Maxims 0' L MERE MAN g:-1 when the Jllllllllclli-'I week. prejudice II IIHIICI Ilse I . Deli: Founded ilfl. ;l.?,m(ll.lu'a:rdhn, Three Utah CHARLOT'l'ETOWN. CANADA. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MONDAY. MAY 29, 1950 14 A wound. though behind I sear. MAXIM! OPA. MERE MAN cured, leaves PAGES Subscriptions Delivered 30.00 Mau 80.00: other Provinces 6 U. 8. 81-00 IN ANT SUF F OCATED IN FIRE SATURDAY AT MARTIN VALE I-lalf-Million Communists Parade In Berlin Soviet Action In Recall Of Official From Japan Arouses Speculation TOKYO. May 23 -(AP) -n.us- ihfs top official in lupin. 3 bitter tdversary of Gen. MacArthur. is ,-n route home to Moscow under aecuiinrly-abrupt circumstances. Authoritative Westem occupat- ion sources are inclined to regard t either as a Russian decision to lie l.t.-Gan. Kuzma. Del-evyan:ro's mowledge of United states milit- m- strength for new pressure on Southeast Asia, or to punish him for failing to stir up chaos in Japan. it the punishment speculation is rorrc-ct. it is considered likely that there will be intemlfied efforts to plunge Japan into turmoil. Diplomatic circles and the ner- vous Japanese are watching CIOSCIY lor clucs. in any case. the Japanese ex- pr,-i no reduction in the persist- ent Communist incitement to dis- Ii'dC'l' within Japan. sails Suddenly Dercvyanlto sailed suddenly Satur- day aboard Soviet. trawler 284 for Vladimstnll. where he will take a train to Moscow. with him were 50 other soviet mission officials, soldiers and dependents. including some wives and chlldrm. Del-evvanko did not make the mstomary farewell courtesy call an Mat-Arthur. the Allied occupation 'TcE.3unuea on Page 5 Col. '7) Coming Events '-hlail vour Films to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Show. Morell, every Tuesday. Fliday. Saturday. Show starts 8.30. "Chess and Loman Show. Clin- icn Hall. May 29th. "See Tyrone play and special- lies at Seven Mile Bay Tuesday, May 30. "in stock. pnsis Boylc. clover seeds. cedar and cc-mcnt. MCC-uigan and "Sec Morell Players in Tracadic Hail. Wednesday, May 31st. Cur- lain 8.30. Dance after. ' "Crme to the regular Dance at th- iionshaw Inn Tuesday night. lticNeiii's Orchestra. "Meeting of I-lillsboro Junior Farmers. Wednesday. May slot. at lfermcth .lenkins'. 8.30. "Wiltshire plays. with special- lyoes, Kingston hall Tuesday. May fiiunter River starch Factory Will be operating daily until Wed- llmi-lii. May 31st. Appointments not necessary. "Regular dance at Skyline New London every Tuesday night. Dan- "ilu: from 9 till 1. Good music and vxntccn acrvlcc. "C.v'ran Ban Hall. Monday, WV ....th. st. Theresa's Players pre- Eirt thrce act comtdy. Dance 81'. ”l'rcnch River Hall. Monday. liar 2'lth. at 3.30. lrishtown Var- 'f'-.i' Concert and one act play. Jllonsorcd by St. Thomas G. A. "Arriving next week. car of Ccmcnt. Special prices off ear; giro in stock Asphalt and cedar 3hl”Elos. P. J. Noy and Company. "Tyrone will present 3-act romcdy drums in Seven Mile Buy Hall Tuesday. May 30, at 8.45 p.m. Good spcclaliles. ”Klnkora I-lail - see Miscouche , .PlI.i'frs present their 3 act comedy nlxinkora Hall. Monday. May !9.h. Curtain 3.30. Sale of candy. L "Charlottetown B. Y. P. U. play. "”b0d.V's Home” (3 act. comedy). Clyde River Hall. Thursday. June lat. no 9. M. Auspices Y. r. U. "New Glu ow Cavendish Hill. "lnl. May 81. date. Concert in Wednesday eve- Note change of "Seeds. open daily. Also Mon- 9Iv and Thursday eveung until 9 P- M. Closed sunsan. Arthur Vwev. York. "See the st. 