MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN us, or are not. understood. nrevlby is very 'good when we The Guardian. live cents. uoi-sing Dally Founded 1881. CHARLOTTETOWN. CAN ADA. Read by Eveybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 1951 16 PAGES Never run into debt. not if you can find anything else to run into. MAXIMS . OFA MERE MAN Subscriptions delivered 85.00; Mall 80.00 other Provinces and U.S.A. 88.00 BIGGEST JET PLANE BATTLE IN HISTORYTIS FOUGHT I'Iiree- Day Downpour Brings Floods To NFIJJ Gen. MacArthur To Return To .The U.S.A. TOKYO. April 13-(Friday) TAP)-Gen. Douglas MacArthur and his family will leave here early Monday by plane for Hawaii and San Francisco on a trip home postponed 14 years by war and turbulent pcncc. It would be their first journey together since they escaped from ffnrregldnr in the Philippines nine years ago. The MacArthur: will fly in MI Constellation "Scrip." An aide said departure is scheduled for early Monday morning. Japan time. The ”Scap" will fly to Hawaii for an overnight stop and then on to San Francisco. Where the Maclirthurs will go after that was still undisclosed and may not yet be decided. the Gent-rai's intimates said. Shippers To Discuss Trade With federation A decision to meet with repre- scn-tatives of the Federation of Agriculture next Tuesday night was reached st a meeting last evening of shippers interested in the Newfoundland trade. The meeting. which was held in the Co-op building. had a larger rep- resentation than the first organ- izational gathering held last month with some shippers from Prince County present. The proposed meeting on Tues- day night will be for the purpose of acquainting the Federation with the problems encountered by the shippers in handling Island farm produce and livestock. It is planned to have ii group'of ship- pers meet Tuesday afternoon in order to prepare material to be sulbmittecl for discussion that evening. No definite action on organ- izing the shippers was taken last night as the general feeling was that sufficient representation of shippers of all types of produce was not present. However, a general discussion on possibilities for the future was carried on with the meeting in accord on the desirability of having a plant here to kill animals to permit the shipment of dressed meat. The main reason for worry over the coming shipping season was said to be lack of R ship capable of providing 8 satisfactory serv- ice. Thc Eskimo. it was stated. does not offer proper facilities and (Continued on page 5 51.11) Gen. Eisenhower Inspects Troops AUGSBURG. Germany. April 12 -AA?)-Gent. Dwight D. Eisen- hower finlslied ll four-day inspec- tion of Allied forces in West Germany today and liald his next field tour as Atlantic Pact com- mander will bc "to the north and Italy." Coming Events "Mail your Films to Gsrnhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. River C.W.l.. "Dance Vernon Hall, April 16th in aid of "Card party at -Stanley Bridge lonisht. cancelled. "Cake sale Moore as Mclbeod's. Saturday. April 14th. 2.30. Junior W. A. Trinity Church. "See Emerald players In Graham's Road Hall. Tuesday eve- nlnl. the 17th. "Vernon River Variety concert. Pownsl Hall. Friday. April zocn. Ausplces Alexandr. W. I. "Indian River-Kcnslngton play at. seven Mile Bay postponed till Wednesday. April 18th. "Receiving Hogs at Crspsud for Canada Packers Limited. until 12 noon each Tuesday. Robert Daw- on. "Due to arrive at Albany around April 15th. one clrlold cement. Special prices on car. R. N. Daw- son. Orapsud. "A special machine for cleaning wheat. s cll r cleaner for other rains st equs Hour Mills. ontrsi lodsquc. P. I. 1. "Robert Furriers. Vernon Brian will be at home to his frlendl Sunday afternoon. April 15 on the occasion of his 100th birthday snnlve” ry, New Wedtlier Records Set In Province ST. JOHN'S. Nfld.. April 12 -. (Ci?) - A three-day downpour' which is setting weather records” has left a trail of flooded base- ments in this port city nlid dis- rupted transportation over East- ern Newofundlaiid. Tot.