Maxims of J More Man After dinner slt 18 PAGE awhile: alter supper walk a mile. Ships In Trouble All Along NEW YORK. (AP)-Ships were in trouble all along the Atlantic coast Tuesday as gales tossed the seas into mountainous waves. Two tankers north of Puerto rum sought help after explosions. in one of which two men were badly burned. - A iii! lowing a barge was in ur- mus trouble off the New Jersey coast, with three men aboard the linrirc. The coast guard also continued a search over stormy seas from vloriria to Maine for s freighter missing since Saturday. The explosions occurred aboard 'llF Norwegian tankers Fensal and liiacnnda, and fires broke out on imih ships. The Fcnsal was some 200 mllcs north of San Juan. Puerto Rico at the time. No one was re- porierl hurt in the explosion. The latest report from the tanker said she had brought the fire under Coasi control and had temporarily re- paired her engines. TWO HURT ON BRACONDA The Bracondn, about 100 miles northwest of the Fensal. reported two men were badly burned in Monday night's explosion. Reports on the tug Ann Moran and her tow. a barge loaded with high-test gasoline, were that the tug was holding her own off Barne- gat lightship. Winds that had tossed up waves of 20 to 25 feet were slackening off slightly. but the coast guard said still worse weather might be in store. Search continued for the South- ern Districts, a sulphur-laden freighter overdue since Saturday at Buckspori. Me. The Southern Dis- trlcts was last sighted by a navy vessel a week ago. about 200 miles east of Charleton, S. C.. in bad weather. Loses Legal Battle, Must Serve Life Murder Term WINDSOR. Ont. Mrcann has lost. At 8:30 a. in. Tuesday. two om. -zais from Lansing. Mlch., equipped uilh an extradition order signed by .liisiire Ministcr Garson. look the .' vcar-old prisoher from the Eli- srx l'()ull'.Lv' jail back to Jackson iiiisoii to serve out the remainder nf a life term for a murder he main- ialns he did not commit. So ends the long fight staged by xiccnnn to remain in Canada and ;ll'Ol'P his innocence of a 1026 mur- (lcr, for which he has now served ainiost 21 years in prison. . Back behind the walls of caver- nrius Jackson prison goes the man who says he was convicted on per- iiu-ed evidence in 1934 for the rob- iierv-sliooiiiig of a blind pig opera. 'nr i.co Dipisn at ilie Vernier Hotel in Fair Haven, Mich. Only hope now lies in a petition which McCann'a attorney. John Unemployment Becomes Problem VANCOUVER (CP) - Welfare agencies here are staggering under a "burden almost beyond our power”: in coping with the city's liiililnlmk unemployment problem, a welfare uorkcr said Tuesday. Grrirge Jones. head of in special Community Chest committee. said there are no beds left in the city m.svion home and men now have to sleep in the open. Mr. Jones said most of the ilcs'ii'ite wore in the unskilled la- Wii Rmiip and in contrast to last :-Far. about 40 per cent of the un- l'miili'i.ved are under 40 years of an oming Events 'fRt-member Springvale Concert tonight. ”limL'ivnod School Concert, Dec- ernhcr 16th. "Grnndvicw Christmas Concert December Hill. 8 p. m. "Lower Bedcque Christmas Con- vert, lleccmber 22nd. "Concert, Flnt River Hall, Dec- ember 20th. "Afton Hall. Thursday, December urn. Rice Point Concert. "B.vrne'a Road School Concert. December 23rd. "Meadowhank f"'rt. Tier. 2i. '.gS0lllllpOl't school concert, Fiiriniz Park llall, Doc. 17 at 7:30. "Pnrkdaln School Junior Christ- mas concert. Wednesday. Dec. 15. 8 pm. "'Blnlm. grzcse and chickens. Mirth Rusiico, this Wednesday 8 Kim. 50:-, for 20 panics. "Long Creek Hall. Pridary. Dec- ember 1'Ith. Shur Gain Amateur fiavalcadc. 