llibg KIM Joopsun. -ftvfaxims of a More Men No man does as much to- day as he is going to dg to. XIIOITOW. IO PAGE! .- Sniaiiest And Most feeble of Doucet I Quadrupiets Died BAT1-IURST. N. 3., (cp) Maria. smallest and most feeble of the D'oucet qusdruplets, die-,i here at 10.15 p.m, AST Tuesday, it was announced Wednesday. Mn. ii1Pt' Superior St. Therese, admin. isirator of the Hotel Dieu. said the announcement of the death was held up until Wednesday afternoon because the (ailm- couicl not be immediately noti- fic,d. The mother superior said; "The baby Maria died Tuesday nigh; in spite of continued and most constant care. She was the moat feeble and smallest of the, quads," Maria weighed 1 pound 12 ou-1. ces at birth. Mrs. Doucet was only advise.-3 or the death Wednesday morning, Mr. Doucet .who could not be io- Tuesday Night CI"-d all morning received the news at noon Wednesday. Mrs; Doucets ohly comm"-it :85 We now have an angel in isaven to watch over the other :”',f9- God my spare. them to iDr. Allan F.oss. Montreal spa- calist called in the medical staff of the hospital Tuesday and fol. lowing a visit to the nursery re- marked how well the quads had Dr. Ross said Tuesday nighi that excepting the possibility of unforeseen infection the quad; had an excellent chance for sur- vivai. The mother superior gaid; the news like good Christians nnrl both feel that everything possible WE! done for the babies." DR. CHAN REVIEWS ACTIVITIES IN COMBATTING TUBERCULOSIS Dr. G. A. Chan. senior residgnt physician at the Provincial San- aiorium was guest speaker at the, annual dinner meeting of the P. E. Island Tuberculosis League held at the Charlottetown Hotel yesterday. Dr. Chan reviewed rulosls picture during the, past half century. "Working fogethgi-I lay and professional minds have vvolved programs that touch every phase of a tuberculosis pa- iIent'I life. and the results have. been incredible", he said He touched on the decline of infec- tion rate. and morbidity rates. Recent improvement in therapy should also tend to further mark- ed improvement in case fatality rates of the patients. Svmkins of the case-finding l'T0iZl't'-Im. Dr. Chan said that "al- though X-ray surveys are still needed in some localities, we per- haps have over-emphasized it and have tended to lose sight of the true, epidemiology of tuberculosis. We must recognize the fact tha: -'iiFVCys do not take the place of careful epidemicological investiga- tions of contacts in the discovery of sources and new infections." Problems in isolation were then dealt with by Dr. Chan. Chest 'ursery and chemo therapy have, already resulted in shorter per- iods of Hospitalization and in general throughout Canada and the United States more beds are now available for tuberculosis pa- tients. speakint of the problem of isolation. Dr. Cl-ipn said that this has not yet been solved in most areas. and health administrators are concerned to an increasing degree with this problem. " . C. G, immunization is still limited to medical students. nur- ses and children of infected fam- (Continued on Page 15 col. 5) the tuber- Coming Events "Dance in St. Andrew's Hall, Mt. atewsrt. every Thursday. "Dance South Ruatico Hall every Thursday night. music Rol- lie MacKenzia's Orchestra. "Don Meaaer Masquerade Dance. Beaver 1-fail. Montague. October Liitth. "Buying and cleaning Timothy and red clover daily. Mociuigan and Boyle. "Dance in St, Mt. Stewart. will Thursday, Oct. 28. "Sandy's Marshfield still cater- ing to weddings, banquets. and social gatherings at reasonable prices. Dial 7412. "Masquerade Dance. 1-Oi 05 HI"- Thuraday, October sun. Lunches served. Doiron's Orchestra. Andrew's I-fall be cancelled Rummage sale in Hurts Memorial Hall basement, Saturday. October min, at 2 p. rn. "Masquerade Dance. Afton Hall. ()ctober ma. New Dominion W. I. Lunchol served. , "The Kingston Branch Cans- riian Legion memorial service at (liyde, River Sunder At 2:15 Pm- All veterans requested to attend- "!