, Maxims ' or A V MERE MAN l T It is easier to ion to II”. faults than baoltlu of virtues. of By carries: in P.l.l. IMO. other Provinces obarleitatewa. Iaxsslda 811.00 per asumn. Elsewhere all lJ.l.A. 311.00 per annluml ThePe's aper CV ” co".-as Prince Edward Island -Likcthc Dew CHARIQTTETOWN, CANADA. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1953 one man's meat is another man's poison." MAXIMS. " OIA. MERE MAM 14 PAGES The Guardian. Five Cents M i Dally Founded isas. FLIGHT CHURCHILL PLANE BEHIND SCHEDULE ON OCEAN Troops Alertecl As Expect Throne Speech Debate To End This Week OTTAWA. (GP) - The House of Commons saw indications Tues- day that members will end the throne-speech debate before the end of the week and start con- sirlei-utioii of government legisla- lion. it appeared likely the debate will end Thursday night with tom on two motions of non-con- Iirlr-nce in the lovernment. One motion, by the Progressive Conservative party. states Can- .'ida's welfare depends on free competition and calls for gov- .-mment policies to "restore" ovar- aeas markets and promote world trade. The other. by the social Vredlil party. says Canada should wccept. sterling in lrlyment 10? exports. A CC!-" motion of non- -nnfidence was defeated 156 to 36 is-r week. indications of an early end to the debate came from Finance xfioister Abbott. who said it like- lv will last another day or two. At the House opening Tuesday Prime Minister St. Laurent said questions on the order paper will improvement Reported in. Fisheryn Department Report OTTAWA. Doc. 1-(Special) - All-round improvement of services m the realm of fish conservation. efficiency in catching methods and innrketilig are recorded in the ul- lliinl report of the Department of i-fisheries. tabled in the House of Commons today by J. Watson Mac- Naught, parliamentary aniltant to Piahc-ries Minister Sinclair and Liberal M.P. for Prince. ' For the protection of chiefly the mantle saimomssid lobster fishing areas of tho Manitimas, two Ed- ditinonl petrol boats were placed in service during the fiscal year. They are the dd-foot "cratana" which is used for long-range work at various kinds and the 45-foot "Murcia" employed chiefly in the lobster Areas. The report notes that the total lobster catch of the Maritimes for i052 was valued at 812,065,000. There were 15.792 men engaged in the fishing of lobster during the tear and 80,039 live lobsters seized and liberated as undersized. Fish- cries Department wardens con- fiscated 8.659 illegally set lobster traps. There was a total of 404 prosecutions for illegal lobster fish- .n;: and 210 convictions were reg- istered. ' in the section dealing with oysters. the report states that while mnditions have not been altogether satisfactory in the oyster beds off the coasts of Gloucester and Kent Counties. N. there has been no Coming Events m”Cornwaii SE37 concert Dec. H "l'ireada.llbane Village Goncert. fhursdey. December 11th. "rredardotan School Conant, Wdlr. December lath. "Dance at Winsioa Station lull. Frtds.v.' Dec. 4 in aid of WMKOW Road hockey team. "Hear Mrs. Perry and Davis Ward in Orspaud Hall. Wednesday Wt-nlntl. December 2nd. "A Meeting-t-if-7-he shareholders at eowml community Hall. will be it-siod Wednesday. December 2nd at "Unloading Acadia Nut coal at -lfllton. Wednesday and Thurlday. Vernon Gillemie. "Gard Party and lunch. Rope itiver Credit Union Hall. Tliursday, December ml. "Pleasant Valley Christmas Concert in rredericton I-fail, Dec- ember 22nd. ' fbiiexandra W. I. Ooh Gale. lnnneil and ohandior's. Daturday. Member stti. 2.00 P. M. "Tonisht.-don't miss hot turkey dinner at New Glsqow. Dinner 50l'Ved from B to I P. K. "war-.ted.at once. good pigs over 1. lbs. imylns moo pair. wel- l;”flf0n McNelll as con. nuntain as Ms wharf. ”l-ienr. luv. and Mrs. 11.7. MM- fglfn in an evening of music and He Written Word at Fredericton all Friday. Dec. 4 at an p.ni. "St Marys Hail. sailors. "Aunt Susie Shoots the men. '” BOW! players. Wednesday and be answered today "in the event that this debate should not end today." In Tuesday's debate Lt.