..4&h'av'w3 ; SMsre Men First define your terms. ll PAGE I iwieikiiiis at or conoumliuoivranar. snofotr ixvonvnn T Rail-Truclt Rate War Starts O'l'!'AWA (OP)-A railway-truck gate war has been prooleimed'on Canada's busiest freight run be- Tortents and Montreal. and truckers Tuesday geared them- selves to meet at least part of the truck refs war." he said. "Yet at disaster may now be seen. "All that the people of Canada the and of the road along which can do is to hope that the two unbridled competition is- leading industries - rail and truck - may the railroad and the trucking in- survive the inevitable impairment dustries. the spectre of financial of transportation services vital to national existence." railways' newest rate Sharp rail freight ,reductlons went into effect Tuesday on the heavy-volume routs -- latest in a succession of cuts by the rivals - and president 0. M. Parks of the aanadian Trucking Associations said they average 85 per cent. The Toronto highway transport ex "ve, chief spokesman for the noo.ooo.0oo-a-you for-hire truck- ing industry, said in a statement here that a. rate war is on and predicted its continuance will lead to an "economic debacle." RESTRICTED SCALE Meanwhile. other informants in the trucking industry said read operators won't be able to match the full amount of rail rate cuts without courting bankruptcy but will try to bring rates down on a restricted scale. one estimate was that the truck- ers may be able to, match the new rail rates on about as per cent oi the Montreal-Toronto traffic. The business is among the most lucrative in the country because it consists largely oi high-valued goods on which freight rates nor- mally are comparatively stiff. The railways, ' in a noun us their reductions Sunday, said they have been getting a email per- centage of the business as against the truckers. They hoped the new tolls would give them such a volume of tonnage that their over- all revenues would be increased. one of the types of rail service In which the reductions apply is a relatively new innovation where- by railway-owned highway trailers are carried on flat cars between the two centres, taking goods di- rectly from shipper to receiver. MOST DBAITIC CUTS President Parke of CTA in his statement called the new rail rates "the most drastic competitive rate reductions ever made by the Gene- dlan railways." "Some shippers will reap a fleet- ing advantage in the current rail- Coming, Events "Regular Dance Crapsud ltink. Wednesday night. "Buying and cleaning timothy dsily. McGulgan & Boyle. "Reserve November 17- for 'i'i'.von Baptist supper and bazaar. "Dance in st. Andrew's Hall, Mt. Stewart. every Thursday. "Dance Cardigan North school, Wednesday. September 22. Turn- er's. - "Chicken supper. Tracadle Hall. Wednesday, October 27th. Dance after. "Buying live Poultry every Thursday "until noon. W. M. Mac- Ewcn, New London. "Abegwolt it. B. P. Kingston, Frgiw. September 24th. sin Degree an up. "Greenwich Church!-lot chicken Dinner. Legion Hall, at. Peter's Bar. Spntcmberlzsnd. ' "Dance illmwood school. Wed- nesday. Sept. 22nd. Lunches and canteen service. "chicken Supper in Mt. Ryan lieu, Johnston's River, Monday, October llth. "Household Shower in Mt. stswart Memorial Hall. Wednesday. me. in aid of fire victim. "Cord play for blankets at Dan 0'Oonnell's, September 23rd. Ten Mile House W. I. "A meeting will be held in New Haven school. September are. at 9 P- In. By order of Tnistees. "Annual Chicken dupper. Brae Parish Hall, Wednesday. Beptem- ber and. "Dance at Mt. Ryan Hall at .iohnston' River every Friday. Burke's utra. "summerileld Parish Chicken Supper. lmerald Hall. Wednes- ll-i'. September sane. Supper served I-I p. in. "Dance. West loyalty Bali. Wedn .. Nollie Ilaoxenaieb Orchestra. canteen lervios 1o-sot Dlyiigni saving. "1401 -presentation of three- ;?”:,iIv...i:' lath” kgstig lnuii. e , . ll ' Dramatic cm. coo? special- "Cosu to s is w ' I""".15l' "mags. hem in Wednesdald. serv September 'ltli. from s. "Goose em... and aiusea i1i;I;l:.er as ,':;”:New to: 'd'lIgd'l.lnanetog' . - mmsla '. L. I , sitar Aus "Wars on a or Mrs stock or aspii ' shihg'l.ee. rod ""7 be surpri how much you CI ..':..i:.'ii.”-.'?"ini.”.'.'.T'5"i'l.I”i! l'.i.i.IIii'.1i.f ,.'.'f'F1IlI6v- . .v.-s-.3-.