'l'ereea'a three act "I'M! drama in coma Ban Danes fill. Monday. my ass. I au'n'ltsurvs Juno up for Daniela 300 and seeing listen at W-ta llutleo Sell. smeare- Wins Am oalisn or the amt. "' i .. I a Toronto Mun New C.M.A. President lllr. W. F. Holding of Toronto who his bevn BIN-lail president of the Clnldlllll M'"'"' facturera' Assoclliiolh TORDNTO, May as -(OP) -W. F. Holding of Toronto was elected president of the Canadian Manu- facture.-rs' Association Saturday. succeeding M. A. East of Saska- too l-llfgh Ciomble of Montreal was elected first vice-l1l'eSld?M. 0- K- Shiels of Toronto second vice- president. and J. C. MadFarlane of Toronto, treasurer. J. T. Stirrett. 'Ibronto. is general manager. The executive council includes 1). it. Turnbull. ,1-ialifax. - -81 Above In City Yesterday The temperature was 31 above in Charlottetown yesterday as I Maritime heat. wave continued. The mark was said by the Dom- inion Weather Office at Hui'ax to be four degrees above the previous record for the same date, set in 1934. However. it was still far be- low the all-time high 10? I310 month. an 8'! above recorded in 1032. As the warm wave continued. Prince Edward islanders tvrned to the outdoors with a will. Yesttr- day quite a few sought the bench- es, some to bask on the sand, and . yew gg guy out the water. North ahore beaches had their quota of visitors. Little Interest In ' Belgium Election BRUSSELS. Belgium, May 28 -(API-Belgium's fourth ' post- war election campaign, wi.h King Leopold as the issue. is in full swing but it nas failed to stir up the voters. Belgians will elect a new Parl- iament June 4, but the poverty of party treasuries and lick of peg- ular enthusiasm has kept int.rest to a minimum. . troopers I plice, Gervln Display lletalls Hitler Days BERLIN. May 26 -(AP) - A half-million or more disciplined East German youths. their blue uniforms sudden from. day-long dcwnpours. chanted and marched today in Berlin's biggest Com- munist show since the war. The vastly-prepared Whitsuntide rally turned out to be a peaceful parade. not a putsch. By nightfall only one minor incident h-aci mar- red the demonstration. A Com- munist youth who beat up a news vend-or was arrested. But it was r. parade which mocked and caricatured the West. euloglzed Stalin and the Soviet Union, and carried high the drum beats of hate-not unlike another day when Hitler's massed legions strode the same historic thorough- fare-Under Den Linden. Troopers Get Big Hand Today's biggest hand was saved for 10,000 grim-faced Jaclcbooted of the East German "People's Police," which the West calls an army. The dee-ply-tanned. drilled mass swept down Unter Den Linden and past reviewing stands in the Lustgarten in perfect military formation. In dark blue uniforms and red ties. they carried regular field kits but no arms. The youth brigades. shouting "friendship. friendship” in cadence and clapping their hands in unison. reminded onlookers of Nazi "Sieg hells." Soaked to the sllln and shivering (Continued on Page 5 Col. '1) Youth Sentenced To Hang For Taxi Driver's Murder VALLEYFIEID, Que., May 28 -(GP).-Kenneth Bevin. one of two I8-year-ol.l fat-mhands ac- cused of the Dec. 13 hammer slay- ing of taxi driver Luc Brunette. was convicted of murder and sentenced to be nanged Aug, 25. Bevin and his alleged accom- -Patenaude. were flushed out of their haymow hid- lng place last Desemher by Fro- vlncial Police sacking to solve the Brunette slaying and the S800 rob- bery ot a I-Iuntlngdon district bank branch. At a subsequent ccrcnerls in- quest, they admitted robbing he lmnk and the fatal beating of Brunette Patensude is yet to face trial. Bevin paled but otherwise show- ed no emotion when Judse Fran- cois Caron prcr-ounced the death sentence after a Cr'minal Asslses jury brought in the guilty verdict following 35 minutes of deliberat- ion. Defence counsel sought to show that Bevin was an honest intellig- ent youth -who was led into the crime by Patenaude. The Crown produced witnrsses who testified Bevin told them Brunette was struck from h.