8 p. m. sharp. "Cherry Valley Y. P. U. Christ- Concert tonight, Cherry Valley l . ."WllISl-"P School Concert, Win- We Station Hall, Thursday, Dec. rmhcr lath. "Caledonia Chrlstmu Concert. n"5'"'ll3'5i” 13rd. 8 p. m. Admission 10c and me. "Card party in French River hall. tonight. Proceeds for new l-"lion Home, "Kelli"! Cross Christmas con- ","'- Wednesday. December 22nd. lima 8.1.5. Dance after. "Brookvala Christmas Concert, Monday, December 20th. 8.15 p. m. Dance after. w"D!'Tr'.V Lodge Annual Meeting. edncsday night 15th. Members please attend. "Rice Point Christmas Concert. iCP)-Bernard Christmas con- at Afton Hall, December ldth. Dance follow. "Guide Christmas play. Zion Hail. Wednesday. 15th. 8 olclock. Admininn asp, f'3lI'lis'0. Hope River tonight. liiiics. turkeys and geese. If not llll”. Thursday night, "Diinr-. Wm. Royalty Hall, Wednesday. Rollie MacKenaie'c ?2l;(l)'iellfl. Canteen service. 910 to "Junior Fnrmara short Vocational School. December I '" 3l- Open to all young men "id young women between the '39! of 16 and .10. Apply Depart- ment of Agriculture, 30:: 0. char- loiictown. Edllflt. John Reycraft, says hevwill circu- late in an attempt to get Michigan Governor G. Hcnnen Williams to pardon the prisoner or. at least, obtain for him a new trial. It was on Feb. 14 of this year that Mccann escaped from Jack- 50n only to be arrested in Windsor on March 3. Since then he has lost every attempt to block his extra- dition. Plan Suit Mine. T Plant At Pugwash HALIFAX. (GP)-Mines Min- ister Patterson said Tuesday it 8500.000 plant and mine will be established next year to develop 3- lllgh-grade find of rock salt at Pugwash. Mr. Patterson said the Main- gaah Mining Ltd. will employ- about 135 men in the operation and the plant will have a capa- city of 1.200 tons for each eight- hour shift. Company plans call for the sinking of a 500-loot vertical shaft to reach the deposit and underground levels and othor work for mining the salt. Pugwash is in Cumberland countw on the Northumberland strait shore. Two of Teenage Gang Convicted NEW YORK. (AP)-Two mem- bers of Brooklyn's teenage kill-for- thrills gang were convicted Tues- dslv of murder in the first degree. A Kings county jury recommendcd they spend the rest of their livse in jail. The all-male jury deliberated three hours before returning the verdict against Jack Kosimv, ill. reputed leader of the gang, anti Melvin Mittman, 17. They were found guilty of the torture-for-thrills of Willard Men- ter last Aug. 17 that ended with Mcnter's drowning in the East Riv- er. Founded 1872 MONTREAL (CF) - A blast of gunfire shattered the lunch-hour calm of a big office building Tues- day and an elderly New York state business man died in what police termed suicide following attempted murder. George W. McGregor. '10. of Chazy. N.Y., died with a bullet in his head in the office of Philippe Bruneau. 65-year-old real estate dealer. who was taken to hospital with injuries but no bullet wounds. from his hands by Stewart Mac- Leod, building manager who hur- ried to the scene. They said he Shooting After Business Clash In Montreal Office HINESE STlllJE( then produced a second revolver .and shot himself. he police said the men appar- ently claslied over a business deal. Briiiicau. former mvricr of the in- surance cxcliange building whole, the shooting occurred nil st. Jamcsi St. in the heart of tin: financial ldistrict, was reported in serious condition in hospital. Hospital authorities said Brun- eau's injuries could have been in- fllcted in a fall. They included at fractured shoulder. Assistant In-, Police said McGregor fifcd four speflor Henry Bond said four bul.. there was no C0m.'lul'lll;1 shots before the gun was wrcsted iet.