-Col. Gordon Churchill (PC-Winnipeg South Centre) urged greater use of armored units by the army. The army had only two armored squadrons and more were needed as protection for the infantry in the event of war. Col. Churchill commanded an armored carrier regiment in northwest Europe in the Second World War. Cheap Travel Other speakers ranged over a wide variety of topics. N. C. Schneider ti.-Waterloo North) proposed that servicemen be enabled to travel on the rail- ways for half-fare in cases where their transportation now is mil. paid by the. forces. He also sug- gesteeilhigher ceilings rm per- missible income for blind pension- ers. Trouble Looms In Buganda 700 Soldiers Given Big Welcoje At Halifax Tribesmeif Are Protesting i Exile Of King KAMPALA. 'Ugands, 1Routars) British troops were ordered on the alert and police patrolled the streets of Kampala today as African leaders in Bugsnda prov- ince protested Mcndsy's ouster of their king which took place with- out violence. ”The whole of Buganda is in tears." native premier Paulo Ka- vumn told a packed session of the Lukikko (African Parliament). immediately after depoalng the 29-year-old kabaka (king), Brit- ish authorities rushed him off to Britain by plane. Colonial Secre- tary Oliver Lytteiton told the House of Commons in London that if the king had remained among his subjects there would lhnve been "a very grave danger of blO0dsl1('d." Tribes Irlred (L - Glen- considera- Raymond Bruneau udinoratoananamptyword" aridlts garry-Prescott) urged tlon of a national flag. evidence of toxicity among the oysters in Prince Edward Island. Oyster output of P. E. I. for 1952 totalled 8.300 barrels. or an in- crease of 85 percent over 1951. Of money's paid as bounty for the killing of h-arbor seals in the Maritimos, 85,010 went to residents of Nova Scotia. 32,690 to New Brurlwick and 5385 to Prince Ed- ward Island. Far more shot and killed than would be in- dicated by bounties paid. It is estimated that about only one liar- bor seal in five that is killed or fatally wounded. is recovered and brought in for bounty payments. Work now being carried out by the department on bot.h coasts. the report states, is in line with the policies formulated under former- Fisheries Minister Mayhew and continued under -Mr. Sinclair. Spec- ial efforts are being made to grap- ple with the problem of depletion of the Atlantic salmon which has been causing great concern to sal- mon anglere in recent years. Urges Thicker Bacon Slices IOVPTAWA. (OP)- A western farmer Tuesday outlined to the Senate his plan to rid Canada of surplus meat. His idea: stop "shav- ing" bacon into wafer-thin slices. Senate R. B. I-loi-nor (PC- Saskatchewan) made the sugges- tion during the throne speech dc- ba-te. adding it to his annual com- plaint that he can't buy roast beef in most restaurants and. when he can. it costs too much. "First of all." he said. ”I woultl instruct someone to hove confis- cated all those slicing machines that shave bacon in thin wafers. I defy anyone to cook such thin slices properly. "If instead of slicing pork thin. it was sliced in good thick slices. we would soon get rid of our stir- plus meat." Death Of Rev. canon Walker HALIFAX. (OP)-Roy. Canon A. atanlsy Walker. 63. president of University of King's College here. died at his home early today of a heart attack. Canon Walker had, Just returned Tuesday night. from a businca trip to New York, . seals are, Crowds of angry Baganda tribeamen were reported stream- ling into Kampala, their capital, -from all over the province. The Bsganda are the inhabi- trints of Buganda, a province of the British protectorate. Uganda. As the word of King Mutsea's exile from his 1.000.000 subjects spread into tribal villages. Afri- cans closed down their businesses and Tuesday night thousands flocked into churches to pray. In Kampala. Premier Kavuma urged his people to keep "calm and humble"-but he issued notice saying that the kahaka was (Continued on page 13. ci 5) Sabre let from Chalham. is Missing . CHATHAM, N.B.. (OP)-A sabre jet from the Chethsm ROAF sta- tion is missing with its lone occu- pant, PC. John Alexander Menzies. 