MAXIMS E ora . ivisni: MAN .1-am MITOQ. Tiierda iaany a mistake asule on By Carrion Charlottetown. lurameraida 515.00 per annum. Elsewhere in P.E.I. 80.00. Other Provinces and U.B.A. 12.00 per annum. Covers Prince Edward Island -Like the Devi CHARLOTTETOWN: CANADA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 12. 1954 Advice is always uiiimng when most wanted. MAXIMI I OFA M E R E MAN'S 12 PAGES The Guardian, Five Cents Morning Dally Founded i887. NORTHEASTERN U. S. HAS WORST STORM IN FIVE YEARS Britain Grounds Bulk 0i Work Still Ahead As Commons Resumes Toda OTPAWA. (CPI -The Commons reassemiblea today, after a 26-day holiday rece.ss, with the bulk of the session's work still ahead, Debate on the government's new housing legislation heads agenda. together with a motion for establishment of a joint Commons- Senate c0mm.lt.tee to study how capital and corporal punishment and lotteries should be handled under the Criminal Code. The Senate will meet Tuesday. Jan. 19, Parliament passed several im- portant bills during a five-week sit- ting before the Christmas recess started Dec. 16. Among them were measurers to give textile manufac- turers and other industries protec- tion against seasonal price cuts in imported goods. to bring interprou vincial and international pipelines Jurisdiction and to change the under the federal transport board's name of the resources and devel- opment department to the northcrn affairs and national resources cle- partmerit There is a possibility the present session will and early in June Willi a break for the Easter recess ADt'll l4-36. That leaves approximately 2.0 weeks for Parliament to deal with the budget and the remainder of the government's list of legislation for the session. Finance Minister Abbott is ex- pected to present estimates of pro- posed expenditure early in Febru- ary after his return from the cur- col. 4) Inquest In Que. Slaying Tuesday ROBERVAL. Que.. (CF)-Provim cial police said today a coroner's inquest into the brutal slaying of a. mother and her tzwo-your-old daughter during the week-end will be held Tuesday night at Mistas- alni. Que. Dr. L. Poisson of Normandin. Que. district coroner, will conduct the inquest. Mistassini is about 50 miles north of this Lake st. John district town in northeastern Que- bee. (Continued on page the '- W. A. Stewart, 39. Canadian Press bureau chief at Montreal. will travel with Prime Minister St. Laurent to report for Canadian newspapers the prime minister's journey to Asia in February and March. Stewart. bilingual native of ftiviere du Loup and veteran of 20 years with OP, was Far East correspondent for the news-gatlh c-ring co-oerative 1945-41 after serving as war correslpondent in Italy and Northwest Europe. (OP Photo) U. K. Electricians Begin Strike LONDON. (Reuters)-The Com- munist-led Electriclal Trades Un- ion launched its threatened "guer- rilla strikes" against employers Mouriny but kept silent on the exteiit of the stoppages. Union chiefs announced 2,000 electricians on contract work at strategic industrial construc- tion sites through Britain would strike during the week to enforce the union's pay increase clenmnds. But details of their program have been kept secret and they have not commented on the success of Man- .dny's stoppages. The union has labout 203,000 members. Fine Paper Industry Combines Trial Begins TORONTO. (OP)-The trial of '21 coirpoi-utiona and two persons on combines charges in the fine paper industry started Monday. l,mvycrs'l said it may last two months, At the opening, Nomian 1.. Mat- hews. special crown prosecutor. said he believes many documents and files were deliberately destroy- ed in an effort to reduce or elim- inate the possibility of prosecut- ion. He said some exhibits contain such phrases as "Destroy letter re- garding price." "We have been par- ticularly careful not to give any incriminating evidence." "Omit any reference indicating arrangement on prices." "Files should be clean- ed up at. once.” and "Please destroy this letter." The crown plans to present at least 3,300 exhibits. The seven fine papers mills and 20 wholesale merchants are charg- ed with conmlrlng to fix itiael Coming Events "Bingo and Dance in Vernon River Hall, Tuesday, January 13111- ”5hur-Gain Amateur Cavalcade. Fortune Hall. Wednesday, January 13th. I p. m. "The annual meeting of Caven- dish United Church (Cavendish Church) Jan. 13. 