-ll rainfall for the month to date is 7.12 inches. nearly four inches of it in the last 24 hours. Weather officials at nearby Tor- bay Airport said they expected the April record of 7.31 inches, set in 1944. would have been passed by midnight. Municipal workers were on the Awarded Teaching; Assistantship HALIFAX. April l2-(CP)- Award of a teaching assist- antship at the University of Michigan to the value of st.- 300 has been received by F. S. K. MacMlllan. of Charlotte- town. now doing post grad- uate work at Dnlhouslc's fa- culty of graduate studies. Mr. MacMlllnn received his .65 Entrants To Start In Provincial Electionliace Reduction Noted In C.C.F. Stalwarts lcanadian Press) p Filing of nomination papers for the Prince Edward Island general election was featured yesterday by the advent of the Provinces; first woman candidate and a re-: ductloii in C. C. F. stalwarts. l Liberal and Progressive Conicr-t vutives put a full slate of .'lo' hachelm Pf 5919"” d953"9 job night and day as flood suffer- "'”m D""'”"5i" U"iV”-my in ers called for aid Sublirban rivers 1949' ""d f" "'9 mm W” and lakes were up several feet in years has been a student in i i "m (Mun), M gmdump smdp some cases and still rising rapidly. ies. specializing in biochemis- try. He will receive the de- grce of master of science in this subject at spring convo- cation. News In 6.... I KENTVILLE, N.S.. April 12 (CF) - The colorful Annapolis Valley apple blossom festival will be held this year June 1-4, it was announced tonight. y A passenger train came to a . dead halt at Port nl.-indfnrcl. near .Gnnder. Wililfthli! landslide ahead land a collapsed culvert. 'Thn railway was rushing repair . equipment to the scene but other trains were cancelled and service was not expected to be put back to normal until tomorrow nbzht. The downpour was preceded by almost two weeks of continuous fog which has kept planes ground- ed. One passenger plane managr-ti in get into Toi-bay and out again eight days alga when the blanket lifted for B few hours. A ship waiting to load dried codfisb for Portugal has been lying idle in port for nearly lhrec LONDON. April 12 - nlleutersi weeks. with the humidity at Sat- uration point. cxporlers were taking no rlirmccs exposing their product to possible moisture dam- - New Times. Soviet foreign-ab .fairs periodical. has accused the lUnited States of laying down a irliig of Arctic airbases for aggres- 'sive purposes. the Soviet news ag- 8:0. ency T353 said in 9, dispatch 1-3. The forecast for lnmorl'0u': celved here today. RM" and for-'. behind I caiirlidzites in the field Mrs. Les-i lie Ramsay. a housewife, filed pap- lrrs for Third Prince-one of the! Hive C. c. F. caiidiclatcs. she is: the first woman ever to seek elect- ioli in P. E. I. In the Agricultural islandts iastl '.two general elections. all the C. Cl P. candidates-nine and 16 re-p spcctively--lost their deposit s.v This year the deposit has been. upped from use to 5200. The snap election. to be held April 26. was announced March ill by Liberal Premier .1. Walter Jones. who declared the top issucl ii: "to find out: if the people... want the present. gov:-ritment to ;continue with the Dominion-Pro-l lvlnclal conferences." The Govern-I merit. wanted a mandate from the! lpecple if it was to continue the l ”liighly-important" talks. v R. R. Bell. who succeeded DI". P. Maclvflllan as leader of l W. J. lllie six-man Prozresslvo Conser- K vntive Opposition in the last Leg-! ;”--icoiiiiihiicd-(Tn pag:5OEr3 1-- F OTTAWA, April 12 - (CPT - A Japanese overseas agency with lim- ited privileges. including trade pro- motion, will be established in Oil- tawa shortly, the Exteriiiil Affairs Department announced today. TORONTO. April 