-Iarrlngton Prelbii-Him Church. Thursday, I p. in. Film! shown by Mr. 2. Mack on work of mission to lepars. "Carleton Players present their 3-act comedy "Aunt Jerushy in the Warpath" in Wheatlsy River Hail. Friday. Oct. N. , "Notice-Installing new Find" in surnsncnidi Mill. wui not be fining custom grinding Thursday. lath and Friday 29th. P. L Morris Ned Service. "Shur-Gain show. Stanley llrldga Hall. Thursclty. October Hill. at eight o'clock. Admission we and sec. Sponaored by women's Institute. Sale of lunches and tea cream. "shur-Gain Amateur Cavalcade in the Mt. Herbert. orppanen. Thursday. November an M I o'clock. land entries to Miss Julie DOM. leoretar! NL ""53" Women's Institute. . "laying pi today at Freder- icimt. puts a pair for good Pill over & lbs. each. will also D"! In can. A dollar extra I pair or delivery of pigs today Dr. 6. Ai Chan been looked After. i ”Both the mother and father tonig- i i BELLEVILLE, Ont. (CF)-Mrs. ,Mary Bell, 43, Wednesday calmly faced an Ontario Supreme Court .iury which pronounced her not guilty of murder in the poison dcalb Jan. 2 of her husband, Percy. The jury was out for three hours and three minutes before it re- -tumed to make Mrs. Bell a free woman. After she was discharged by Chief Justice J. C. McRucr, she went to the front bench of the court and burst into tears in the arms of her daughter. Mrs. June Treverlon. As the verditc was announced, courtroom spectators began to ap- plaud but were silenced by angry words from the chief justice. Mrs Bell quickly recovered her com- posure and shook hands with her counsel, crown counsel and police officers. Before he dismissed the court, Chief Justice McRuer said he de- plored ”thc interference with just- ice in the early stage of the case” by newspapers. "Hordes of newspaper reporters were sent to interrogate a woman who became the accused," he said. The chief justice said pictures and articles war a published which pnever could have been admitted as evidence. In his three hours and 40 minute charge to the jury. Chief Justice McRucr said "there were only three people in that house-three hands to administer that strych- nine." GUILTY OR. NOT GUILTY He said it was either administ- ered by Roscoe Jenners, a boarder, Mr. Bell or Mrs. Bell. ”You must give each one what weight you think concerning this." the chief justice added. The chief Justice told the jury iieiiant Dock LONDON (Reuters)-Strike lead- ers defiantly prepared Wednesday night to continue the trade-crip- pling dock tieup despite sharp cen- sure from the Trades Union Con- grass and a government investiga- tion board. Strong support from three mass meetings of strikers during the day made it seem certain the strike chiefs would not retreat from pre- vious pledges to carry the water- front walkout, now in its fourth week. to a successful finish. Indus- trial sources said the leadcrs' de- termination actually had been strengthened by the twin rebuffs. They already have defied back- to-work appeals from the Trades Union Congress, which Wednesday suspended the main striking union, and strike leaders have said they will not heed any back-to-work ap- peal from the government court of inquiry which accused them of breaking agreements in the strike. The strike lost little momentum Wednesday as more than 43,000 men remained away from work, continuing the fieup of 343 vessels in eight key ports. N0 BREAK At the same time, there was no break In the strike of 8.000 ship re- pair workers in London who have stopped wotk on 100 other ships during the last month. The dock strike. now holding up imports and exports worth 13125,- 000.000, has bamstrung more than two-thirds of Britain's vial mar- itime trade. The strikers have lost close to 511,000,000 in wages. The strike ieaders' first rebuff Wednesday was delivered by the three-man court of inquiry. a fact- Strikers Ignore Sharp censure finding body. which said the main union, the