-, were found in the floor nilmcn. uniformed and imprisoncd. to Bruneau's office. The, two menl ouanmrrmown. CANADA. wnnunsnav, DECEMBER 15. 1954 By Warren Rogers Jr.) WASHINGTON. (AP)-Top American officials were reported convinced Tuesday that y . imprisoned U. S. airmen without any deal involving a trade of 33 Chinese students detained in the United States. consideration has to the Chinese students in order fol However, serious granting exit permits Red China will free 11 been given to cut the ground out from under any Communist accusation that America is holding them Representatives of Canada. Brit- ain and other Allied countries sup- porting the U. S. cifort in uni re- lease of the airmen by marshalilng world moral pressure against Red China are believed to have urged such a course. A state department spokesman. Lincoln White. told reporters Tues- day. ”No deal is involved." He said the air- the students. who are civilians and were alone in the seventh-floor of-l, M llll8l”ll'- fice when the shooting began. Air Of Pessimism Nofecl By FRANK BRUTTO VATICAN CITY (AP) -Medical specialists Tuesday held two con- sultations over the Pope, who was perceptibly weakened in the last (8 hours. and decided to give him an .x-ray examination Thursdayn about two weeks earlier than they first planned. Vatican sources said that. for the examination. the Pope Will the barium solution the doctors have avoided giving him in the past because of the nausea it might induce. The Pope has again experienced difficulty in cating. as he did im- mediatcly after his dangerous coi- lapse Doc. 2. and there were (cars the doctors might find he is facing the threat of anemia. HOLD ('0NSl'L'I'ATION Gastric Juices of the 78-ycaii-old pontiff drew special attention at an examination and consultation Tiles- (lily night by his private physician, Dr. Riccardo Guleazzi-List. and three men called in previously on the case. They are Prof. Antonio Gnsbarrlnl of Bologna, an expert on stomach diseases; Prof. Raf- fncle Paoluccl de Vnlmaggiore. an Italian surgeon and 51-. Paul Nie- hans, a Swiss hormone specialist. In session nearly two hours, they issued no bulletin. But the news of their decision to use the x-rays came from a source close to the Pope. The consultation followed an earl- ier examination of the Roman Catholic leader by Cvulczizzi-Lisi and Gasbiirrini. The lack of a medical bulletin, such as was issued when the doc- LONDON. ilieutcrs) - The cab- inet Tuesday discussed strike threats by British railm:-n in sup- port of wage claims which would cost the country i'.8.000.000 a year. It was the second cabinet meet- ing within 24 hours to consider the claims by 400,000 railworkers. many of whom have threatcnr-d to strike at Christmas or early in the New Year. As the government grappled with this problem, leaders of nearly 3,- 000,000 engineering workers served a fresh demand for pay increases wh ould cost employers nearly e-6fSMiZ"lA. President Dies jorle Eileen Flemlngton, wife of President Ross Flcmlngton of Mount Allison University. died Monday in hospital after an illness of five months. ' she was the only daughter of the late Rev. and Mrs. Joseph Howe Brownall. Mrs. Fiemington was educated at Mount Allison Ladies College. where she won the gold medal for the highest standing. and at the university from which she gradu- ated with a bachelor of arts de- gree in 1922. In i020 aha married Dr. Flemlngton, A classmate, They have two children, a non Kent who graduated last spring and 1 daughter. Patricia Anne Wal- lace of Piston. Ont. The funeral will be