-hind in his c-r and his body hidd.-n under a bridge. Jud-ge Caron told the jury "it would be minimizing to a great ex- tent the valve uf a life if you were to render snv other verdi t than that of guilty-" Bevin will be taken to Bordeaux Jail near Mol..real to await exec- - ution, Eleven Canadians Win In Derby Sweepstakes , By The Canadian Press llleven Canadians share S312.- soo in major sweepsteke winnings from saturd-avs running of the Derby at Epsom Downs. lirngland. All but two won in the Irish Hospital Sweep on the DerbY'I l'flst running. The others held tickets in the Army and NW? Veterens' English Derby sweep on the same race. Thomas .1. Harper of Woodstock, ont., won 017.500 in the Irish sweep with his ticket on aalcador, which sped to first-place glory in the turf classic. an-var. I hmltnl supervisor, used the name of his Irish terrier, Murphy, in, picking his pseudonym, "Murphy MI 17'" lln." winners of 331.000 each in the Irlsh sweep are Fernand I-:. Ber- gevin. Wesuuount. One. and wal- ter Jackson. Toronto. Both held zlgets on Prince lunch. the sec- upuu one. Bolder! of Irish-Bwlep tickets worth 015.000 each on the third- plase Dottie Ieitase: wood, a Toronto suburb; Lloyd K. Germs, Copper Cliff, ont.: R. C. A. F. cpl. J. O. R. Bellemare of Am- os, Que., stationed at Crumlin. near London, Ont... and Iemand Bsrgsron, Tor-n-to Harold Cusack, Toronto trade paper publisher, won 021.000 with an Army and Navy ticket on Prince Simon. R. Butcher of Hon- treal mods 310,000 with a ticket on Double ll-zlipss in the some sweep. rirst Dries -- 040.000-in the Army and Navy Sweep went to B. Msrtlnes of srooidrn. N. 7.. the only person in that sweep to hold a ticket on Golcsdor. The Woodstock winner's wife, Mrs. Joyce Harper, watched the race remit some in over a Osm- dian Press telstype in the alias of the Woodstock Sentinel-Bnl . where she is a proof-reader. She said she plans to continue work- ing for a white and has no im- mediate plans for using the non- ey except that "t.here'il be no he"! mendlnr risht WI!-" Her husband said he thought hewould"lilltvII1 35!”? I nuts." The I-mun own their Altr hosuIdhsuauIlldnss.i..-.. l'MI'l. G. M. Richards ,Mrs. Cyrus MacMllsn .. Old Montreal Coliseum Is Destroyed By Fire - MONTREAD May 28 - (CP) -- Qulck evacuation of roller-skating young people from the old Mont- real Coliseum prevented casual- ties tonight as the rickety wood- en structure went up in flames, Fire Department officials report- ed here. . Scores of youngsters were skat- ing in the building when the fire broke out and roared unchecked through the structure's tinder-dry wood. Fire equipment and ambulances were rushed from various parts of the city to the scene of the blaze. it was difficult to determine for sometime whether anyone had been trapped because thousands of Monfrealers took advantage of the warm summer evening to jam into the streets around the Col- iseum located on Guy Street be- low Dorcheslcr in West-Central Montreal. The fire broke out shortly be- fore 10 pm. and less than one hour later the Fire Department reported it under control. The Coliseum is 70 to 75 years old and is constructed of wood throughout. Fifty to 60 foot flames shot up into the night sky. attracting attention from downcwn Montreal and from as far west as suburban Verdun. more than two miles away. The building is used as a roller- skating rink during week-ends. After the blaze broke out, scores of youngsters carrying roller-skates over their arms gathered in the streets around to watch the blaze. 