13 - ICP) - While telephoning for help to clear his flooded cellar, William Patter- son of suburban Scarboro heard his four-year-old son struggling in the water and dashed downstairs in time to save him. "He was going down for the last time right in my own cellar." Patterson said. "I pull- No British-ll. S. Misunderstanding him out of five feet of water and LONDON. April 12---(Reuters)- took him to hospital." Home Secretary James Cliuter Ede today turned down a pro- posal that Prime Minister Atllec have another meeting with Pre- sident Truman on the Korean sit- uation. He told the House of Commons there has been no misunder- standing with the United States. or failure to agree on political aims in Korea. Leonard Gamnians. Conserva- tive. had suggested there was growing misunderstnnrlliig. and proposed Attlee have ll meeting with Truman. New Method Cancer Detection NEW YORK. April 12-(AP) - Success in a new cancer-detection method was announced today by Memorial Hospital. The treatment is irrigation which detects cancer cells it they come from either the rectum or the large bowel. Of M men and women-none known to have cancer-18 were found dis-1 cased in one of Two places. In- elght: there had been nothing to cause suspicion of anything wrong. iI'ROVI.VCIAL RENT CONTROL TORONTO. April 12 - Provincial rent control became law today wlicn the Ontario cab- inet proclaimed lcgislation passed during the last session. The act becomes effective when the Fed- eral Government drops rent ('nfl- trols April 30. in the first stages Ontario will adopt the prcseiit Federal rcglllatioiis. changing: them later to meet various con-' ditions. GUM PRICES TORONTO. April 12 -l'CP)- T'he price of a single package of chewing gum will remain unchang- ed at six cents. one company an- nounced today. However. the tax reduction announced in the budg- et will permit sale of two ppckages for 11 cents. said A. L. Moore. president" of the William Wrigley. .lr.. Company. U. S. Editors Divided On MacArthur Issue NEW YORK, April l2 - (CP) - Newspaper editors across the country are as sharply divided in sentiment on the firing of Gen. MacArthur as their readers. Edit- orial reaction ranges from denun- ciation of President Tl-umsn to warm praise. The Chicago Tribune and Wash- ington Times-Hersld said: "Presi- dent Ti-uman must be impeached and convicted. His hasty and vin- dictive removal of Genera Macar- thur is the culmination of s series of sets which have shown that he is unfit. morally and mentally. for his high office." At the other end of the argu- ment. the Baltimore (Morning) Sun sold: "Mr. Truman's decision was proper and necessary soldiers must. obey the orders that come to them from above or there is Truman is a crushing blow to Am- erica long prepared by the clique of administration officials who seem determined upon a course of appeasement toward Communist Russia and Communist China. "It follows the line, of weak- lmeed diplomacy so long advocated by the socialist government of Eng- lancl. by the French and Italian Communist blocs . it demon- strates the insidious power over the President of secretary Acheson and General Marshall . . ." The Chicago sun-Times: "No American general is bigger than the government of the United states . . .. he was fired because he was insubordinste." New York Daily News: "The en- tire Korean war situation stinks to heaven at this time. MacArthur is the man of all men who knows emu," most about why it stinks . . . there- Hearst newspapers. including the fore we believe MacArthur'li latest. aeottle Post mtelllgsncer. New patriotic duty. in in long lifetime devoted to the magnificent dis- charge of every duty. is to tell the American people everything he knows about every subject dti-ectly or indirectly connected with little Harry Truman's Korean 'pollcc lic- York Journal American. lsn Pran- clsco Examiner. the Pittsburgh sun