23, of Victoria. The plane; missing since noon Tuesday. had enough fuel for only an hour and 15 minutes, station officials said. Search for the missing aircraft began immediately and will be in- tensified Wednesday. A Dakota aircraft from Summer- side has left to take part in the search. F0, Ethel-lrigton was the pilot. F0. Abars, the co-pilot. and F0. Holiett the radio officer. Snow Causes Big ;Tiaup in Montreal MONTREAL. tCP) - The sea- sonls first snowfall in the Mont- real area caused what witnesses described Tuesday as a three-mile long traffic snarl that delayed traf- fic on incoming highways by as HALIFAX, (OP) -Seven hundred returned from Germany aboard musing reception by a. military' band and scores of relatives. The troops appeared fit and happy as the Netptunia warped into dock to receive a. welcome from Col H.E.T. Doucetbe. army chief of staff for Eastern Comma-nd. Most agreed that military life i.n Germany had improved during the past year but there was need for more recreation. They said more passes were being granted, the food had im- members of Canada's 27th Brigade cigarettes were made available. the liner Noptunia Tuesday to a..of dances. out-dated movies and proved and the popular brands of They complained mainly of lack not enough sport. Osipt. C. J. Smith, conducting officer for the voyage. said the troops' behavior was "excellent". The liner Saimairia is due in Hal- ifax next Saturday with another 850 returning troops. An army an- nouncement sald one more ship will arrive before rotation of the 27th Brigade is complete. It has been replaced by the let Canadian Ilklnlllr)' Brigade. Exiled Dockers Siarl Growing Strike liL Y. By Arthur Everett NEW YORK. (AP)-Elciled dock- " crs Tuesday started it strike snow- baliing along New York's vast. wat- erfront, and by Tuesday night most of the port was tied up tight. The New York Shipping Associ- ation said the walkout violated a Taft-Hartley law injunction which ended an earlier port strike. The injunction forbade any new strike forrm 80-day period that expires Christmas Eve.- The police department. ordered its men to be alert for a possible general waterfront, strike. However. president William V. Bradley of the independent Inter- national Longshoremerfs Associa- tion insisted: "I have called no strike for any time. On the contrriry I am trying to get the men back to work, No order for a general strike has been issued and no order will be issued." Defy New Commission l.ongsl1-oremcn quit the piers by the hundreds in defiance of a new bi-state waterfront commission that took over Tuesday as cleanup agent on the rackets-infested piers. One picket line stretched a mile. The strikers were trying to force the commission to reinstate at least temporarily on the piers scores of lorigshoremen who have been bar- red because of criminal pasts. Hardest hit. by the strike were the midtown l-ludsmi river piers, where the big liixiiry liners dock. Some 255 longsliorcmen have been ordered off the docks by the new bi-state waterfront. commission be- much as two hours. Vishinsky By FRANCIS W. GA-R.PEN'I'lllT. UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. AP) Russia's Andrei Vishinsky Tuesday denounced as iposh" the Ameri- can charges that the Reds killed thousands of soldiers and civilians by atrocities in Korea. He coun- tor-charged that the Americans and south Koreans committed many war crimes. American chief delegate Hanry Cabot Lowe Jr. promptly chai- lenged the Soviet tqo delegate to permit an impartial commission of inquiry full access to all of Korea and china to learn the full faote. Lodse previously had not aakai MONTREAL. (OP)-City council Tuesday defeated. em. a