2,000 Police Seeking Slayer Of Constable MONTREAL. May 2a - (CP) - Two thousand men from three police forces. spurred by the death of an R. C. M. P. constable from a band-it's bullets, combed Mont- real Island during the week-end for the hefty holdup man who shot two men in an attempted. bank holdup Thursday. it was the greatest manhunt Oince three bandits shot and killed two city constabiu in a bank rob- bcry here nearly two years ago. The three were subsequently caught and banged for murder. Top police officers warned that their quarry this time is quick on the trigger. Mllhir man is armed and he's dangerous.” said Assistant in- spector William Fitzpstrick. "He might decide to make a fight for it if he's cornered. He's cold- bicode” and he's jumpy. He might shoot any one of you at any time, if you donit capture him first." R. C. M. P. officers joined with City and Provincial Police after the death late Friday night of Con- stable Alex Gamman, 58. Gamman was passing the Bes- ver Hall Hill branchgof the Bank of Toronto when he heard shots at noon Thursday. He dashed for the bank and received the fatal wounds from the bandit who had just shot bank manager gs. G. Bickley. The bank manager's wound was not serious. Meanwhile. police put together a description of the bandit and traced his course from the time he fled the bank empty-handed un- l mm til he returned to Montreal Island early Friday morning. At that point the trail was lost. He was believed to be a tall man weighing about 200 pounds and about 40 years of age. Police said they believe he is wearing a pair of grey-blue overalls over his pin-striped suit to cover up bloodstains from a wound which he accidentally inflicted himself in his flight from the bank New Asteroid ls Reported Jonarmi-3581180.. south Africa, 'May.30 - (Reuters) -lbisoovery of a. new asteroid. said to be the first of major significance to as- tronomers since 1936, was announ- ced Saturday night by E. 1.. John- son of Union Observatory. The asteroid - a small, fast-mov- lug body close to the earth and travelling towards the south celes- tial pole .- was first observed by Johnson May 22. The body is reported to be of the 12th .magnitude, but its size cannotbe computed until its orbit has been completely traced. PRINCE ALBERT. Sash. May 23 - (CF) - Twenty-five furm fam- ilies fled their homes over the week-end as part of a 100-mile-long: forest fire front threatened to snuff out the tiny village of Erwoud, Sask., near the Manitoba border. Incomplete reports indicate five buildings in the town were razed. THE GUARDIAN Manitoba Flood Relief Fund PATBONS: His Honour Llsut.-Governor -l. A. Bernard The Hon. Premier J. Walter Jones Their Warships, Mayors 8. Boris M cnonald, Charlottetown: Henry Wedge. Summerside: W. H. Lane. Montague: Edwin Lavle, Sourls: Charles Profltt. Alberfon; W. F. Taylor, Kenalngton; P. L. Boudreauli. Georgetown; Willard Loud. Borden. It is intended to close The Gu nesday, May.31. donations immediately in order th to Fund Headquarters, whim will come Tax purposes. Mr. and Mrs. Berton E Holm. Hampton .. Reid Underhsy, Bay Fortune .. Bell A Mathieson . Percy Hsmm .. A. W. Hyndmsn aryisn's campaign Fund on Wed- Intending subscribers should therefore send their at their names may be submitted issue the official receipt for in- Sisters of St. Martha Mt. St. Mary's Mslpeque W. 1. Ross Valley Scha Junior Red Cross 200 Rev. and Mrs. Blair Colborne, O'l..eIry ILR. 1 5.00 W. K. Roger; Agencies Ltd. 20.00 10.00 10.00 Geo. Mason Charles Peters. S'Side 5.00 Sydney Taylor and Son ME 5 M"- C- 3- -79"? W Iloe 0.00 Summerlide .. .. 