkied particles on her father's coffin. draped with the crimson color of the Grenadier Guards. Then the Archbishop of Center- liury, Dr. Geoffrey Fisher. intoned the words: "Earth to earth. ashes to ashes. dust to dust..." Elizabeth again stepped forward and sprinkled earth as the coffin lay in the royal vault. In the echoing chapel. a boys choir sang. the Carter King-of- Arms proclaimed the styles of his "most. high. most. mighty and most excellent ma,iesi.y". and an organ played the Dead March from Handel's "Saul." Slowly. the sorrowing Queen. her mother and Princess Margaret filed from the chapel. Then came .1 concourse of kings and queens from foreign countries. diplomats and courtiers, soldiers and states- men. 'l'he committal will be complete when the Kings coffin, bereft of its imperial crown. sceptre and orb. is borne along a. subterranean passage-way to the royal tomb house. built by George III in 1310 and housing 74 coffins along its liclvth of chalk. A chapel official said the coffin will he placed alongside another bearing a personal standard-that of the Duke of Kent. the King's brother. who was killed in a war- time air crash. -------Canadians-At. Service Prominent Canadians present at the chapel service included Rt. failure to settle west Germany's role in the defence of Europe. official 's0urcti”fep0fted developments: 1. United States. Britain these and definitely to meet here Sunday- whether the present French Gov- ernment is in office or not after tomorrowls confidence vote. Seek To Settle Germanyis Role In Western Defence -(AP)- day on future Allied-German mil- lthe Foreign office. Then State Secretary Acheson and foul- rand his aides. The :cnn discussion will range for be- yond Germany-and Driver Falls Wheel, Four (GP)-An I tomobile. whose driv- er apparently fell uleep at the wheel. Three others were injured. erely. Light Infantry. were kin. It is be western osneds. this town ' the deed and injin-ed from t.he.London. gm AILSA CRAIG. 0112.. Feb. 15 -' rammed into a tree near here today, killing four passengers. Id Hunniford, 00. of Thedford. 0nt.. the driver. and three soldiers from Camp Ipperwssh lost their lives. The three other occupants. all soldiers. were injured; two sev- Names of the soldiers. members of the Princess Pstrleirs Canadian withheld pending notification of next-of- lleved some came from Al Bridge owner of I garage in miles northwest of London. was called to help remove Asleep At Men Killed car. Bridget said "We had to pry the car apart to get at the victims. when we got there there were two dead soldiers in the front seat. An- other was lying across the back of getting him out." asleep. him and were returning L First. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden will talk with Adennucr at Dean close advisers French foreign ministers arrangednvili go into conference with Eden Anglo-Amerl- likely will deal with Atlantic Pact business. 2. They arranged also a facc-to- the situation in the Far East. Mid- face talk with west German Chnn- die East matters and Russian for- ccllor Konrad Adennuer for Mon-lcign policy the front seat. He was dreadfully injured and died while we were Bridget said the fact that there was no snow or ice on the road and signs from the tire marks that the car gradually left the high- 5:55 7-"- way indicated that the driver fell Police said the soldiers met Hun- niford in a. Thedford restaurant last night, went to ,London with to the camp when the accident occurred. The camp is 50 miles northwest of Solemn, Impressive Service In Chapel; Milestone In I-Iistoryl I-Ion. Vincent Massey. Canada's govemor-ge.neral-designate. w h o had a seat. in the chair as Can- ada's special representative; Ex- ternal Affairs Minister L. B. Peer- son; Defence Minister Brooke Cluxton; and Gen. H. D. G. Crerar, wartime Canadian army commander who attended as a. formal royal aide-dc-camp. L. Dana. Wilgrese, Canada's high commissioner in London. marched in a long procession from West- minster to Paddlngton and from Windsor station to the chapel. about five miles in all. Neither Pearson nor Clsxton were able to get a good View of the proceedings from their posit- ions in the chapel. More fortunate was L. W. Brockington, a Canad- ian film executive. who managed to obtain an overhead seat near the broadcasting booth. The inner chapel of St. George's is e. high-ceillnged room with a. fan iraccry of Cotswold stone rear-hing high into a. tesseilatod roof. Beneath the tracery on either wall are banners of knights of the Order of the Garter-the most: exalted in English chivalry and dating from the days of Edward III. Beneath the banners are ancient intricate hand-carved woodwork- lngs. each bearing the helmet. sword and crest of the individual knight. In various vaults are buried kings of the last 150 years and some before that. Near the royal tomb house are the bodies of Henry VII and his favorite wife, Jane Seymour. Queen Elizabeth. was tlght-lip- '-tcTntinued. On page 16 4:013)..- l.lSTENitii; (0 (up Btiicirr 3AYlNCs or ckiioacn libs toast) MANY A Bacaetow. or wanfmc. -to oer MARRlED! k.. HALIFAX. Feb. Ill - (OP) -- Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Saturday with an outlook for Sunday. Synopsis: Little change is expected Satur- day as northwest winds continue to blow. Sunday's weather is as yet very uncertain but present indica- tions are for snowflurriee. Forecasts: Prince Edward Island -- Cloudy with snowflurries. Little change in temperature. ,Nort.hwest winds 20 Low and high Saturday at Char- lottetown 12 and 20. LONDON. Feb. 15 O U k g g Western leaders worked feverishly ltarv and political relations (xurglego for Sunday 5"” behind the scenes of a British Two special meetings llllcdre set pp monarchs funeral today to stove for tomorrow as a pre u e to lie "Yb yd wd t oh my off it major diplomatic failure- is -full-dress conferences. WW1, at A. mild 100 glomp High tide today on the North Shore at-8.46 A. M. and 9.25 P. M. I summerside tide eighteen man- uies later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 7.14 A. M. and sets at 5.41 P. M. MCA am SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY heave Charlottetown for Meneton 5:30 A.M.; 11:20 A.M.; 4:50 P.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Moneton 7:25 A.M.; 1:85 P.M.; 0:55 EM. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow-Halifax 1:40 A.M. New Glasgow 1:50 P.ltI. New Glasgow & llslifsi Arrive Charlottetown from New. Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 A.M. from New Glasgow (:35 PM. from New Glasgow and llslifsx. I MONDAY, wszfv-Esnasr. nmar NLY 0:10 AM. Arrive Sydney from New Glasgow ' 10:25 A.M. Arrive New Glasgow from Sydney. SUNDAY ONLY lflttetown for Mooeton :20 . Arrive Charlottetown from Monoton Leave C' IIORDIN - CAPE TOBMENTINI FERRY sntvros Daily (Including Sunday) have Bortlef have 0. 1'. 9:10 A.M. Ilill AM. l:iiO RM. 2:00 KM. 6:30 PM. ' I: PH. 1:30 PM. 0:00 LI.