motion by councillor Harve Ravary to es- tablish a province of Montreal within the Canadian confedera- 2 on. Councillor Havary said financial and other problems of Montreal are caused largely because the greater part of the oityie revenues is drained off by the province. "which refuses to assume its fair share of expenditures incurred by the city for the benefit of the prov- ince OI tloatraars autonomy "is nothing whole administration and progress Iii"-isaay. December and and mi, 8 30. Sptcllitib. are "paralysed by the lack of lim- Proposed Province Of Montreal; Move Defeated he laid. It would be a great. advantage for the city. the province and the nation to constitute a Montreal city province. "independent. autonom- ous. mistress of its own destinies. its legislation and finance." Oouncillor Mamel Lafalile said the motion was premature and "extremely dangerous" at this time when nlroyal con-iminiori Is studying apportionment of taxes between the various levels of gov- ernmmt. He was not ready to say to blame for the print Montreal situation and calmed no official demand has . r been made to the hitrher gmn-mrnenm to obtain dsr-standing of Quebec legislators” finanicial concessions. Labels U.S. Atrocity charges that either Quebec or Ottawa was Md Continued on page 11. C01. 4 Bosh for a. commission because the Americans assumed the Russians would not let it go behind the Bamboo Curtain. They still do not expect Russian approval for such an investiifnlion. Vishinsky attempted in his speech to punch holes in the doc.- umenta put. before the assembly by Lodge. These contained sworn statements by survivors of death marches and massacres and inter- rogations of Communist prisoners alleged to have taken part in a number of the reported atrocities. Lodge said there were 38.000 vic- tims. ' Blames ll. 8. bombings vishin.-ky claimed many points were not settled in the documents. He declared that killings repotrted to have been committed by North Koreans and Communist Chinese actually were the result of whole- sale b '” by American planes. He charged that Americans wiped out cities such as Taejon and in doing so kiilled many women and children. vlshinsky declared that s.l.rocit- ica item is a "flagrantly concocted falsification. redolent with slender and a recital of events which never took place." He charged it was part of pot- chologictil warfare intended to blow up the peace negotiations in Ko- rea. Vlshinsky admitted there were conditions for prisoners or times "became the Americans bombed everything". He told the assembly that tvm Mai. ?EI Members Returning dome With 27th Brigade seventeen Islanders were among the home-for-Christmas draft of Canadian Army personnel which landed at. Halifax last evening from the 8.6. ”Noptunis.”. Thirty- nve officers and 700 men. all members of the 27th Canadian In- fantry Brigade. are included in the draft. The men are scheduled to board Prime” i”tiIiisier' En liouie To g Bermuda Talks SHANNON. Ireland. lR.eutetrsl- The airliner carrying Prime Min- ister Churchill to Bermuda arrived here 15 minutes behind schedule for its refuellirig stop. The takeoff was further delayed. for repairs to a leaky door. British Overseas Airways Cor- poration reported that the plane was running into fairly strong hesdwirids after leaving Shannon and is now exipected to reach Gander at 'i am. mT, 214 hours behind its original schedule. LONDON. tCPl- Sir Winston Churchill - with the cheers of leaders of all parties still ring- ing in his ears-set off across the Atlantic Tuesday night on his way to the Bermuda conference. The Prime Minister and his 28-man diplomatic team took off in the great silver and blue Stratocruiser. Canopus, at 11.37 pm. (6.37 p.m. EST) for Ber- muda, where he will being his meetings with President Eisen- hower and French Premier Jos- eph Laniei Friday. An hour before. in the House of Commons. Conservative, Labor and Liberal MP: alike rose to their feet to cheer a "ban voy- age" to their leader, who had come to the House to see through a vote on his government's hous- ing policy. Puffing on a cigar. Churchill walked to his limousine amid cheering from a crowd waiting outside to wish him good luck. The 79 - year- old statesman trains carrying them to home des- tinations across Canada today. All have served in Germany from one to two years with the 21th Bri- gade. Leave has been granted on the basis of reporting to their re- spective depots on Janiiary 4. 