Telegraph. Detroit Times snd nan- ilnore News-Post. published ident- icsl editorials. saying: "The abrupt dlsmtnal of General tioat " Peron Puts Opposition Paper Out Of Business -The Argentine Senate tonight. voted to expropriate the 82-year-I old opposition newspaper La Prcn-. sa. The all-Peronlsta senate ap-' proved by acclamation a bill pass-T ed by the Chamber of Deputlesi Wednesday. There are no opposition mem- licrs of the Upper House. Exprop- riation meuns that the Govern- ment will buy the paper. at a price still not determined. Once the s.1'lo' has been completed. President Per-V on is authorized by the measure to; decide whether the Goverrliiientj sltialltoperute La Prensa or liquid- no . Opposes Capitalism The final step in the Argentine legislative process is signature by ;Preslc1cnt Peron.-who last: night ialtackcd La Prensa as "a beach- tlicad left here by capitalism.” Ii The expropriation bill was re-? commended by a nine-man con- (CP)- 'grcssional committee which for 22: rear 330- Ldnys has been investigating the lpazilccked newspaper's activities. iLis Prensa has been closed since Jan. 26-first by a news vendors' boycott supported by the govern- lnient-supported printers union and rtheli by goveriinieiit order. Pcrolilstn congressninii ,said,.La Prensa was an aiiti-.'irgentine Oi”- gaii which put foreign interests above those of this country. The one lone Opposition Radical Party member of the congression- al committee. Arturo Frondizl, fought to block the expropriation move. He told the house it was "not. the question of the future of La Prensa. hilt the entire future of Argentina is at stake." Food Miiiisry Has New Trick NORTHAMPTON. April 12 - fAP) - The staid Food Ministry uses A luscious blond to shlke the virtue of Britain's sturdy butchers. a magistrate complained today. Oliver Bell told a magistriite'll con- vention the blond thaws the amor- ous main man with I. sultry lip- prosch. pockets s cutlet over the legal ration. then chills him with a summons. Union Jack 345 Years Old Yesterday LONDON. April 12--(Reutrrsl-- The Union Jack is 345 years old today. April 12. 1606. King James I ordained the flag signifying the union of England and Scot- land should he the national flag. The cross of St. Patrick was add- ed in 1801. III(l-(I-It-ST-PI;;2.RAINSIlI.A. Arabia in the largest peninsula iii the world with an estimated Douglas Mscltrthur by President, area of l.'s5op.ooo square miles. . miller, BUENOS AIRES. April 12.-(AW. Iports of hay and straw iv Sixty-five candidatels--comrpris- ing a full slate of both Liberal and Conservative standard bearers for each County together with five contestants for the C. C. F. party-nominated yesterday for the Provincial general election scheduled for April 26. mg are the candidates t-ricts and political affiliation, with stm's indicating members by Frlllow- l d.s- K Will Celebrate 100th Birthday Kt of the last Legislature: FIRST PRINCE Liberal tlfred C. Ramsay. Montrose. farmer. Councillor, moved by Ramsay Hardy. Montrose. sec- . onded by Arthur Martin. Blemi- field. '.l. Hector Richard. Howlan. Fmiik Pineau. Duvar, seconded by William Boulte-r. Coleman. Conservative J. W. Don Cam-p-bell. Alberton.: incrciiant and farmer. Councillor, moved by William E. Arsenault.. iiowlan R.P.. seconded by Ever- ett Shea, Allberton. Hubert ..'. Gaudet. farmer and fislicrunan. Assembly- man. moved by Frank Bryan. Cascuinpcc. seconded by William E. Arsenault, Howlan R.R. C.C.F. Hudson Pridham. A!-bcrfoii. Daniel Morrison. Alberton. SECOND PRINCE Liberal llfnrest W. Phillips, Mount : Royal. farmer. Councillor. moved by Dermot Mscf..ean, Coleman. seconded by Albert Phillips, 0'- L cal-y. "Walter E. Dlinby. Sumnierside. bzirrlstc-r. Assemiblynian. moved by 5' B”r'eigh' E-””5”"' 5”””d'idilstrlcs Liniilcd and vliairnmn nil , Ni by PN”C.V Ad9m5v Moi-mt P1939 l the executive ennimittee. Further Increase In Shipments Of Pulpwood Shown A big increase in the shipment of pulpwood and decreases in the quantities of potatocs and turnips shipped last niontli in comparison with March of W50 are shown in the sliipnient figures for March which were released yesterday from the C. N. R. Superintendent's office in Charlottetown. 