-. .. , - 1, cltiaens opposed OTTAWA, Sept. iii-(special) - An analysis of the 1953 Prince Ed- ward Island fishing industry is given in a special bulletin issued today by the Dominion Bureau of statistics. Total value of last.year's catch of fish and crustaceans was 34.049000 or roughly a quarter- of a million dollars higher than the value of the previous years catch. Lobster was undisputed king both in volume and value and ac- counted for more than half of the total catch. The 1953 lobster har- vest of 0.998.000 pounds was 3. mil- lion pounds less than the 1952 landings but its value was 32,542.- OOO or nearly 8200.000 more than the value of the previous years catch. Secohds only to lobsters returns to Island fishermen and oyster farmers were oysters. As was the case with lobsters, while the actual volume of oysters dredg- ed wss higher in 1052. value of the harvest last year was 3185.000 or 822.000 higher than the prev- ious year. There was a drop of two million pounds in the landings of hake in 1953 compared to the previous year and value of the bake catch drop- ped from the 1952 figure of 5211.800 to 6167.800. Values of other im- portant fish species caught in Is- land waters in 1903 were smclts. Iles.00O: cod, eissooo; haddock, 3149.000: plaice. Ill'I,000: herring, 301.000: miscellaneous, 3576.000. Clams also brought worth-while revenue to the clam-gotherers oi the province last year with the Army Going Back To Old Bullons OTTAWA. (CF) -. This may- come as a shock. but most sol. diers prefer to ehirxgbutiong. IT -.rIhl'l3fv-'-iD0fic”s'- say -the tr0DDl.;lia'ven't taken to buttons which don't need to be sinned and the army is going back to the old style. which must be rub. bed vigorously. In 1949. the army introduced what is called the "non-tarnish- able" button. They are duller than the old brass buttons but they don't have to be shined. It was not long before there was grumbling in the ranks. A typical comment: "How can you look smart on parade with these dull buttons? They make us look dull. too." Some units ordered the non- tsrnishable buttons cut off great- coats and the old type sewn on. Now the army is getting rid of its last stocks of non-tarnlshable buttons and is issuing the old brass style. in net wear the some buttons, with maple leaf and crossed swords. It also saved money. But now the army is drifting back to regimental buttons of corps and unit design: Grcatconts are issued minus buttons so that the men in various units can sew on their own. The idea was to have all units h LARGE INCREASE SHOWN IN VALUE OF ISLAND FISHERIES CATCH LAST YEAR harvest of soft shell clams valued at 862.500 and others at fi3,800. Value of crabs in 1053 dropped to 31.000 from l12.I00 the previous year. The scallop catch was worth 520,000 last year and the 1953 value of quahaugs s0"l,400. Irish mom brought the dwellers of the province last year. The bureau of statistics a sis indicates there' were 2.768 P. E. I. residents engaged in primary fish- ing operations in 1953. about 100 more than in the previous year. Total value of vessels boats end sear used during the year was placed at a little over three million dollars. Robbers Ger Haul In Gold Bullion LONDON (AP) - Fast working thieves crashed their truck Into the rear of another Tuesday and matched two boxes containing gold bullion worth 1:46.000. The gold had come from the royal mint and was consigned to Amsterdam. The gold. weighing about 200 pounds. was being loaded into a. truck at the KLM Royal Dutch Airlines depot. A worker was clos- ing the back of the bullion truck when the thieves' truck suddenly appeared and smashed into it. coastal 8248.000 Housekeeper 30 Years: Gets 5250.000 WORCESTER. Mess. (AP) - A frail lifile old lady, who always Pxllected to "get something" under the will of her employer as house- keeper for 30 years, got the world Tuesday-the "something" is about s250,000. , That's the estimate of the value of the residue of the estate of Dr. William M. Whiting, Barre. Mass. dentist who died Sept. 18 at the age of 102. His will makes a half dozen specific bequests of 35.000 each to c h a r it a b l e organizations, and leaves his house, 320.000 In'cash and the residue to Mrs. Annie Maude Kelley, B2. The will was filed Tuesday with an estimate that the total value of the estate is nearly 3300.000. CHILD KILLED MONCTON (GP) - Seven-year- old