2.30 pm. "Strathslbyn District L.0.l.. annual meeting Bunyan Ladle. hole Valley, Jan. 12 at 2 p.m. if not fine Thursday. "Double header at North River Rink Tuesday. Jen. 12. North River va Wlnaloa at 7.30 sharp. Hamp- ahbo ve Dunataffnago at 8.46 State after. . "looking Baby Chicks now. for delivery about February 10th. will be setting eggs to orders for early hatches, book now if or-derlnd in February. Dillon and spiliett. "Watch for annouiioarient from yott one stop Farm 80991! E00"- Bborily now its news for you from Kenaingwn reed service us. Let rs do yrur grinding and mixini v all: you wait. FAT. .-.j.. .....m tdurlng the period from 1933 to Oct. Ill. 1052, at the manufacturing and iwholesalc level. Becaiise they were cliarged under an old section, since revised to al- low for unlimltedliiies and ii max- lnium of two years in jail, Mr. Mathews said the mriximum lines in the cnse. if convictions are reg- istered, will be 34.000 for individ- uals and 310.000 for roi-porntiors The seven mills charged are the Alliance Paper Mills. Mcrriton. Om., l-lowurd Smith Paper Mills Ltd. Canada Paper Conipanv. and Rolland Paper Company Ltd. all of Montreal, the E. B. Eddy Coin- paur. Hull. Quc.. and the Don Val- lcy Paper Company Ltd, and Prov- inciul Paper l..td.. both of Toronto. The srven mills charged, Mr. Mathews said. produced more than 05 per cent of the fine paiper man- ufaciurcd in Canada during i948- hl. In 1951 the value of the 253,081 tons produced was t63.000.000. ST. THOMAS. Ont. (CPi-Can- ads will accept about 168,000 im- migrants in 1954. including the 1,0o0,000i.h post-war immigrant. Citizenship Minister Harris said Monday, night. The government believes there are still many opportunities for newcomers and plans to take in ”about the same number" as last year's 168.000, he said. There was evidence that Can- ada could have placed "at least another 20,000" during 1954. Mr. Harris said in a speech prepared for delivery at a church meeting here. By the end of 1958. Canada has taken more than 958.000.il05l'W"T immigrants. "We are looking forward in the 1.000.0(Iith Immigrant some time In the next few months. a post- war record equalled only by that of the U.S.A." British immigrants. 295411). had been the single racial group. There been l15.000 Germans. Netherlanderl. 70,000 from totalling largest had 92000 the All Comet " Jet Airlinersliealh lliii Queen Elizabeth Opens New Zealand Parliament Famous Itlanes Will Undergo Rigid Inspection By PHIL CLARKE LONDON, (AP) - Britain Mon- day night grounded all her world- famed Comet jet airliners for a searching inspection, after the third fatal Comet crash in 10 months. Thirty-live-persons were killed in Sunday's crash off Elba. High- ranking British airline and civil aviation officials pushed a probe into the tragedy. The grounding, temporarily sus- pending British Comet services be- tween London, south Africa, and the Far East at midnight. was ordered by the government-owned British overseas Airways Corpora- tion, BOAC said it had taken its 'seven four - jet, 500-mile-an-houn l plus Comets out of service, for "a minute and unhurried technical examination.” It called the action "a measure of prudence." Canada. France Informed BOAC said the ministry of trans- port and civil aviation concurred in the decision. Canada and France were informed of the action so they could make their own decisions re- garding their Comets. Two French airlines, the govern- ment - subsidized Air France and the DFlV3t-ely-owned Aero Mariti-me Transport Company. also an. nounced