held Thurs- day from the sackvillo United Church. CHICAGO (AP)-Television will temporarily replcee the medical Journal Feb. 9 to bring 18,000 doc- tors in more than 30 cities in the United States up to date on the latest advances in treating heart dis 2. The cloud-circuit TV program will be presented coast to coast as the "Medical Journal of British Railway Workers Threaten Strike In Weeks iil00.000.fl00 a year. At tlic same time. leaders of nearly 60.000 London bus workcis talked with ministry of labor con- ciliators. anxious to avoid Christ- mas labor troubles in the capitals transport system. The cabinet consideration of the rail pny crisis followed a meeting Monday between John Boyd Car- pcuter. minister of transport. and leaders of the National Union of n.Hllll'f'l)'mCfl. Boyd Carpenter told union chiefs that the government. could not consider underwriting wage increases on the railways by subsidizing the British Transport Commission,,operatnrs of Britain's slate-owned rail system. the rail the Y.M.C.A. the Air." Pope To Undergo. X-Ray Thursday tors noted a perceptible improve- imcnt of the Popels condition lastl Thursday. contributed to an air of pessimism. Reliable sources said thcre' was "at noticcablc absence of optimism" at the Vatican secre- itariat. lWill Replace llAl.il”AX (CPL--Air Marshal C. Roy Sltrihiin, linicrruptcd a closely timed inspec- ltion tour of the Atlantic provinces -'RCAI-I hoses Tuesday to tell it press conference about the aiscrali. iliati will T('Dlf'.CO the trusty old Lan- caslcr patrol bonibcrs. The new air force planes will be modified versions of the British Bristol Britannia. he said. They'll: be used for long-range land-haseril aviation. and in the lviaritimes will, he specially equipped for subniar- inc hunting. l The four-engine aircraft being modified in Montreal will Kl'.l'lilally replace the Lamastcrs, synibol of air search and rescue on the At- lantic seaboard. SUB-KILLERS Air Marshal Slcrnnn said "they'll l They'll be sub-killcrs as well with all the latest devices in inc.-ite.l 1 think the nus? "How many? sinus would like to know ilir "Laiicasicrs have done a sicrl-l ing jail. but aircraft linvcn'i an in- dcfiniic lifc. They'll be ivrirn out 'by the time the new aircraft can rcplacc ilicrn." l N0 PLANS FOR B.-tSl-2S , He said the air force had no plans for activating airficlcls at, Pcnnficld and Blissvillc. NR. for' joint. manoeuvres with tho army's big new camp at Gagciriivn, N B. ”Thcrr- undnubicdly uill he co- PARIS (Reuters) lorricrcrl a new iiivcstlizaiion iutof the triple murdcr of it British fam- ily following reports of new "sensa- tional disclosures." A gri7.zled. old goat farmer. Gas- tmi Dominici. 77. was sentenced to dienth at Dlgne last month for the slayings of Sir Jack Drummond. his wife. and their ll-year-old daughter at a camp site near Dom- lnicl's farm in August, 1952. Justice Minister Giicrin dc Beau- Connolly; Sea Cadet Chairman, Captain J. J. Connolly; Licut. Kenneth Maclfenzie, First Lleut. Queen Charlotte; Padre. Father Allen MacDon- ald; Commanding Officer Sea Cadet, Lleut. J. W. Smallivood; Executive .l MAY swap His comments came in rrspoiisc to questions prompted by a Pen)- ing broadcast Monday night in- dicating that Red China might be interested in a swap. The broad- cast accused the United States of ”a flagrant violation of interna- tional law”-the same charge lev- eled against Red China for impris- onlng the Americans. The U. S. contention has bcen that Red China, in jailing the init- formed fliers during the Korean war and holding them thereafter, violated the Korea prisoner agrcc- ment as well as iniernatioiial law and rules of international conduct. Any counter-claims by Red China it was argued, mleht weaken such ta case in some people's eyes and v(',Pi eiDescribes Aircraft Which Lancasiers army." llo raid the air force. was ex- ipcnrling its personnel ”accnrrlmg in, plan. We're getting entries into ihcl , ah. ml.” in the mlmbms W, needy-v-, tcnipis are still bPillf1 made to sal-i He didn't "want to get into" the as hostages. lariAy..slired of.tTuth. no matter how zsinnll. might tend to strengthen thc, i.