Judy Carter of nearby Dieppe died in hospital Tuesday shortly after she was hit by a car driven by Ottis Price of Gallagher Ridge. The fatality was ruled "purely ac- cidental" and no inquest will be old. humans suoormc. WINDSOR. England (GP) - The Queen has asked keepers in ,Wind- sor Great Park and Windsor Forest to make regular patrols to shoot rabbits stricken with myxomatosis. The rabbit plague was reported in the area. Segregation Issue MILFORD. Del. (AP) - Tele- phoned threats of violence led to the closing of two Milford public sohools again Tuiesduy. Possible court action loomed at I-iillsboro, Ohio. and a strike of white stu- dents continued at Madison, W. a. Elsewhere in the south the seg- regation situation continued calm. with no incidents reported. At Milford, Dr. " ymond Cobbs. school superintendent. ordered the aohools closed after reporting tele- phoned threats of violence if Negroes were allowed to attend classes in the previously all-white high -school. School doors were shut Monday after the school board learned of a protest march planned by anti- integretionists. POLK! ON GUARD Five policemen guarded the school and t ion was reported mountlo in soutbeaslsrn Delaware oosun tr. starry ssayhew. one of the four memlers of the school board. re- but did not discuss the rea- for his action. There was no immediate decision as to whether ii Negro pupils would be allowed to take up their high school studies. School board president Dean Kimlneli said that in addition to the telephone calls. a delegation of to in ration came to his home about in dnight Monday and told him that some of their number had "got out of hand and there might be violence" If Negro pupils tried to miss the school. At Nlllsboro, a small southwest- em Ohio city. Negroes planned to gotooourtinanefforttosst Causes Closing Of Two Milford. Deleware Schools their children into previously all- white schoolrooms. Hiilsboro officials said. however. that there was no school segrega- tion in their city of 0,000. The city had about 1.200 Negroes and of- ficials said 0'! Negroes were en- rolled in elementary schools. some Negro children remained away from school Tuesday. At Madison. W. Va.. a strike of white students continued. The county board of education has made "no definite decision" on school segregation, board officials said. some 15 or 20 students went on strike at Sherman high school at Seth. W. Va., Tuesday in protest against admitting three Negroes to the white high school. There are about 700 students in the school. Violent Storm In Western Ontario TORONTO (GP)-A sudden violent storm described in places as a "bsb y tornado" Tuesday swept through west- ern Ontario cutting power lines. ripping limbs from trees. knocking over television serials and releasing more than an half an inch of rain in so minutes in many centres. Residents of Barrie,, 55 miles north of Toronto. saw s. small funnel-shaped twister sweep in off Lake simooe during the height of the downpour and cut diagonally across the town, causing some damage to the business district. Reporters Try Job On Street TORONTO (GP)-Two Telegram reporters borrowed picks. shovels and rubber boots Monday and helped dig on Yonge street. The city's main thoroughfare has been dug up many times during the last five years as a. result of subway construction and its after- math. Much of downtown Yonge street still is loose earth and mud, with bulldozers and steamshovels operating among the barricades. William Bragg wrote Tuesday that he and Fred Jones worked undetected among the crews. "We levelled off some piles of dirt with shovels. We carried off hunks of broken sidewalk. "And then, just like the regular workers seem to a. we undid all that we had done--piled up the earth we had levelled off and put the bunks oi sidewalk back where we found thedifl. Aillee Tells Of Visit To Russia. China MONTREAL (CPI Former prime minister Attic of Britain said Tuesday night it is "an irony of history that the Chinese regard the Americans as the great ex- ponents of imperialism." Nearing the end of a round-the- world trip in which he visited Rus- sia and Red China, Mr. Attlce took note of criticism aimed at him and declared it is vital for the West to understand what is happening in China. The visit to China had been the main object of the trip. ' The Labor chief's speech was recorded for the CBC before he took off for Britain on the final leg of his tour. It also was sched- uled for broadcast over the ABC and Mutual networks in the United states. He said the ironic side of U. 5.