440 carloads of plllpwood were i shipped nllt of the Province in the past month compared with nine cars in Mnrcli. 1950. The potato shipments in March, 1951 were 802 carloads against 1283 carlcads in the same month a creased from l67 to 96 carloads. Livestock shipments showed a slight increase with 79 carloads being exported in the past month against 75 in March last year. Ex- far i)Ci0W that of March last year as .QlEiil..l...V:'tl10Cld5...wcre feri-lcd dur- ing the past month again:-t 71 in the cm-respoiiding month in 1950. There was a sizeable decrease. in the amount of flour and feed -"1CE-tirhle-d-oirpngemsitoll. zlw Agric-lilPrd Council Meeting A meeting of the execlitive and committee chalrmln of the Dom- lnion-Provincial Agricultural Coun- cll was held in the Board Room of the Provincial Department of Agriculture yesterday afternoon. Committee chairmen submitted brief reports And reviewed in con- siderable detail the recommend- ation: that were made at the Pro- vlncial Council held in January. In A great many instances it was not- ed with considerable satisfaction that definite action is being taken on ii number of the recommend- ations that have been made. sev- eral of these recommendations are still in the hands of committees under advisement. and it is felt at a later date that action will be taken on those. The question of.the formation of ii seed Committee within the Council was discussed. and such committee is to be established. The committee on Junior activ- ities tentatively outlined ii program for a Field Day to be held probab- ly in September. It was reporhd to the meeting tcontlnued on pogo Sol. 3) Asscmlblyman. moved by. Tignish. . far- i mcr. Assemblyman. moved by W. B. MacLellan. Alma. seconded by (Continued on page 5 col. 5) Turnip shipments de-I (By Don Hutlit TOKYO. April l3- vFi'iday:... lAP)-- Twenty-nine Russian-typo enemy planes were reported shot d0W" 01" damaged over Noi-lliwcsl Koren yesterday in liialnry's greatest jet and bomber air battles. The lighting and American jets and bombers developed several hours after President Truman iv;il'nr-d of H FWD-ufl in Red air power in be turned loose from Mancliurizi bases. between encniy B-29 Plmllnr Withdrawals of Vernon Mr. Robert Furness. River (above). will be presl-nt. at his this memorable occasion. -Mr. Funiess is still quite active who will celebrate his looth birthday anniversary on Sunday next. A number of friends home on it also came as the Chinese Communisls made a puzzling withdrawal in West-Central Kn- prea hill kept up the rcsistanvv-' elseu here. In izround fighting. Allis-s .tT00l'75 with flame throwers and trockets killed or wounded nearly ;2.500 Reds Thursday on their ad- Vance deeper into North Korea. On the-yeast central front pow- erful Allied sear:-hlights lit up the battlefield south of Iriwaclion reservoir through Thursday night W0 Din down the Communists. Enemy lets pressed their attack on a B-29 bridge-bombing mission :H'llil linprccedcntctl fury hilt llhcre were no reports of Amcri. lcnn plane losses. The American jets and B-295 ing a. numb:-r of years ago. he still gxyerg credited by-ma Fm. East air raises .1 fine garden each year. He .foi-ca today with destroying eight has been out on the land already and is awaiting fine plant his 195i garden. As far as can be ascertained. he bred of reports thus far showrd the lAyrshire hull into Prince Edward 3-29 Runners knocked down four .iniporte:l the first pure l '-lc3n'ilECiE.