1954. The returning men to this Pro- vince by Counties are: Queens: Pin. J.W. Cud-more, Bon- rhaw; Pte. G.J. Currie, 99 Elm Avenue. Charlottetown; Llcpl. ' F. M. Dacoste. 35 Prince St., Char- lottetowti; Pie. H. R. Doucette, 196 Kent St., Charlottetovm: Tpr. L. E. Duran-t, 51 Villa. Ave, Char- lottetown; Pte. P. E. Gillespie, Clyde River; Pte. W. L. Glover, Winsloe; Pie. G. I. Kerwin. North Rustico; and Pie, 5. L. Thompson, Hunter River. Prince County: Pie. J. C. Arsen- ault. Richmond; Pte. R. J. Arsen. auli. 370 Myrtle St.. Summereide; Tpr. J.A. Bernard. 482 North Mar- ket St., Summerside; Tpr. H. O, DESRO.'3ilEE, 36 Cedar SL. Summer- sidc, and A,Cpl. L. A. MncDougali, McNciil's Mills. King's County; Spin RB. Black- ett. Georgetown L.Cpi. R. Dupuls, Moreli. and Lrcpi. A. A. MacDon- ald. Moreil. DiscussedECi'viEc Mailers Al Ollawa OTTAWA. Dec. 1- (Special)-. on left. Ottawa today with thel city solicitor and cliniimitn of thel finance committee after a discus- sion with Finance Department of- ficials of federal tax oblignllons lil Charlottetown. They hoped for an appointment with Canadian Na- tional Ro.ilwa.ys odicers at Mont- ixeol. in negotiate on taxes for the Charlottetown Hotel. While not. prepared to divulge results of the conversations held with federal finance and public works officials, Mayor Stewart felt that his visit. to ottstwa had been worth while. and now that the ice has been broken. feels that fur- ther progress can be achieved by correspondence. 22.ooo Min . Veterans Eligible For Benefits OTTAWA. (CPl--Nuirly 22.000 regular force servicemen who took part in the Korean war are eligible for benefits similar to those received by Second World War veterans. The benefits. including univer- sity or vocational training and settlement under the Vetersns' Land Act. previoiitiiy had been granted to the 5.000 members of the forces specially recruited for Korea in 1950. Benefits received by the spe- rlni force were similar to those givcn Second World War veter- ans. Veterans Minister Lapointe on Monday announced in the Commons extension in all regular force men of the three services the snme benefits received by the special force. A total of 26,123 Canadians served in the Korean war. some 5,000 of them in the special force. 0! the reluiar force men. some umno more soldiers. .'i,.'500 sailors (Continued on page 13. col. 5) and 500 airmen. worked up to the last minute before his departure. but after he walked up the ramp to the Canopus he turned and grinned hoyishly, despite 48 hours of ill- most constant preparation for the meeting. x Declares Many American Cars inchinese Capital LONDON, (Reuters) - A Labor member of Parliament says Pei- ping, capital of Communist China. is as full of new American autos as Grosvenor square in London. site of the American embassy. Geoffrey de Freitas asked the government Tuesday what it is going to do to ”overtnke the Ameri- can lcari which Sen. Joseph Mc- Carthy has established." adding: "What's good for General Mo- tors is good for this country." Another Labor MP. Philip Noel- Baker. chimed in to suggest that the Wisconsin senator, chairman of the Senate investigating com- mittee, should ”inquire into Gen- eral Motors." Re F'reitns' remarks followed a reply made by Derick Heathcoiit.