-ittack. Tiius. the argument ivciit. it would be wise to wipe out the basis for any such claim by let- ting the Chinese go home promptly. NeliFJ"tlEET lchinese To See U. N. Secretary NEW DELHI. llieutersl - The lnrlsnn newspaper Slates- man said Tuesday P r i m e Minister Nehru has urged Chinese Communist Premier Chou En-lal to see United Na- tions Secretary-General Dag llnmniarskjold over the C. S. airnirin hold by the Reds. The newspaper said Ncliru inlrl Chou tiic Contact would give Pt-iping an opportunity for direct negotiations with the United Nations. Jet Crushes Near lMorden. Manitoba i PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. - RCAF officials reported i'I'uriKrlriy night a jet plane has crashed in the Morden area. about :30 ll1llf!S south, but it is believed the pilot parachuted to safety. l They said the pilot. was in touch ghg radio with the control tower lthc station: are not primarilv cnn- hcro niiniilcs before the crash andl chief of the air staff. C('il19fl with co-operation with tho hc nos advised to "bail out." i Since the crash. however, there. ,had been no sign of the pilot. ST, .lf)Hb.':S, Nfld., (CPJA Al.- ivage the 150-ton coastal vessel Prince ALik Covers” Edward lsland e The Dew; . .PBIOE5o m...z -. . l LE OUT DEAL T0 SWAP 8 am” Ru ITTS F R 11 AIRMEN Remarks On U.S. TV Backfire Churchil Political By PAMELA MA'I'l'Hl-LWS l LONDON iRcu'.crsi-Fume Min- istcr Cliui'chill'S S0VCmmC”l Tue? lday faced a fresh political storm on its China policy as the result lof Minister of State Anthony Nut- ii.ng's reniniks on an American tc2cvis.on pY0Zl'3m 5UllCl3l'- Nuiiing, 34-)0iii'-Old dclcilflle the United Nations, said ,might become involved in an at- ltack on Formosa since Nationalist China is a UN member. l A foreign office spokesman said Tuesday Nutting "had in mind that lany outbreak of hostilities in the larea of Formosa might well spread and that in view of its world-wide responsibilities. the UN would iclcarly be involved in any right- -ing." I Comniiin.st China continually has threatened to "liberate." General- issimo Chiang Kai-shck's Formosa bastion. Britain has recognized the ,Communist regime since January. l1950. LABOR PROTESTS Tcn Labor members of Parlia- imcnl. Tuesday added their names to a motion placed before the if-louse of Commons Monday night .by six other Labor members pro- ltesting Nuttlngls statement. , The. motion will be debuted at a rweckly innetiiig of Labor MP5 lQuebec Decli i l QUEBEC y iCr'J -The Legislative ,Assembly Tuesday unanimously approved a 5lf),ilfl0,000 boost for iliousing aid but declined to co-oiw ldmaie provirzcial aid with federal subject of increases in fighter do-i Mm.” R. which grmmdpd on Ncwggovci-nniciit housing loan facilities fence. foundlnnd's west coast last week. Shannon DUBLIN (Reiitcrsl-The swollen waters of the Shannon rivcr swept, over protecting dikes at Athlonc not only be used for l'CC0l'lfllSS(lflPlt. lT”c5dl'y "id fhreal-encd 1” brlnll lihe flood-beleaguered little town under the same shcci rounding farmland. ivaiclicd helplessly as the river's wait-rs lapped over l.llI' clikcs sur- rounding its course through centre, of the town and pruircd ihrnugli the lnivcr scclions of Aili- ilone follmviriiz heavy rains Tiics-lfilliic day. An imnicriiatn nrricr went out to evacuate dangcr areas. Dci'cnr." Minister Gen. Sc.