500 Min 1Angellna Blanchard . Marl. & Mrl.RJo:n A. MacDonald A Fr end .. . allow ca 5.00 Wkli. Mcrsrlane. A son B. Jezkiga ampton . ” ,, o. . l Luccg Maud Iigogtgomery ad:-s. King ll-I. DeBlola ap er. . . - . . o. . ar a .. ..r Pigegts of St. Dunstan: um Miss Lillian "McKenzie 0 eg ......a..... . June 1' it . Prov. Seen. Sta ........... 37.00 A, Giant. . 300 Prov. San. Patients ......a.... 11.18 L.” pm-M, Log... (loo. 5. ltyan 3.00 cm” Coy. ,, 5,00 :35 3:” sI0l(l:''il:gl''.I moo Arthur Jackson .. 13-00 "'- "Ml '0 I II. I). Miller .00 Summsrslde 300 gm” pom. son an n 3--Ir-to M a. cull... u..3m.... , p 0 - I mrneralde. ll. ll. 2 ........ .. ..t JH,;I'l;if'l.l'l;(.m-. "M 150 lI'llVI'Il Waighg. Victoria ...... - - ' ' any on .. . HI""V"" 7'?” ltou Valley w. 1. son A """"' Junior Sodsllty Tignlah x:'-.:;':;:' H”:;,:rd Mn 3' Convent .. .... .. 2.00 ' I J. D. McGl . M.D. 500 "I'M" fun" Kl" 5'00 Mrs. H. I-lllotlvaprdr. Milto - 300 K 1'' """''' Kc T T mm York Senior Dept We 3- 3”" S"'""”"' - ml Junior Red on... ......,..,. 1.oo " l;P,'.L,,n'""d'e'l:l:f.,gd gm Mrs. Boswell Jenkins. 0 , , ,f,;m Mcxmt. Corner woo '.;". I I In .a' blend 1 gt"? iproduction was about 35 per cent Home Ahd Farm Buildings Are Destroyed A four inonths-old child. a son of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Grant. Mar- tinvale, died as result of a fire which destroyed the home and all outbuildings Saturday afternoon. The child was resting in the kit- chen where the fire broke out. ap- parently from an overheated stove. The mother had Just left the house to do some work oumde. Looking back she saw flames coming from the kitchen. Attempting a rescue she was driven back by smoke and flames. A neighbour, Elmer Grant. on hearing screams raced across sev- eral fields to the scene of the fire and after several attempts suc- ceeded in bringing out the then lifeless body of the child. At the time of the fire the fa- ther was away fencing and was unaware of the tragedy. The fire occurred about four o'clock. The two-storey house. a barn and two outbuildings were de- stroyed. it represented 12 years work of Mr. and Mrs. Grant in as- tablishing a home in the district. There are three other children in the family, two girls and a boy. It was not known if the buildings were insured. Martim-ale is about north of Montague. 12 miles Annual l.0.lI.I. Convention Opens MONTREAL. May 28 - (CP) - Viscount Alexander. Canada's Gov- emor-General. Saturday night told hundreds of members of the Ini- perlal Order Daughters of the Em- pire that the body had "stood steady as a rock in the rushing stream of events in the last 50 years." Lord Alexander was chief speak- er as the -!:iO.'D.I:. opened I five- day convention here which marks the orderls golden Jubilee. Lady Alexander. honorary pres- ident of the organization, also ad- dressed the 1.000 delegates from all parts of Canada. other speak- ers included: Prime Minister St. Laurent. who attended with Mrs. St. Laurent: hationsl president Mrs, F. P. Mcouniy of Toronto: Mrs. Paul Kuhring of Montreal. I.o.D.E. regent; Mrs. A.T. Stike- man. president of the Provincial Chapter of Quebec. and Rev. John. Dixlon. Anglican Bishop of Mont- rea white-clad delegates carrlcd hundreds of Union Jacks as they marched in colorful parade to the opening meeting. A religious sen. ice highlighted the convention Sunday and business sessions were to get under way tomorrow. Predict Arrests In .Spy Probe LONDON, lfuy 28-(CPW-Two London newspapers predicted to. day that more persons. including a Canadian