they were grounding their British-made Comets for the time being. Three Comets are operated by Air France, three by the French Union Acro Maritime Transport Co.. and two by the Royal Canin- diaii Air Force. The RCAF said its Comets will remain in opera- tion, for the time being at least. Three BOAC Comets were aboard: at Singapore. Johannes- burg, and Tokyo. The company salt. they would be flown back to Lon- don without paying passengers BOAC. is still serving its Comet lines with conventional propeller planes. Fire Destroys" Church Al Si. Urbain. Que. SHERROOK-E. Que. (CP)-Fire early today caused an cstiniated 520.000 damage to the residence of the Roman Catholic Teaching Or- der of the Holy Cross Brothers at nearby St. Joseph de Wate-(rvlllr, forcing the brothers out into 2.5- helow-zero weather. The residence is located but a short dlisiflllcr from an niphannge. The oi-pliniiage. however, was not tlireatrncd. It was believed the fire started from a candle, Candles were used when electric power failed, The fire is believed caused by an over-heated furnace. Vounteers from nearby villages came to help local residents, 350 of whom were left homeless in the 1952 fire uhich caused damage es- timated at 31,500,000. At that time 40 homes were de- stroyed and flames had swept down a street and stopped at the church. RICH TIMBER Dense forests with many valu- able types of wood cover the Fiji jislands in the South Pacific. On.e-Millionth Immigrant Since War Expected S0231- United States and 3&.00O of other racial groups. The late Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King, announcing Canada's immigration policy. had said im- migration "should not and would not alter the fundamental char- acter of our people." "Mr. King, I believe. meant two things by that phrase: that the racial background of our people would be maintained within reas- onable hnlance and. because he was not a Presbyterian for noth- ing, he also meant that we would avoid an influx of persons whose viewpoint differed substantially from that of the average. respect- able. God-fearing Canadian." The government had always felt the greater portion of immigrant: should come from the United Kingdom. "At. the same time. one cannot disregard the advantages of hav- ing a mixed population and of adding to those other national group: already here who have demonstrated their ability to adapt themselves to Canadian Oalldl l.lOI'il. WELLINGTON, N. Z., (Reuters) -The Queen. wearing a rich robe of state specially flown here from England, today will become the first reigning monarch ever to open a session of the New Zea- land Parliament. From a richly carved and em- broidered throne made by New Zealand craftsmen, she will read the speech from the throne-an outline of government policy us- ually read by the gov(rnor-gener- al as the Queen's representative. It is prepared by cabinet minis- ters. To her left on the dies. and 'slightly behind her, will be the Duke of Edinburgh in a similar throne. Monday night the Queen Duke toured the Ford works at Petone, just Wellington. Highlight of the royal tour Mon- day was the Queen's speech at a state luncheon in the blue-and- white hall of Parliament House. She proclaimed her faith in the Commonwealth as a great force for good in the present arduous times and said the warmth of the New Zealand welcome would be a continuing source of inspiration to her. and assembly north of Over Much Unemployment Insurance Claims Show Increase OTTAWA. (CP) - Unenployment insurance payments rose to 510,- 172,035 last: November, compared with s'l,603.66'l in October and 56.- 435.444 in November, 1952. The amount paid in November covered a. total of 3,337,519 days for which compensation was claim- ed. the Dominion Bureau of Sta- tistics reported Monday. This was an increase from 2,506,254 in the preceding month and 2,158,920 in November, 1952. A total of 138,851 initial and re- new-al claims for unemployment in- surance benefits were filed in of- fices across Canada compared with 123,771 in October and 123,418 for the same month last year. All provinces figured in the claims increase. compared with last year. Totals by province for November with 1952 figures in brackets: Newfoundland. 