National Amalgamated Stevedores and D o c k e r a. had broken agreements by imposing a ban oniovertime work this year. The chief strike issue is the work- crs' insistence that overtime be voluntary instead of compulsory. WON”! JOIN During the day. dock workers in Glasgow announced they would not join the strike. But they agreed to contribute to the strike-fund. if the strike continues. one affect it will have as far as North America is concerned will be an increase in the freight rates on Canadian wheat and various other products. It is doubtful whether enough ships are free to pick up wheat al- ready contracted for from St. Law- rence pnrts before winter closes them. And with the winter ports such as Saint John, MB. and Hal- ifax getting overloaded with wheat, more use will have to be made of Vancouver. on the west coast. which means a longer haul. Quob; Member Blasts Union National: Gov'l QUEBEC. (CF) - Rene Hamel. Liberal member of the Quebec legislative assembly for St. Mau- rice. said Tuesday night Quebec's Union Natlonaie government is the "most corrupt," since the days of Intendant Bigot in the 1750s. speaking in French at the Lau- rier Liberal Club here, Mr. Hamel said Premier Dupleasia is "the most reactionary and behind-the-time politician of modern times." liury Finds Mrs. Bell Not Guilty In Hushandls Death it could return only two verdicts -guilty or not guilty. There was no evidence of manslaughter. The chief justice covered much of the same ground in reviewing the case as defence and crown counsel in their summations. Both spoke of relations between Mrs. Bell and Jenners. Defence attor- ney Ronald Cass said I reasonable conclusion would be the man took his own life because of an affair between the two. Moscow Shy-sTU.S. Woman involved in Incident LONDON. (AP) - Moscow radio said Wednesday night an American dipiomat's wife accused of "hooli- ganism" struck g Russian worker in the face. The radio broadcast gave what it said was a review of the events in the case of Mrs. Earl E. Som- meriatee. 32. wife of the U. S. embassy'a second secretary. and Mrs. Houston stiff, wife of a mar- ine lleutenani.-colonel who is the assistant naval attache. The Soviet; Union has declared Mrs. Sommerlatte is no longer ac- ceptable in Moscow as an after- math of an incident Monday in graph some Soviet children. The United States has protested what it says was illegal detentlts and malti'eatrr.ent. of the two Am- erican embassy wives. Both governments have refused to accept each others notes on-t-he incident. A late dispatch from Moscow said U. S. ambassador Charles E. Bohlen will see Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov today. The Moscow radio gave this ac- count: The iwo women were trying to take pictures of the children against a background of building One of the children was the daugh- ter of a teacher who lived in the house. He protested against his ,daughter's picture being taken against such a background. and sulisested the women go to a work- ers' club nearby. "On arrival at the club, one of the women-who was subsequently ascertained to be the, wife of the second secretary of the U. S. cm- bassy. Sommerlatte, telephoned the embassy a)1d went toward the exit. when she met, at the exit. worker Andrlanov who tried to call her attention to her improper act. Mrs. Bommerlatte hit him in the face and brutally pushed away a woman worker of the Trckhgor- nay: Manufaclsturs who was near- by." Head: Optometrists Mr. J. 5. Taylor was elected president. of P. E. Island Optome- trists at their annual meeting of their association held in Charlotte- town last evening. President Byron J. Grant occupied the chair. Following the regular business the following officers were elected: President J. S. Taylor; Vice Presi- dent A. Raymond Grant; Sec- Treas. I-I. T. Coivin. Board of Ex- aminers: A. Raymond Grant, By- ron J. Grant, E. E. Parkman. J. A. Carruthera and H. J. Mabon. PRINCETON. B.C. (CF)-Princlv