and some Americans, will be arrested in the atoml: spy probe. There was no official con- firmation of the reports. INCREASED PRODUCTION By I949. Britain's agricultural higher than the pre-war level. Signs Britain ,Into Peacetime Boom By Alan Harvey LONDON. May 28 - (CF: -AL most without anybody noticing it. Britain has stopped from post-war austerity into a peacetime boom. The signs are two-fold. They range from cautious Government acknowledgment that "our dollar position is improving" to glow- -ing newspaper reports of indus- trial progress on the home front. Along with these bright augur- -ies of boom times. personal frec- doms are growing. This Whit- sunday week-end. for the first time in 10 years. a motorist can buy as much gasoline as he wants. milk is off the ration. eggs are abundant and the chafing "points" system is Just a memory. Two popular newspapers said it in headlines this week. The Weekly Recorder. which avows its main aim is to defeat the Labor Government. proclaim- ed that Britain will slugger the world. The Recorder argued in effect that things are better because the present political stalemate has on- ablcd business to escape from the steel corset of socialism. Lord Beavcrbrook's Daily Ex- press. sn up-ard-at-'em newspaper also unfriendly to socialism. said business is boozning. . . "the biggest boom in lriteufs p should give improved performance. Fires In Ont. Wins Navy League National Award Roger Russell Clark. St. Peter's Road. P. W. C. student. whose us- say on "Our Canadian NEW W05 the grand prize for Canada. consist- lng of at Diamond Medal. in I competition sponsored by the NEW League of Canada. U. S. To Test New Rocket Plane By Max Boyd WASHINGTON. May 28 -(AP) - The. United States Air Force says it will begin flight tests early next year of a tiny rocket plane designed to hit a top speed of 1.700 miles an hour. The plane is the X-IA. s' suc- cessor to the faster-than-sound X-l. Like its forerunner. it is I product of the Bell Aircraft Corp- oration of Niagara Falls. N. Y. The X-I itself was designed to have a top speed. of 1.700 miles an hour. But design problems delay- ed completion of the turbine- driven fuel pump that was sup- posed to force alcohol and liquid oxygen into its engine. Instead pressure was used to drive fuel into the rocket motors. How fast the X-I went with this substitute fuel delivery system never has been disclosed official- ly. Prior to flight tests. its top an hour at an altitude of more than 11 miles. During the tests. which were completed early this month at Muroc, Calif., the Air Force an- nounced the plane had travelled faster than sound repeatedly. Sound travels 763 miles an hour at sea level and slightly less than that at higher altitudes. Now the Air Force says the X-IA will be equipped with a fur- binc-driven fuel pump which With such a fuel pump. the little research plane is designed to fly at a top speed of 1.700 miles an hour 15 miles above the earth. Slipping an lindustrisl history has developed." lwrote financial editor Frederick of this pump, nitrogen gas under ' speed was estimated at 1.000 miles , Rain Quenches Forest And Que.; N. B. Bans Woods Travel I By The Canadian Press i Week-end rain put out m ' forest fires in Quebec and Omar: but more than 000 weary firm fighters in New Bl”lflS'vVlCl( Sum day faced new threats in varioul parts of the Province. other flref were burning around Halifax and on Nova scouals Cape Breton Island. I-Ienri Kiefer. chief Forest Fird Protection Service officer in Que- bec, said Sunday that nearly all fires burning in the northwest section of the Province had been doused by rain, As a result, a