4,604 (2,- 088); Prince Edward Island, 821 (569); Nova Scotia. 8.253 (6,785): New Brunswick. 8.410 (6.202); Que- bec, 58.499 (37,328): Ontario, 83,179 (40,097): Manitoba. 7.795 (5.685); Saskatchewan. 3.934 (2.347); A1- berta. 9.827 (4,700i; British Colum- bio. 23,469 (17,019). RCAF To Keep Two Comet leis ' In Operation OTTAWA. (OP) - The RCAP, first air force in the world to fly jet traiuiportii. said Monday night its two British-built Comets will re- main in operation, for the time be- ing at least. The RCAF said it has received notification from British Overseas Airways Co 1'3-ration that BOAC is grounding its passeiiger-carrying Comets until an investigation is carried out into the cause of Sun- dayls Comet crush off Italy. The air force said the notific- ation conialiied no information in- dicaiing that coiitinued operation of its two Comets is unsafe. The BOAC message supplied no hint on cause of the crash and until it received such information. the RCA? said, there is no reason to ground the Comets here. The RCAF added that it cer- tainly would not continue to oper- ate its Comets if there was the slightest hint they are unsafe. Montreal Man Heads Electronics Defence Program OTTAWA, (C?) A. Brewer Hunt. prominent Montreal elec- trical engineer. will head Canada's 8l00.000.000-a-year electronics da- fence program. Production Minister Howe today announced appointment of the new 81-a-year man. on loan from the Northern Eieotrlc Co. Ltd, where he is general manager of the com- munloations equipment division. Mr. Hunt. a bland, soft-spoken. 51-year-old electronics expert, suc- ceeds W. R. McLi(chlan of Toronto who recently was appointed bout of A. V. Roe'a gas turbine divis- ion at Melton. 0i-it. The new electronics chief. who also is president of the Radio Television Manufacturers Associa- tion. wlll rule over a top-oeoret Cold Wave Continues Of Canada By THE CANADIAN PRES Most of Canada was held in the zero grasp of mid-winter Monday. Heavy snows fell in southern Ori- tario, 0V91'lllZht lows i.n most Canadian cities were expected to be the low- eat of the season. There was no end to the polar air in sight. Ontario communities within 15 miles of the Great Lakes prepared for a blizzard Monday night. Six to eight inches of fresh snow was Pxbected to be on the ground by morning. Inland areas were to get one to three inches. Some temperatures expected 1.. cross Canada Monday night: Sas- katoon and Regina 10 below Win- nloez 30 below. Fort William, or. town Montreal and Quebec City 15 below, Toronto zero. Coast Cold The west coast. balmiest spot in Canada Sunday with highs up to 43 degrees. was also to get colder, A low of 25 was forecast for vm- NUVEF. considerably below the city's average January night gem- pcmture. Weather officials, however. pre- dicted that three cities, which Sun. day night got lower temperatures than any night in the last two years. would wann up. The low at Ottawa would be 15 below com- pred with in helow, at Toronto zero compared with two below. and at saint John, N. 13.. a big warm-up-15 above compared with six below, Weathermen said there was little snow in sight Monday night for Canada outside of southern On- tario. The Hamilton area got almost a foot of snow in it local storm dur- . as the city threw its full 8,000-man i sanitation force into snow removal. Ileporied To Be At l.easil3 II" New Nliw YORK, (AP) - A raging: swonstorm, the worst in five years, buried the ..northeastem United states Monday and high winds Farm, By Ovid A. Mutln 3 wAsl-ILNGTON, (AP) - Presi-i idcni. Eisenhower proposed Mondavl piled up road-blocking drifts. to build a new it. S. farm program' Freezing rain and sleet moved in On flexible Price Suiiporls. aiming) behind. at