ion has waited so long for .1 new federal building that residents nro reconciled to having it built river whet may be real gold deposits. the excavation. NEW HIGHWAY CONFERENCE NEXT YEAR LIKELY O'I'!'AWA (CP)--The trans-Cam sda highway. a 5,000-mile coast- to-coaat hard-surfaced road begun in 1980. is little more than one- quarier complete and its 19.56 tar- get date has gone by the board. Hf-,ih government informants said Wednesday night it's obvious there will have to be a new fadersl-pro- vinoisl conference to renew the highways agreement with the prov- inces. And after that there will be several more years of construc- tion effort before the highway is completed. The new conference probably will be called before Dec. 9. 1956.!!- piry date of the present agreement by whichithe federal government splits construction costs 50-50 with 0 rovlnces. mAiT provinces but Quebec are parties to the agreement. Premier Duplessis has said Quebec would rights. Informant! here say there is no indication Quebec has changed its mind. BIG OUTLAY The federal-provincial highways agreement. endorsed by Parlia- ment In 1919. commits the federal government to a maximum outlay of siso,ooo.ooo by Dec. 0. 1056. The agreement "' a stone- based black-top road with a min- imum width of II feet and a max- imum of 84. Shoulders must be 10 feet wide on each side except where geographical contours interfere. in which can five feet is permitted. Each ' rovinco does ill own g:ii1dlng.m xlstlng roadls" that meet 0 Inec cations may incorpor- ated in the highway. Up to Oct. I the federal govern- ment hpd committed itself to pay not enter because there were not ,gufficienl safeguards of provincial more than m.ooo.ouo for construc- tion that had passed the standards ' i Trans-Canada Proiect Lags test. It had actually paid out 348.- 98'I.004 to that date. matching the same outlay by the provlnceiu To Sept. 30 a total of 1.715 miles of grading work had been approved of which 82 per cent or 1.410 miles had been completed. Base course and paving mileage approved total- led 1.214 of which 81 per cant or 978 miles had been completed. It BIDGEI DONE Of in bridge: approved, 98 have been completed-32 of them in Brit- ish Columbia alone. On completed psved highway. Ontario leads with 237 miles con- sirucied up to Sept. 30. compared with 207 miles for Saskatchewan. 134 for British Columbia. 130 for Alberta. 120 for Manitoba. 0 for New Brunswick and 43 for Prince Edward Island. Newfoundland and Nova Scotia have not yet completed any final psvinp V which the women tried to photo-l rubble. 1 the i Some gold has been panned iznm. was appointed Britain's First hood pledge to his father. ambition in winning the For Mountbatten, tall. handsome cousin of the Queen and uncle of the Duke of Edinburgh, it was the payoff of a promise he gave his father as a 15-year-old naval cadet, to redeem the family honor. For Prime Minister Churchill ibr: Mountbatten appointment marked an important vindication, too, in his nomination of the son for the father's old job. CHOSE PRINCE LOUIS As the civilian first lord of the admiralty, C h u r c h i 11 person- ally chosc Prince Louis of Batten- berg for First Sca Lord in 1912. Louis threw himself into building up the flect against the German challenge to Britain's mastery of the seas. Two months after the outbreak of war, however, Louis resigned to save the government from embar- rassment when a public outcry blew up over his German ancestry and name. Churchill accepted the tion ”with reluctance." Prince Louis gave up his Ger- man titles and anglicized his name from Battenbcrg to Mountbcatten. ASSUME POST IN MARCH Mountbatten. a great grandson of Queen Victoria, now is com- mander in chief of Allied forces in the Medltcrraneail, a post which he gives up in December to Ad- miral Sir Guy Grantham. He will assume his new duties in March, succeeding Admiral of the Fleet Sir Rhoderick