- Chinese relations arose in that the Americans, despite their historic hate of anything colonial. now are regarded as imperialistic by the Chinese whom they had helped. ''I can thoroughly understand the feeling of our friends in the U- S-." he said. They had "suf- fered heavy losses and behaved with great generosity to China for many years." BAD OOUNSELLOIS Nevertheless, it was well to re- member that "emotions of that kind are bad counsellors." Mr. Attlee, who arrived here early Tuesday from San Francisco via Winnipeg and Vancouver. spoke of an earlier visit to the west coast "when our hopes of world peace were high" and ihq United Nations was being formed. Then prime minister. he headed Britain's delegation to San Fran- cisco when the UN was born- "Wa sought to bring together people of conflicting ideologies in the hope they would work together. "But it was never thought they Continued on Page 2, col. s '(By Francis UNITED NATIONS, N. Nations General Assembly as its first business Tuesday overrode Soviet demands and shelved for 1954 any action on the tension-ridden questions of seating Red China. The vote was 43 to 11. It was the third straight year the assembly had taken such action. 'Iucsday'a vote was virtually the same as that last year, when a similar proposal was approved 44 to lo. Denmark switched from the affirmative to the negative to ac- count for the single additional vote cast against the proposal. Canada voted with the majority. Britain and France joined the United States in urging postpone- ment of action. even though Bri- tain has recognized the Red Chi- nese government. A British spokes- man told the assembly this is not the time to consider the question. LODGE PROPOSAL The roll-call was on a proposal by Henry Cabot Lodge. chief of the American delegation. . The members voting against the Lodge resolution were Burma, Etjelorussia. Czechoslovakia, Den- mark. India, Norway, Poland Swe- den, soviet Ukraine, Soviet Union and Yugoslavia. Abstaining were Afghanistan, E g y p t, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia. Syria and Yemen. After this decision the assembly elected Eeico N. ,Van Kleffens, for- mer foreign minister of the Neth- erlands .as president for this year. He received 45 votes. Prince Wan Walthayakon, foreign minister of Thailand .had withdrawn from the contest but got three votes. Twelve countries abstained. The assembly will complete its organization today with the elec- tion of seven vice-presidents and seven committee chairmen. who will serve as its steering body. Just before the vote on the Red china issue, Mrs. Vijayn Lakshmi Pundit. outgoing president and sis- ter of Indian Prime Minister Nehru. ruled against anrattarnpt by V. K. Krishna Menon, her brother's top adviser on foreign affairs, to delay the question untill later in the assembly session. PRQTESTED MOVE Menon protested that he had not had a chance to debate the issue. He said the proposal for postpone- ment was out of order. Krishna Menon argued that the assembly must await a report of the credentials committee for a debate on the issue. Mrs. Pandit ruled that the assembly by de- cldlng to take up the Lodge reso- lution had decided what it wanted to do. The soviet Union's first deputy foreign minister. Andrei Vishinsky. raised the question as the session opened. He waited only until Mrs. Pandit had made her good-bye speech as assembly president. Visblnsky said the Iwork of the UN cannot succeed until the Red Chinese are admitted. He formally proposed that the assembly oust the representatives of the "ku- mintag clique." as he described Nationalist China. and seat a dtle- gate from Pelping. Lodge declined to discuss the substance of the question, but pro- posed that the assembly decide not to consider during the current year any proposals to exclude the Na- tionalist Chinese or sent the Red Chinese. T ' rnorosim vorr. He then proposed that the as- sembly decide to vote first on his motion. and the assembly voted 45 Quebec City Hos First Polio' Death QUEBEC (CP)--A little girl died of polio in Quebec's