a goal of agrioul(u.ral equaliiyi with the rest of the economy and at minimum of controls. In a special message to Congress. outlining plans for future govern- Smrm from New England to Maryg , ment aid to farmers, the president land, Many mppled Wm. hurt ab , said )')l'FS('ilt fli'flg1':llllS-l),V creat- mcks H they bucked the snow - mg surpluses and prlciiig crops out atom, or mied to shovel it. Auwiof markets-are "hurtful" to those Temperatures hit new low: for! the winter-2'! below zero in Maine. for instance. ' At least 33 persons died in the. aocldenm and aleddmg mishaps whom they are intended to help. also took lives . The El-””h0w” program M19”. The storm, the weather bureau hme that is new and " proposal to keep much that already is in operation. , in C.iii;zrs-as it got a somewhat, mixed rPL'el:iltm. Senator George Aiken (Rep. Vt.r, chairman of the Senate. agriculture committee, said. said. will continue into today. The great arterial highways ihatl, snake along the coast from Newt England south lay lonesome ll)-. neath a restless sea of driftingi mo” Plan” we” deliayed 0' it "forms an excellent basis tot mguzdeg 1 d t. 1 . ,lWll'k ml! the soundest farm pro-, .c 00 cose ig it in man; ,..,..,m W, mm. had,-. 1 areas. I y Fight Expected , But there is bound to be A fight; over the program in the House of Representatives and Represent- ative Clifford Hope (Rep. Kan.i.l cliairman of the House 9lgl'lCl.lliUl'lll, committee, was noiicommillal. . The major change proposed by; up Etiscnhower relates to government Phuadeipma was hardest hit or iiirziieer.-”Li.a..'.3”rhi35y'.?ie'35i".l"fdii"5i the major cities with some lolvhigh lewd by Congresg the prlgshl i,i;(;l,i;:s gilt, scr::i))v':cl;1e,;i,;Ilises:l,)i:iiedseEi,',e:t;1dent would give the S."Cl'ei.al'y oil many offices and factories limped Plants Closed At Farmiingdale and Port Wasli- ington, N.Y., Republic Aviation, Corp. shut down, affecting 39,000- employeas. General Motors Corp: shut li.s Linden, N. J., plant when- faw of the 2.000 employees showed '.Airman Killed? In Auto Accident OTTAWA, (GP)-Flt. Lid. Ken-l ncth Latta. killed Sunday in an. auto accident near Grenoble,i F . . n 1' N t -l 'l'he 15 bodies recovered from theiml::,?l: ai;0'lYd)rcenh::ldqYl:ll1'-A sea. Sunday were taken from (haters Sam Mm,,,a.. chapel at Cerbone ceemiery on! A ,.,.pm.t from G',.(,nob1,. mid Lhmt Elba to the Church of Sen Gm-,i.ar.ta, 24. a jet pilot stationed art w,'P,”' . .Gros Tcnquin. France, with thel 19” W” eVIdF”9 that "19 391R. C. A. F. 421 Squadron. was killedi Vasseniers and, 51X,CI'9W member-Si when a car in which he was riding: died when the, let airliner exploded crashed 700 feet down a mountaint M5 E 3”” "n””de- ravine, The driver Lieut. Renci , Dr. Delfino Bellinda, chief ined-Ivan,” of the French Mr porch, ical officer of Elba, said after ex,-, also was killed, i amining the bodies that their, F”, Lt, Lam, Joined me R. C, deaths were from concussion and A, F, m 1951 and named ” 'lPP”9"”Y "Wk P1859 WW9 Wicianve.-imim. Alta, and Chatham, torn plane plunged into the sea. N, B along with skeleton work forces, New York took on a strange small-lawn look as the storm: dumped 8.8 inches on the city in. the first 24 hours-the worst sincoi the l5-inch fall of 1949. Then mint and sleet punched -the city anew. k Gaobage piokups were forgotten liovtt To Redeem Balance of Second Victory Loan Bonds Fire Damages Catholic Residence 31'. URBAIN, Que, (OP)-Piro Monday detroyed the Roman Catholic church of this Charis-voii: in: the day Monday. county village. swept by a disast- rous blaze in the spring of 1952. OTTAWA, (OPl - Justice Min- Adjudicator By IAN M. BALL Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO, (C?)