ban on forest travel may be lifted to- day in Abitani, Temiscamingue. Pontiac and Enuyn-Norada Count- ties. A fierce blaze broke out Satur- sday at Larouche, near Chicoutimiy but it was brought under control. Rain Saturday quenche a grass- land and slash fire near Kirkland Lake which had extended over- 4,000 acres and had crept to with- in two miles of Kirkland Lake's limits. l Improvement In N. 3. Although there was no rain during the week-end. some im- provement was reported by the New Brunswick Forest Service. Hazard continued high, however. and forest travel was banned throughout the Province. Prev- iously, woodlands had been clos- ed ln seven counties. Most serious situation was in the Allardville area of Gloucester County and a new fire front near Newcastle Bridge in Sun-bur! The old Allardville fire was worse on the south side of the Tabusintsc River. several other outbreaks. new and old, were under control or extinguished. The Newcastle Bridae fife Ill"-' lad about 3 P. M.. Sunday and soon covered on area more than three miles long and one mile deep. (Continued "on pain 13 001- 4) new Juan: A News WORTH av -(HE AMOUNT or meuaancr. as canmas 9 .3 roaomo, May 2s.(c1:)-Min and max temps, Victoria 44 56: Edmonton so 65; Realm 4'1 76: Winnipeg 50 75: Toronto 50 591 Ottawa 52 -; Montreal 62 721 Saint John - 70; Moncton 40 81. Halifax 47 '79: Charlottetown 41 in; Sydney 47 '12; Yarmoulh 4.1 81; St. John's 40 -- nsuhax, May as-(Cr)-or flcial forecasts issued by the Dem- inion Public Wcather Office at Halifax. Synopsis: It was sunny and very warm again Sunday in the Maritim During the evening some ciou mppeared over the western part of the district but the weather was still clear in the eastern sections Variable cloudiness was expected lEllis. "Britons accustomed to idragging their coat-tails in aus- terity for so many years are hardly conscious of the vast pros- perity in' which they are sharing." What are the reasons for the new optimism? What has caused the change in the country which six months ago was warned it was on the brink of bankruptcy? The Liberal Manchester Guardian of- tribuies the transformation to the high level of business activity in the United States. which it says is changing the "economic outlook of the world." This recognized prosperity .st home depends on external factors. A year ago. things Hooked briglft in Britain. but last September brought devaluation of the pound from 84.06 to 82.80 in United States funds. Serious critics consider the country is as susceptible as ever. They echo the warning last March by John Kennedy. head of the Economic Co-Operation Adminis- tration mission to Britain. "Necessary corrective menu cu complementary to devaluation must be accomplished or else the during the night but Monday fins weather will again be likely. Regional forecasts valid midnight Monday: Prince Edward Island-Monday sunny and very warm. Light winds. Low and high Monday at Charlottetown 4'! and '13, untl High tide today at 8.00 A M and 9.20 P. M. ' 4.32 A. M. and 980 Sun rises at It 7.40 P. M. Sunlrnersids tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. IOIDEN - TOEMENTINI FERIIY SERVICE WEEK DAYS have Borden at 0.10 a. II-. 1.00 p. In. and (.30 II. In. and Cape Tif- mentlns pier at 10.85 s. m.. 2.00 p. u.. 1.80 p. m. SUNDAY SERVICE Lv. Borden Lv. Cape Tormentirle I.l0 A.M. 10.35 A.M. M0 P.M. s.ofi P.M. 0.45 P.M. L00 P.M. All times Ire Atlantis standard WOOD ISLANDS - CAIIIBOU nsxu FERRY nave Wood Islands British economy may proceed per- iodically from crisis to expedient. and then beck to crisis.” II A.M.: I P.M.: 8 EM. Leave Caribou I A.M.: p earn nus. 1rsa.;Ius..