-'l'-6rTiniEe”sToTil .ted.fr , H. G. Smith Named i.iJ.?.yag.a. M ””'"””" "'1 ” . ?PresidenI' t2.I.L. ' W 1,. I. ,m i 4 v e MONTRT-,Al... April 12 - tC.Pl--. . . p 4 iii. Grcville Smith today was I(.:JLr6r;rPK1in;'g:i;:n Ehgrifid :PiO('lPfi president of Caiinrllnn in-WW0 MPMMO hum” with” "ham He smuyllfltl ll. S. Jets and .12 big bomb- Icecds George W, lluizgell u'hn;:')g:”pmm 'a'"'" "d 0kl"”W'" remains chnirnuin of the board. At the annual meeting. Mr. Huggetf snid quarter sales were higher PVNIIT than in l5J;'iO, hilt this trend lmay not continue. In 1950. sales totalled Sll7.500.- and S3.T50.000 was added to earned surplus. Dividends on common stock amounted to 51 :1 share. hlglix-r by 20 cents than in limo. 3000 l I i i land. although he quit actual farm-J i . 1 i weather to shareholdcrs' first- this penemy planes, probably dtlglrny. lTbursda,V' fighting. The Air Force said I rt-check .enem.V Jets, probably got four !others and damaged one. 17, S, -Jets were credited with four (in- Thc B-29s hit. the steel and con- Icrete bridge over the Yalu River lfii Sinuiju on is main route nf ,Red China's supply line to the ;Korenn haitlefronts. 1 The Air Force said the bomb- Vers made "the most conceiitrated pinterdiction attack of the war." 1 A flight of 50 or more Migs swooped on the bombers at the 'niitset. The enemy planes were ljumped in tllrn by masses of F-S4 Moscow Papers Comment 1 I On MacArthur Release By Thomas I'. Whitney MOSCOW. April 12 -lAPi... lThe Literary Gazette told Russian Headers today that. though Gen. lDouglas MacArthur has been re- lmovcd. "Wall Street does not in- 'tcncl to renounce his risky policy." "It's this the White House had in mind in stzitlnrz. as a qualificat- lloii to the removal of MacArthur, limit it tdors not mean a change .in American policy in the Far ll-:ast,'” lhc bl-weekly publication said in the first cxtemled Soviet press coiiininiit on the case. I MacArlhilr was i'iP.'tCl'ii)9li as a Ngcneral who failed." ITO Communists. ”Wall Street" means "the L'iiltcd States Govern- :iiiclit.") The Literary Gazelle. influential l0l'Sflll of the Union of Soviet. Writers. discussed the dismissal .of MacArthur and the appoint merit of l.i.-Gcn. llattliew R. Ridgway to succeed him in the body of it regular article coni- menting on the military situation iin Korea. . "Now. when the failure of the lFar Eastern policy of Wall Street lwns specially evident. Truman dc- cided to fire the more-than-once beaten and compromised general from the posts of commander of the American armies in Far East and commander chief of the armed forces the iiiterventionists in it said. ”lmmense losses nf the ;cnn annexationistg in Korea and itheir frequent defeats on the .front showed the complete bank- lruptcy of the much praised twnr- 'strnfegiC' talents of lla(tArthllr and ht: inability to deal with the ;sltuiitlon in Korea..." The Communist Party paper Pravda gave the affair only A brief item on its back page. which said. in part: "It is supposed that MacArtbllr .was removed in com:-quenrc of 'his inability to deal with the situ- ation in Korea." in of Korea." Ameri- GLASGOW, April 12 - MU”! Britain": Gmernnicnt and police juggled the case of the plirloincd Cornnailon Stone like a hot pn- tato today while authorities tried to decide their next move. The long-missing historic relic. which was turned over to the custodian of Arhroalh Abbey by three men Wednesday. was brought to police headquarters here by truck in the night. it was positively identified by ex- perts from London today. Twn large-sized problems rc- mained. One was whether in court an outburst of Scottish la- dlgnation by removing the sand- stone slsb immediately to London. The other was whether to try to arrest and prosecute the persons who stole the stone from West- Hmlnsicr Abbey Christmas morn- ag. Coronation Stone Hot Potato To Authorities qucslions were liroiiizht up in the House of Cnnininns. Re'hl)inK- Home SPi'r0iflT.V (ill'""" Ede refused to any W"''" '""'l