-Graham suter. the 34-year-old British actor and lecturer who has just arrived in Canada to start on tun 8,000-mile, three - month assignment as atl- judicator for the 1954 Dominion Drama. Fusllvnl, says he has been told to expect an "unusually high standard" in Canadian amateur tlleartte. And he feels the explanation may lie in the dearth of professional companies across Canada. "Many talented people who might ordinar- ily make their way into the pro- fessional theatre have no altar- natlve but to stay in amateur groups", he said at a prms con- ference here Monday. Mr. suter will travel by plane and train across Canada judging regional drama festivals. The win- ning groups Each region will take part in the Dominion festival, scheduled for the week of May 10 in Hamilton. Seeks Imagination s "No actor will get many marks from me if he doesn't bring his imagination onto the stage." he said. "Many nmltcura are content just to plod along and give an ac- curate performance of a play. but that is not good enoug ." He will be making allowances for the varying conditions under which amateur groups acres the country have been assembled and do their stage work. Already he has started to obtain from regional festival di- rectors rleioillr of the background of the player! in competing ama- teur groups. , He is finding out whether the actors and actreuee are drawn from lndust :.l or farming arau a-nd hopes to supplement this in- program that has become the moat formation by talks with regional intricate segment of the current directors when he arrives in vari- dofenco build-up Olll eitiel Expects High Standard ister Garsnn, acting finance min- ister, Monday announced that the government will redeem for 5474.- 355,489 the outstanding balance of three per cent second victory loan bonds. The bonds will be paid off March 1 out of the government's cash re- sources which are at present air a high lcvel due to the record; sale nl eighth series of Canadai savings lxmds. I The announcement also said that I the goveriinientts cash resources will be augmented Feb. 1 when Canadian National Railways repays the gorcrnincnt .-bout. lul50.000,000 of ienipmary advances made it for capital purposes during the last two years. in turn. the ONE is obtaining its funds from n s2oo.ooo.ooo loan at 3 3-4 D('.l' cent amiounced Monday in Montreal by Donald Gordon. C NR president. The remainder of this loan .s50.000,000-will be used to repay it CNR five per cent bond issue maturing Feb. l. Of Drama . "If a set of farmers do a play. not accurately. but with a good deal of imagination, then the enm- pany will certainly score," he ari- ded. "I'm here neither to mot talent or to down nnyone." Mr, Buter was born in Barry in Boutfn Wales and has a 'cnnnectlnii with Canada-his paternal grand- father was bnrii in Toronto. He saw wartime service in Burma and India, serving with the Royal Eng- ineers and later the Royal signals. After the war he wnrked in re.- pertory groups. including the cel- ebrated Liverpool Repertory Thea- tre. He has played many character roles in films and on television, and has just recently concluded a tour of "Call Me Madam." Former British Cabinet Minister Dies In London. l a. . . . .mm...:.. became solicitor-general. He was: then sir John Simon. 5 In 1915 he was appointed homel secretary but resign-d the follow-, in; year because. he disagreed vrithi the government's policy of com! scription. LONDON, (OP)-Viscount Simon, leading British jurist and cabinet minister in two world wars, cited today. He was 80. Simon was for- merly foreign secretary and chan- cellor of the oxchequer. Lord Simon had been ill in a London hoqaital since Christmas, but early today his condition and- denly turned critical. Lord Simon. one of the greatest legal minds of his time. gave up a 3110.000-a-year practice as a lawyer 40 years ago for the greater tests of stat:-manship, and played a central part in many historical events. He served under five prime ministers, and was in the thick of affairs during the abdication of the Duke of Windsor, during the Munloh pact in i938 and in the dif- ficult transition! between peace and war, His first ministerial post came in loll-five years after entering Perliarnmt as a Liberal-when he the rise of Hitler, the increased power of Mussolini. and the begin- ning of Japan's agresslon in China. For the next two years he was home sncrr-taipv again, mid then took nvcr thr job of chancellor of the excliequer. Simon was still at the helm of Britain's financial affnlril when the second World War broke out, He resigned early in 1940. He was leading counsel for New- foundland In the Labrador bound- ary rr-fcrr-ncc.s in l9?6. This catap- !i.