Civic Hospital this week, spoiling the city's record of nearly two years without a polio death. Dr. Berehmens Paquet. city health director, said 24 cases of polio have oocurred in the city this year. He did not disclose the victim's name. Postpone Decision CI-iina's Membership In U W. Ca for) Y. ( )-The ninth United to 7 to do so. In the debate George Yeh, Na. tionsllst Chins": foreign minister, denounced the Pelping regime as 0 Puppet of Moscow. since it came '0 DOWN”. he said, 15,000,000 chi- nese have been liquidated, 26,000,- 000 have been pressed into forced labor and the regime has hem Wfludiatcd by thousands of Chi. nese who were forced to fight for it in Korea. Clement Aliiee "Exhausted" -.. ,3, . - SYDNEY (CP)-An "utterly ex- hausted” Clement Altlee lit his pipe and fell asleep in the airport lounge here Tuesday night before leaving for London on the last lap of his round-the-world tour. The obviously fatigued former British. p rim a minister sought some rest on arrival here and asked an Immigration official: "Are there any reporters around?" Assured there weren't. he and Mrs. Attlee went into the lounge. where he puffed on his pipe in few minutes and then dropped off to sleep. His wife snoozed. too. Before taking off at 10245 p. m. ADT. he consented to have his picture taken but told reporters he didn't have anything to say. "I've already said everything in Montreal. I'm utterly exhausted and will be happy to get back home." - He said ihe last time he came to this steel city was in the "pre- moior age" in l904 when "I was shown the sights in a horse-drawn Covers I . I "'.PrInce Edward Island. iLike The Dow, V1-arouse, On Re Quebec Disregard: Decision By Privy Council; To Regulale Trucking By BERTBAND TIIIIAULT Canadian Press staff Writer QUEBEC (CP)-Transport Min- ister Antoine Rivard of Quebec announced Tuesday the Quebec government will continue its juris- diction over interprovincial and in- ternational t r a n s p o rt despite a Privy Council decision that placed it in federal government hands. The statement was a new shot in the volley of federal-provincial controversy that has been mount- ing for two weeks. in political circles it was felt the statement by Mr. Rivard. who is also solicitor-general of Quebec and very close to Premier Dup1eI- sis, means the Quebec government will answer Prime Minister St. Laurent's week-end speech with actions rather than words. Mr. Rivard addressed the Que- bec Automotive Transport Associa- tion which had submitted a brief to him suggesting among other things that Quebec "accept on a temporary basis the offer of Ot- tawa to turn over federal jurisdic- tion on interprovincial and inter- national transport to the prov- inces." AWARD FOLLOWED APPEAL Control was awarded to the fed- eral government by a Privy Coun- cil set last Feb. 22 following an appeal against it by Ontario, Prince Edward Island and Alberta. British Columbia, New Brunswick and Quebec supported them in the appeal. The decision was the council's last before the Supreme Court of Canada was decreed the highest tribunal in Canada. it ended a lengthy legal battle. Last March the federal govern- ment called a conference of provin- cial higbwaya ministers to study the possibility of handing over to the provinces the right to regulate highway traffic. Quebec Highways Minister An- tonio Talbot rejected the federal offer in view of a bill. adopted since the Privy Council decision, which outlined conditions under which jurisdiction would be turned over to the provinces. REJECT EXEMPTION CLAUSE One article which Quebec re- fused in accept gave a central ad- ministrator the right to exempt persons affected by some of the highway laws. The Quebec government inter- - preted the article as a limitation on its proposed jurisdiction be- cause federal authorltles were re- serving the right of exemption. The Privy Council decision was handed down following a judgment carriage." News Briefs From L05 ANGELIIS (AP) - A new, era of good feeling between the AFL and Clo developed Tuesday big labor groups plan an early merger. BATHURST. NB. iCP)-Spokcs- men for a majority of New Bruns- wick union workers. steam-rolling over scattered opposition, called on the provincial government on Tuesday to loosen its liquor laws. BONN, West Germany (Reu- ters)-A prominent