how the stone would be moved. But he hinted it certainly WWW be returned to London by saylnit it was customary to move stolen proporly'!0 lh(' police Oi the area from which it was stolen. The question of prosecution in in the hands of Attorney-General Sir Hartley Shawcross. If Sir Hartley has made up his mind. he isn't saying. One of the thoughts that prob- ably has crossed Sir Hartley's mind is that Scottish nationalists who took the stone from West- minster Abhey might make a cir- cus of a trial by declaring the stone belonged in Scotland In the first place and the thief. If any. was King Edward I of England who took it to London in 1306. ing six and crippling 15 in the' iliep Russian - Made Planes Appear In Numbers In North Korean Skies -'l”iiAii-hderjets and F-86 fl:'in;: cover for the 13-295. The bombers themselves joineil the fast tactical air battle with their 50-valihrvf guns while bom- b.-irrliers lclv go the licuviest. ton- nage of explosives dropped on n pbrlilrzv (funny: The Korean war. l Pilot and crcw members on the honiiiers said the Reds flew jthrnuszli their own anti-aircraft ifirc to :N at the bombers. i Two homhrrs were forced to land in liorczi after the battle. the Fifth Air Force reported. Ulutoniobile Tire ;Prices Advance ! TORONTQ. April l2 -TC?) Increases in auto tire and tube lpricos were announced today by J. in. Lucas. sales manager of the Dominion Rubber Company Ltd. The increase. insofar as his coinpany is concerned. Mr. Lucas said. would vary from 10 to 17 1-2 per cent in the various lines and types. The increase, he stated fol- llows the increase in sales tax from it to 10 per cent. the increase in ,the excise tax from 15 In 25 per ,(-ant and the continued high cost of manufacture. The price change Ls retroactivt to Wednesday. HISTORIC SOCIETY l Oldcst learned society of its lklllfi in Canada. the Literary and Historical Society of Quebec was ifounded in 1324. MAKES YouRsr;i.i'-' Barren AND Your: WORLD XNILL FOLLOW kf.5UlT .71 TORONTO. April 12 .- 4CPi .. Minimum t.emperatlll'c.-. observed lietweeli 7:30 P.M. and 7:30 AM. E. S.T.; maximum teiiipcrattlrea lbetwccli 7:30 A.M. and 7:30 P.M; Calgary 36. 69; Regina 17, .17; iwiniiipcg 22. 36; Toronto 43, 47: Ottawa 39. 51: Montreal 41. Quebec 25. 41: Saint John 34. IMoncton 32. Im; Halifax 36. 43, Charlottetown 34. 40: Sydnev 35. 42, iYarmouth 37. 47; St. John's Nild, :38. 40. 517 44: 12-lCP)--0i- issued by The Weather Office valid until mid- HALIFAX. April ficlal forecasts !Dominicn Public at Halifax and night Friday. Synopsis: Skies were still nvcrcasl. in most regions of the .Vlai'ltllncs and East- ern Qurbec tonight. and there vvns cccasioiinl drizzle or light. ralii in some H-allti . Little change is forecast for Friday. A disturbance cciilrcd near New York City is dcveloping and mov- ing nortliward. It is expected to affect the southwest part of the forecast dislrirt late Friday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward IFiall(i-0Vtrr'PSl. Occasional drizzle or light rain. Little change in temperature. Northeast. winds 15. Low and high Friday at Charlottetown 33 slid -to. High tide today at 3.25 A. M and 2.09 P. M. sun rises at 5.44 A. M. and 5.55 P. M. Summerslde tide olizhtPPll mili- utes intrr than Clial'loltctnwn. BURDEN-A; Cart: 'I'0R:tlE.N"l'1.VIc' FERRY SERVICE Leave nnrden 1.1-". c, 1-, 9.10 AM. 2.40 P..tI. SUNDAY SERVICI.-I more Borden Leave (7. or. 0.45 l'.M. 3.00 l'.M. MCA AIR SERVICE Lv. Charlottetown for Moncton 5:50 A.M.-H220 A.M.-4:45 I'.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Mom-uul 7:40 A..VI.-l:'2.'l P.M.-8:55 P.M. I.v. Charlottetown for New Glasgow -- Ilslilu 1:55 A.M. New Glasgow only: 1:40 PM. New Glasgow 3. Halifax. Ar. Charlottetown from New Glsegow and Halifax, ll:lo A.M. from New Glasgow only 4:20 I'M. from New Glasgow gml llsllflix. Cluirloitn-town - Sydney night: every Monday, Wednesday, Friday.