- Amory. a trade ministry officinl, after de Freitaii has asked how many British automobiles had been exported to China in the liist cause Mme”, Criminal backgraundsglrgagoi: .l. D. Stewart of Cl'lltX'l0H.C-,li.l1l'ee years. Heathcoat-Amory hnri answered that such exports were "negligible" numbering only two each in 1950 and iilbl, one in l9.'i2, and one so for this year. , No Evidence The minister added that inquiries had been mails and there was no evidence to show that ot.hei' coini- tries were not observing the em- bargo laid by United Nations members on Communist. China. De Freiisis asserted that auto- mobiles were being "exported from the United States through Japan straight on to China." inn Mikardo, niiother Labor member, declared: Chinese have been able to htiy large quantities of motor cars and steel tubes and generating sets and other things in many parts of the world by pay- ing for them with the several hundreds of millions of dollars which they have got through ex- ports to the United States over the last three years." Unprecedented At a meeting of the Potato Mar- keting Board held yesterday the present position regarding the movement of this year's potato crop was reviewed and Board mem- bers were surprised to learn that already upwards of 5.000 corloarls of potatoes had been shipped by rail. mater and truck, or are al- ready assembled at Island ports and local siorages'awaiting ship- ment. "This moverrlent breaks all re- cords from this Province for a similar period of time." states Mr. D. A. MacDonald. chairman of the Board. "The Board Selling Agency has. since it commenced operations on the 13th of Octobber last. sought to make every possible provision for moving that part of the potato crop which was not protected from frost. Generally speaking. this goal has now been achieved and for that reason purchases are im- inz to be drastically reduced dur- ing the month of December. In fact, only shipments which can be sold immediately on loading will be accmted. General market con- ditions have been very weak during the last month and as yet show Movement Oil lotaioes To Dal: This Year. Onlxi no sign of improvement. reduced shipments will change thati market trend as far as this Prov- 'lnce is concerned. "During the next month the Soil- ing Agency will concentrate its ,efforts on moving the remainder of line supplies already assembled at; ilsland ports as well as the very lsubstantiai quantities it has al- ready stored. This tremendous volume of movement. all of which has been bought and mid through the Selling Agency Office, has caused a major ,problem to develop regarding to- ldividuoi payments covering every lshipment already made by nearly 5,000 producers. Mr. MacDonald stated last night that scarcely half those shipments have been fpaid for notwithstanding the fact that the Selling Agency staff has been working all day and most of the night. The payment output from the office has gradually been ll'lCTPH5Pl'l. At the present time accounts covering 70 to 80 cars per day are being settled. Sometimes there has been some delay in re- ceiving loading reports from the (Continued on page is col. 2) or Big Three By Stanley Johnson TUCKERB TOWN, Bermuda. (AP; -- A raging tropical storm bringing the heaviest rainfall in Bermudd's history struck these is- lands Tuesday on the eve of the arrival of Prime Minister Chur- chill for the Western Big Three conference. The weather bureau said 3 1-2 inches of rain fell in an hour. breaking 99-year-old records. Meanwhile arrangements for the meeting are being completed. President Eisenhower will be able to keep in close touch with Washington throughout the nor- muda Big Three conference be- ginning Friday. On a bedside table and scatter- ed strntegically elsewhere through- out his five-room suite at the Mid- Ocean Club are telephones linking him directly with a switchboard operated by the U .8. Army Signal Corps at the Castle Harbor Hotel and thereby with the White House by radio transmission. Neither Prime Minister Chur- chill nor French Premier Laniel will have cquiiaicnt facilities dur- ing the talks opening Friday. though it. is understood Churchill can reach London direct from Government House. Churchill. as l1flFL has taken the smallest and least accessible suite of the main conferees. It is on the third floor of t.he club. ' J? l iwoman Elected mayor or Kentviiie l l HALIFAX. 