R. Mc- Grigor. resigna- Adenauer"in:em& Washington I WASHINGTON tAP) - German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer ar- rived ln Washington Wednesday for three days of talks designed to cement Germany into the Free world alliance. He was greeted by State Secretary Dulles as .”one of the truly great men of our times." Bricklayer is Found Guilty Of Wife's Murder PICTOU, N. S. tCPi---James A. Swinamer, a 32-year-old brick- .laycr, Wednesday was found guilty of the murder of Mrs. Harriet Skal- ing at the home they shared on the outskirts of neighboring New Glasgow. The jury deliberated two hours and 22 minutes bcfore giving its verdict. He will be sentenced at the end of the Supreme Court term by Mr. Justice E. T. Parker. Under Canadian law a murder conviction carries a mandatory death sentence. in an address to the jury that lasted an hour and 50 minutes Justice Parker told it to bring in a verdict of guilty, not guilty. or manslaughter if it found ”ihat he did not have the intent to kill her bui. did, in fact, kill her." Swlnamcr's case had been built on his statement that he returned home from a drinking bout at 1 a. m. cm Sept. 12 and found his common-l.1w wifc lying across .1 bed, scantily clad and beaten in death. A statement by Swinamer ad- mitted as evidence Tuesday said he'd gone in a hnotlegger to buy wine between 4 and 4:30 the afiel- nonn of Sept. ii and stayed there drinking it until 4 or 4:30 a. rn. Scpt. 12. When he came home, the statement said, he found his wife lying across the bed. in her slip. He lit a match and saw her face was scarred and her eyes black- ened. Burn CioiiiEAs Distress Signals EXMOUTH. England (Reut.erei- Two men peeled off all their clothes Tuesday night and burned them as distress signals aboard their little cabin cniiscr, drifting helplusly in heavy seas. when the Exmoulh lifeboat res- cued them early Wednmday, the tum man, John Peat:-, 40. and Adrian Bird, 33, were naked. wmr got into the engine of the cabin cniiser and put everything out of action. They had no radio, no lighui and no food as they drifted uhromhout. the night. along the English south coast. when dlstrem flares and other inflammable material ran out Peate and Bird took off their clothes, dipped them in kerosene and set. them alight on deck. (By Edwin Shanke) LONDON, (AP)-Admiral Earl The dashing 54-year-old admiral job his Prince Louis of Battenberg, gave up under public pressurc early in the First World War. :'Cov'ers Prince Edward island Like The Dewju 'PBICEIo FirsiASea Lord Fulfills Promise Mountbatten Sea Lord, fulfilling a boy- today German-born father, Dueen Mother Unveils Daughter's , ..,..,,.,. . ,....,,,,, Picture At Canadian Club Luncheon oeived the club's gold medallion, By LLOYD McDONALD highest honor given by the asso- Canadian Press Staff Writer NEW YORK, iCPi - Queen clation of CElta:;aI;15 who havrs 'TTTTTT:-jTT- -CT Mother Eiizubcth. ”ke-only looking made their mar ere in siic thI"fh,i:f,'”'i;Ij,f;';'j.N;3i?”:?;”'f,,,fg forward" to her visit to Ottawa fields as banklni. medicine 3110 y C I next month, had an advance meet- law. appointed in the last 50 years. It is the highest naval appointment possible in Britain and carries with it the responsibility of acting as an adviser to the government, on defence matters. The term of the first sea lord. indefinite. Lately, however, the The navy refers to Mountbatten t as "Lord Louis." His links with the navy began became a cadet. Boys Spot Fireiln Westminster Abbey LONDON, (AP) -- Two sharp eyed London school boys walking in Westminster Abbey prevented .1 major fire in the ancient. churcll Wednesday when they spotted flames creeping along the south triforium roof. Their shouts sent workmen and later firemen scrambling up lad- ders. Passing up buckets of water. the men extinguished the smould- ering fire in seven minutes. The blaze broke out near wherc workmen were repairing the roof. The triforium forms a gallery run- ning about the