-in Maccnin and Land Minister Joseph Fllmvick vis- ilcd the scone. opcr:i'.ivi,- cffnxis in .1 degree, initl The Shnnrimi has born on the 1”-illllflllll Order New Murder Probe -The Frenchunnnt disclosed that Domini.-i hns;KlmVl'i on lliiiilc lFUCkS- The drivers ,n1lillSil'l' of justice 'I'ucsday nichtibecn questioned sillC(' the trial in csviiiicrl Willi mlllllr ln.lUTl9S- Mnrseille prison where he is await- ing the guillotine at a dnfc still to be set. The decision to reopen the case followed this qucstioiiing. Dominicis lawyers said the el- derly farmer has made "scnsa-I tional cllscloSui'cs" iiivnlviiuz liisl son Giistav and uctgbiiors of his farm at Luvs. Gustnvc and his. brothcr, Clovis, dcnounccd their) father a year ago, leading to hisl arrest. iiary of the Y.M.C.A, River lLaps Over Dikes irampage for a week. lnisnurra LAIJNCHING Meanwhile. in Britain floods, fog and snow threatened communica- ltrans-Atlanlic lincr into a Cains- l Troops and re s c u ca lt'nl'lZPl'S ”'llm”'- In Glasgow. the tugs battled the jizale for nearly an hour to keep lheilhe newly launched 22,000-ton Cun- yard lincr lvemia from being swcpi ,ngruiin(l almost as soon as she be- iv;iicrhnrne. They finally pulled the ship safely in a fitting- -nut basin. l The river Siour burst its banks. psivamping houses in two villages rand making roads impassable lh' lSuffnlk and Essex counties of Farther north, ilorvi water from the River Trent wrecked an R0-yard railroad 2-in- bnnkmcnt wall at Colwich and brought mm of masonry crashing For: blanketed parts of western England for miles, and ice coated roads in northern England and Scotland. PLANS PROTEST ("ARDll'-2 Wales (Reuters) David l.lt-wcilyn. Conservative nimiilicr nf Parliament, salri Tues- day he intends to protest the dis- tribution of horror comics printed in Welsh. W. Machalne; Mxs M. Ca l A last-mlrtllie amendment intro- duced by the Liberal opposiion to enable home builders to benefit siniul.-inonusiy from provincial and federal housing legislation was i-ulcrl nut of order by Speakcr Alcxanrire. Tache. His decision was maintained by a vote of 61 to 19- Premier Duplessis described pro- vincial government aid as suitabir: in Qiicbcc and said Liberal suit- gesiions of government-sponsored loan: at a low interest were im- lpractlcol. I The inn, which now goes in the of wafpr lions and a howling gale alrnnstlLci:islaiivei Cniinfllzslglggg llilllggf l . .' . . - ' i v, t, g A ... g . fV.' lidontim and destroy subn-1'-”.n.(.s",CfH9llllK 50 squaie milcs of sui- tinned the launching of a no x increases from n n (i0()Jlil(l tho housing-aid fiinri set up lin 1-:t-iii. Undcr the Quebec plan a home builder b4vr;im's money '. p in 75 pcr ,cci1I. of the entire cost at a maxi- lmuin into,-(Sf. rate. of six per rent jfrnm .1 crrriii iininn or private pm: I,, isdwn Lumber Production Down mm --British Colum- wcre the OTTAWA lbia and S:iskaicliivc:m lieu of saun lumber in both Scu- tcmbcr and thc first nine months of this year, the bureau of statistics rcporlcd Tucsdav. Nova scotin pmduction lumped 45 per cent in the month but dropped by file per cent in the other provini-cs reported declines in both periods. Scptembcr output of eastern provinces. with figures of the cor-, .rt-sponding month last year in, brackets: Quebec 85,012,000 (97,-p lll39.000). Nova Scotia 28.299000 I19,-i 507,000). New Briiiiswick 09,489,000), 549,000 l5,i22,000' Prince Edward Isiandl (951.00). 