4C-Pl -- Gladys M 'Pnrt(-r was elected mayor of Kent- viiie Tuesday to again become the only woman to hold the office in the Maritimcs. Mrs. Porter. mayor of the valley town for two lrrms stnrtirig in 19-iS.i was defeated in 1.050 by Roy W.l Rritllor. l Mr. Rntilcr was re-eirctcri by nccinmation in 1952 and lost. Tucs- day's contest. in Mrs. Porter by. 128 votes. The count was 903 to 775. l in Dartmouth. ririitrgi.-t Cir-tidal iMoi:ris defeated A C. Pctttpss 21,-. 271 in 1.848. t New Waterford Mayor Pat. Mui-el was defeated by James McNeil hy- It rrnjnrity of 5'11. chariot Thomp-l lsnn was re-elected in North Sydney with a majority of 50 over Stan Clenry. In Sydtir-v. iagher was returned with 6,670 votes lngainst. 6.i:i2 for George Fiaveh. Mayor Tony Gal- Hall Insists Had Ransom Money When Arrested ST. LOUIS. (AP)-Cari Austin Hall insisted to ouestlonere in his death row cell Monday that ho had most of the 8000.000 Green- leaae ransom money when he was an-uteri. a high official said Tues- day. The official, who declined to be named. also said Hall repeated that the suitcases containing the money were left in his hotel room when he was taken to a district police station Oct. 6. Hall and Mrs. Bonnie Brown Heady were questioned by chief of Police Jeremiah O'Connell and Edward L. Dowd. st. Louis circuit attorney. at the Missouri peniten- tiary in another effort to find 3303.720 of the ransom money still missing. The condemned man was unable to identify any of several photo- graphs shown him by Chief O'- Connell in an attempt to learn the identity of a mysterious man Hall had seen outside his hotel room as police led him away, the offic- ial said. Down said after the interview that sitittoments by Hall and Heady might prove to be the basis for futura prosecution in the case. of- ficials began a study of the state- ments today. Hali and Mrs. Heady. confessed kidnap-slayers of nix-year-old Bob- by Greenloaee. are being held in prison pendina carrying out of the death sentence. Record Storm On Eve Conference liobsier Prices, iieporieiijigher YARMOUTH, N5, (CP)- Ti-oi lobster season for 1,400 Yarmouthl cotrnty fishermen opened Tuesday! wlth'- an encouraging increase in I. ,, i Dealers in the area decided t.c'r' offer 30 cents a pound. about three cents better than the price ex- pected. Fishermen say so cents is the break-even point. 4iit2ra:.s."st it TORONTO. tCP) - Minilnunl and maximum temperatures: I Min. Max. Dawson 13 -- Viclorin d2 48 Edmonton 25 26 Calgary 2'1 iii Regina 31 33 Winnipeg 25 IR Toronto 33 41 Ollmwt 26 32 Mnntrt-:il 28 33 Quebec 2'! 32 Saint. .lnhn 26 41 Monrtnn 21 41 Halifax . 32 40 Charintlctm-tn - 27 3'1 Syclncy N 30 Ynrmntilh 3i. (0 St. John's 25 32 HALIFAX. (CP)- The Domini inn Puhllo Weather Office hero gay: a storm developed off the 'Nrn'l scotie coast. Tuesday night and ram with increasing winds spread over Nova Scntia. Prince Edward Island and into southern New Brunswick. The storm il forecast to move past the district Werlnc-sday. and improving wes- iher is expected in most of the district. - Rclflnnal forecasts: Low!-r St. John river valley: Cloudy with little change in tarn- perature: northwest winds 15. Low-high at Fredericton 30 and 35. saint John 35 and 40. Prince Edward Island. Iaab-n N. 3. counties: Overcast: rain changing in afternoon to snow- flurriea; little change In scapu- shire; northerly winds I8. Igu- high at Charlottetown and Heme- ton M and an. Upper St. John river valley, Boy of Chaieur: Cloudy: not much change in temperature; north winds 15. Low-high at lid- mundston and Campbellton I) and 32. High tide today at Ohariottotowni at 7.06 A. M1 and 7.11 P. M. Summaraiuu tide oightnon min- utes later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 1.32 A. M. and rises at 4.33 P. M,