aide aisles. Westminster Abbey, burial place of many grt-.aLs and scene of the coronation of kings and queens, 15 sometimes referred in as the "par- ish church of the English-speaking world." Five fire trucks raced to the abbey in answer to the alarm- lialian Debt-if Toil Almost 500 SALERNO, Italy tfieutersl w The death toll of theviolcnt cloud- burst which early Tuesday sent floods and avalanches rampaging through this southern Italian city and adjoining villages mounted to nearly 500 Wednesday night Bcacltes the horse finishing sec- Exhausted rescue squads of po- onci in the race. She was the lice, troops and firemen already iiiiZh"-ii Fdmldian m0i'iP.V Wimikf have recovered 279 bodies in the in the Irish Hospital Swecustakes wreckage of six communities. ra- which were held in England on vaged by floodwatcrs and mud Tun,sdl1,V Hill"- which sluiced down the mountains ”i can't believe it.” Weft i185 into the sea at the height of the disaster. In this city of 42,000 alone. 102 bodies have becn found. Blit rescue workers said at least another 200 persons missing are believed to.have been washed out into the Gulf of Naples. or buried ashore beneath tons of hardening mud. Eisenhower P Campaign Trip By Air .mid-term contests. there are many By C. 11. Blackburn NEW YORK. Eisenhower Wednesday apathy apparent smonit States voters might. haa done such a good 1011 . Nevertheless he did not like 1i and told his press l Washington that he would like lo, country to stimulate day. he will make a flying campaignl Louisville, Ky. and ing Wednesday with n little bit. of Canada. high in a tower in Man- hattan. of the North American tour which began who also is chief of naval staff, is iianded Mother attended a Canadian Club usual tenure has been three years. iiincheon in the club's quarters in in 1913 when be her daughter, Elizabeth II, and re- Montague Woman Wins 356.000 On Sweep Ticket iliontaguc, 49-year-old mother four. the she evcr bought. her modest comfortable Montague WEARS DOTTED DRESS The Queen Mother wore a dark grey satin dress with pink dots, is grey fox fur and a matching gray hat. trimmed with pink roses. Before the luncheon she unveiled the portrait in the club lounge. which also has a collection of works by prominent Canadian art- ists. Frank Slater. British artist who painted the Queefs portrait. was presented to the Queen Mother at the unveiling. Following the unveiling of the portrait. which - not drawn from life-depicts the Queen in the grounds of Windsor Castle, the Queen Mother went to the ante- room to meet. the guests. Proposing the toast to the Queen following the luncheon, Ray Law- son. consul-general for Canada, said Canadians "more than ever, fully realize that England's Queen Mother is likewise Canada's Queen Mother." In her first official engagement she Queen when the late Tuesday in New York. he Waldorf Astoria. There she unveiled a portrait of RECALLS ROYAL VISIT He recalled the royal visit to Canada in 1939 and the 1951 Cana- dian visit of the then Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edin- burgh. which again strengthened "this feeling of loyalty and love". He paid this tribute to the Queen Mother, whom he described as "is living and shining example of what a great lady and a good wo- man ahould be." "Her patient courage in her gnr. rows, which were our sorrows also. her guardianship of all the deep unspoken sanctitiea and certainties of family life. her indomltsbu bravery in the days of war, 11”! unquenched hopes for human we (Continued on Page 15 col. 3) -Photo by Peoler. (above) of of S36,00() yesterday on Irish Sweepstake lickcl Mrs. Reginald Flucll W'OTi first i-is Wt-to 5.-was ,. HIS PENMES She hclcl a ticket on Queens first words on being informed of her gnarl fortune by vi Guardian reporter in Iris yesterday after- noon. ”Tiic,re's a trip in store for us.” stated the happy Mrs. Buell in home last, night. It will be her (Continued on Page 6 col. in lane New TORONTO (CPL-Minimum and maximum temperatures: . . - .