-lied the hmindary between Qw- bec and Labrador. icent of parity, depending ,tempt to hold domestic Lof direct payments from He was l0rf'lill'l :cClPl.a1l',V' lromy l93l until 1935---the years that saw! Eisenhower Suggests Flexible Price Supports FVOEEIL i'a.glil-C.lllAt.t-l.ll'e diacretronary autlioiwiy to raise and lower them As a cushirrn against an abrupt decline in prices. the president would set aside (he called it "free7;e") up to S2,500,00tl,000 worth of surplus agricultural producls now held by the government. Thll would be barred from regular coni- mercial channels and reserved for special uses such as disaster rehcf. Under the flexible system price props for such crops as mttviri, wheat, corn. rice. and pcanuid would vary between '75 and 90 per on the size of supplies. Corn will remain at 90 per cent. Parity is a standard for measur- ing iann prices, declared by law to be fair to the farmer in relati.-iii. to basic prices he pays. The flexible system has not. been allowed to operate because of con- gressional action cxiendinz man- dntnry. 90 per-cr-nt-of-parity sun- poris for the major crops lhrougil 1954. Gradual Adjustment Under the flexible system, price guarantees would be higher when supplies are normal or short, to maintain or encourage greater pro- duction, and lower in times of sur- pluses to encourage consumpiloii and to discourage over-production. But the "key element" ofthe ad- ministrations new program. the president said, would be a "gr:id- ual adjustment" to ll6M' coiidiiioizs. in other words. he said. thcre will be no abrupt reductions in price guarantees. The sole major change in pres- ent programs. aside from the pro- pr-used shift to flexible supports, re- lates to wool. Ilnde-r the proposed new pro- gram. the government. would per- mit prices of domestically prod- uced wool to seek their level in the market in competition with im- ported wool. No longer would it at- prccs at the 90 per cent parity level. If at the end of the year priccii of domestic wool averaged lead than 90 per cent of parity. the gov- ernment would make up the dif- ference to producers in the form cuetoml receipts collected in imported wools A no(.L.mc. 510 I GATHER5 Ho Moss bur. i-r. , G.l!.1'si'A Nice..- 9 :.;r,v.,. . ,. TORONTO. (CPI-Minimum and maximum temperatures. Min. Mun. Dawson 1 - Vancouver 23 17. Victoria 34 42 Efilllniildll 114 28 Calgary 12 25 Regina lzb '.Ib Winnipeg ltib 15b Toronto 0 i0 Ottawa 18h 3b Montreal lfib 2h Qucbcc . 22b 0 Saint John . Gt) Mniictnn 5b 1'? Halifax 14 21 Charlottetown it 18 Sydney 10 170 Ynrm-outh 1'1 21 St. John's 9 15 HA LIFAX. (CP)-The Dominion Public Weather Office here 533x" . an intensifying storm ccnirwi near Cape Hatteras is moving northeast. The centre will be im- ntv-ii south of Yarmouth this Hilfi- noon and precipitation will change to rain along the Nova Scotia south coast. Winds will gradually increase and snow will spread northward as for as the Chip" peninsula. Regional forecasts" Prince ldrlward Island and New lnrunswlclc: Snow; milder; north- ,o-ast winds 20. Low-high at Char- -lottetown and Moncton is and 23. I-irerlerlr-inn 10 and 20. Saint John 15 and Ill. Etlmundainn I0 he-ion and I5 nbm-e. rnmplwlllmr flu- llwlow and ill about. i l-lay of l-hind)" Norther-i iwinrls ?5 increasing hv evening to nnrlhc.-(st gain: and snow. with yvisihility one mile; temperature: in the 2024. High tide today at ChRl'IOill'lnlWfl yai 352 a. m and 402 p. in. Sun rises today at 7.50 a. m. and sets at 0.53 p. m.