4 4 4 l Charlollelown Sea Cadets Hold Annual Banquet The Sea Cadet annual banquet was held last, evening at 6:30 at Officer S,-li.leiil. ll. Thomsen; with an attendance of seventy-five cadets and invited COFPSI -Vl-IPlll- . . . . - George Fisher. Following the dinner a rousing sing song was led by Dick guests which included. President. Walter Hyndman, vice president, J. J. Turpin with Alan Dunbar providing me pimo accompaniment. Further entertainment included songs and readings by Dick Turpin and a skit by Jack Ross and company. The dinner was provided by the I.adles' Auxil- and the following officer's of the Kent rmody; guest speaker. Dr. ici- Bl'il,8lIl' ,'nnly provinces in incrcasc produc-l l.)-,.nii;ii-y - September period. Alilltcxiiia lFaces Siorm Thursday and the Q'll'9l'llll'l”ll l1 scheduled to give a reply ll” mli lowing Monday- Forcign Secretary Anthony Ed?-ll told the House of Commons lasl Wednesday that Britain is not Q party to the new security pact bi” Lucien the United States and Na- uonalist China. He added tha: Biitisli policy is to seek the avoid ance of fighting and to Yed'l"-Q tension in the dispute over For-9 mesa and nearby islands. BRITAIN NOT NVOLVED I Diplomatm quarters said Britain is not involved in any automatic: commitment to aid Formosa in tho event of an attack. The main ques- tion. they said. is whether UN in- tervcntion would be called for it 'fghtng between the Chnese Coma munista and Nationalists. Most diplomats would agree that the-conflict was a civil War. dl lomatic quarters here contend. consequently would be claimed thal the UN under the terms of ill charter was bound to non-intern vention. The foreign office spokesma Tuesday denied newspaper repor that Eden had rebuked Nutting mg the TV statement. The conser alive Daily Express quoted obseE vers as saying it was ”the dlfll matlc blundcr of the year." nes To Join .4 .Housing Aid With Ottawa ernmcnt-authorized compan,V- Pli Quebec government then pays 1 in half oi! the interest on the loa until it is paid. 4 Mr. Dupleasis said his goverm mcni will not pay back interest n loans made. to Quebec home. huil crs by Central Mortgage and Hons ing. a federal government agent and by banks. 8 f O E o INQ, Ti 5 .l7A)i5 . i. , THE BEST. Houomr I WREATH is one OF SMii.E5 3505; , TORONTO fCl"'l- Mininiiiiil and lniaximum cmperaiurcs I Min Mat ; lflavvsnn . . . . . . . . . , . .. .'i ii lvictnria 41 S0 Edmonton in .'lR ,(ialgni'y i6 .10 19 .'l.'i Winnipeg 20 R2 Toronto ,7 flit Ottawa 5 "T Montrcal 20 7.3 Quebec .. 12 24 l".'cdnricinn .. Ii .10 St. John l7 an Mnnrion ll .13 lialifax ,. IR -3?. Charlottetown is .14 Sydney 20 35 Yarmouth 2i 431 St. Johns 20 29 HALIFAX (CPI 'l'hc Dnniiniii public weather office here say: skins are clouding over in this southwestern Maritime: as a storm cr-nlred near Long Island. New- York. moves northeastward up the coast. This storm will cross the Maritimes Wednesday causing rain. and strong winds in the southern Mariiimcs. A freezing rain warn- ing haa been issued for northern New Brunswick and the Gaspe. rciinn Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island: Rain; very mildi easterly winds chang- ing to southeast 10 In the After- noon. Low-high at Chsrlnttetown ,a2 and as. Eastern N. 3. counties. lower St. John river valley: Rain and freer.- ing rain changing to rain in the morning. ending in the evenfnl: mild-r. east winds 20 increasing in nftermon to 30 shifting in the eve- ning to want 20, Low-high at Mone- ton 32 and 40. Fredericton 20 and 35. saint John SI and 40. High tide today at ohorlottawwn at 1.55 a. m. and 3.07 p. in. sun rises today at M4 a. in. and Photo by Margaret Mallett. acts at 4.83 p. m.