- I . I (OP)-Prcsiderii who would are a Democratic iic- nawgnn . V - ' g . I ' p . . 3:2” suggested tory as an Eisenhower sci-back. Vancinuv" " u ,;m united nopublicans. with 33 Scnaicscnis Vmnrm ' " 2” kg be attributed not. at stake in this cicrtirm, must Edmnmnn 44 gm to the fact. that hLs administration witn.l4 seats in 'liic.:fin3's vntinil in Camarv 35 R6 re am a are 11lllJOl' .,r . a They already have elected Mmg- aisixacg conference ini srct Chase Smith in Maine. T fl 4" ,0 '1 i)emncrat.s, with only 24 ilold- 0"Ttr""" 1g 2, l - . awa . make one more, swing about tlieiovr-rs in the senate. must cu. iii Mammal as - Rcpubiicamniore to retain a barc miI.i0i'l-l Quebec 12 4, efforts before the voting ncxt Tues ,ali-owing for the unccrtain support F d 'iCmn' ;m H of Senator Wayne Morse of Oregon. Sr? 53 hn E9 '6 The White r-louse announced thai.' an iiidcpcndcni hold-over. N;'(:'':cm'I; ” 2; g: b The cntirc House Of RFDFP-With Hamnx 1'4 ' ii-in Friday to Cleveland. Detroitnailvas-435 members-is ronicsieri ' "' Wilmington. every two years. Republicans hold St. John's . . . . . . . . . . .. 25 53 Del, where rallies will be held Rip it bare ma.i0r".V "T 213 the airports. The president would any forecast about the not make. elect-lonl 5"" he did ten A 'i””"”"" lmiipresident has yielded to pressure- a Democratic victory would not ne,D(.mo..,.Am am; it .5 1,,,ge1,. "om a non-confidence vote in his ad-'(-,,.,,,p -rh,,n,MlE. D9,,-9,. I lYork and vice-President iNixon-and made the contest. very imiiffh an Eisenhower appeal. ministration. COULD BE SET-BACK Nevertheless, since he had made! an extraordinary effort. to win Re-i candidate for president in 1952. is publicant votes. departing from the spear-heading presidential role in psign. from coast. to coast. traditional P. E. i. Tuberculosis leagueAnnuai Meeting Held in City Sidney 1'. Green. president of tin: P. E. Island Tuberculosis League presided over the annual dinner meeting of the league held at the Charlottetown hotel yesterday. which was well attended. seated at. the head table were Hon. B. Earle MacDonald. Minister of Health and Welfare. Rev. P. F. MacDonald. Major M. J. Campbell, President S. T. Green. Dr. G. A. Chan. Arthur M. Clark and Ray Mac.1.ean. In his address Mr. Green com- ? nr.i.nsn To PRESSITRE HALIFAX (CPl-The Dominion public weather office here says I disturbance is moving eastward across the district and skies will be generally cloudy today. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy with showers today; clearing in the evening: cooler tonight: south- west winds ll shifting in the nor- ning to northwest 15: low-high II Charlottetown IO and 58.. Eastern N. 13. counties. St. John river valley. Bay of Chaleur: Cloudy today clearing in the eve- ning; cooler tonight: light wlndl becoming northwest 15 in the mor- ning: low-high at Moncton and Fredericton 38 and 40. Saint John 10 and 48. Edmundston and Camp- Faced with this situation the of New Richard Adlei nstevcnson. Democratic the p.11'iy'a cam- Yesterday mended nurses and other League members for their combined support. Reierring to thc mas Seal campaigns he fourteen years ago when elected treasurer. 33250.00 was rais- ed in the campaigri while last year it was exactly three amount. death rate in the province was 59.0. last. year it was 12.3. Since August. businessmen. doctors. interest and Christ- sald that he was times that In that year. the T. 3. 1945 the unit has s-raved 162,263 (Continued on Page is col. Ii belltnn 35 and 45. Bay of Fundy: Northwest wind: is today; showers tonight; cloudy. visibility 10 miles lowering in show- era to two miles: cooler. High tide today at Charlottetown at 2.06 p. m. and 11.10 p. rn. Summerslde tide eighteen usin- uias later than Charlottetown. illgh tide today at the North shore at 9.01 a. in. and 0.23 p. In. , sun rises today at 0.46 A I. and sets st5.0l p.in.A ' s -