West German Jrnde union leader said here Tuesday that Nazi infiltration in- to public offices in West Ger- many had grown as serious as on the eve of Hitler's seizure of power In 1938. BATHURST, N. B.. fCPl--0r- ganized labor in Canada must guard and maintain the principle of non"-compulsory arbitration, ihg president-elect of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada said here Tuesday. ITo LIH: Duties On French Irnporl:sI OTTAWA. (CP)- Canada. as a means of aiding the weakened economy of France, has agreed to halt temporarily the collection of dumping duties on eubeidiud French exports to this country. it was learned Tuesday. The move. approved by special order-in-council, may assist in low- T moon in France range from steel to liquor and lace. Under; the french tax sysum. a heavy social security tax is levied on French manufacturers. with the eaoeption of those gw0' that are exportad. F IOKI VALIJI BAIT! Thus. an article may sell in hence for the equivalent of 8100 but may be offered on the foreign .market at 300. Under Canadals anti-dumping laws. the value for duty normaly would be the mar- ket value of the article in the home market-sloo. A For months now. the Canadian government has been proceeding on this basis. levying its import dut- ies on the market value of the article in the h home market and collecting the difference be- tween the homo market price and the import price as a dumping am. .. . s. -, This led to complaints by French authorities who argued that the terms of the General Agreement on 'l'ariffs.and Trade allowed them to subsidise exports in this fashion. REGULAR DUTIES STAY Canadian 'aui.horitiea did not agree. However, after observing that French inflation has boosted the export price of French prod- ucts considerably and that the irrench economy is weakened. it agreed to forgo collection of the dumping duties. However, it still levies its regular import dutlu on the price of the French article in the home market. The whole issue, they say. Will be threashed out at the forthcom- ing meeting of CiA'l'l' members. scheduled to take place at Geneva Oct. 30. Trade Ministsr Howe will iikely.lead the Canadian delega- tlon. The view the Canadians will take there is that France must find some other way of lowering her airport prices if she wants to avoid the penalty of dumping duties. De- valuation of the French franc has been mentioned here as a pos- eibility. French economic problems wue among Cana- dian cabinet mlnisters and ldgar minister Premier diseu&d 'D.iEly Paure. French finance and right-hand man to Mendes-France. at the Al"L's annual convention with indications the country's two" by the Supreme Court of Canada Home And Abroad LONDON (CP)-More than 180.- 000 British. Canadian. Dutch and Belgian troops stationed in north- west Germany join today in Battle Royal, the biggest Allied exercise since the second world War. QUEBEC. (C?)-Lance Corporal Denis Gauthier of Montreal was ,eentenced to two years in pen- iitentiary Tuesday at a court mar- itial after being found guilty of I13 charges of fraud in connec- ,tIon with an alleged 813.000 fur- niture moving racket. 'WilI Consider Truck Transporl SAINT JOHN. N. 3.. (CF)-The New Brunswick motor carrier board will meet In Saint John to- day with Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island representatives to discuss the posslbilliy of setting up uniform regulations for motor truck transport in the Maritime provinces. The meeting was Premier Hugh John Flemming. Among those attending will be Hon. D. D. Patterson. Saint John. provincial secretary-treasurer, and Lawrence H a e h e y. Fredericton. registrar for the provincial motor vehicle branch. arrii hired by Pope To Continue curtailed Schedule CASTEL G A N D 0 L r 0, Italy (AP)-Vatican sources said Tues- day nlght that the Pop:. fatigued from overwork. will continue to limit his number of private eu- diences. The Pope has held fewer than usual since last June. The sources said. however, that the 78-year-old pontiff would not curtail his regular general eu- diences every Wednesday and Sun- in October, 1951. The judgmti said Mackenzie Coach Lines. a Lewiston, Mc.. autobus company. had the right to carry passengers in or from New Brunswick on tickets purchased outside the prov- ince. Killing Frosl On The Prairies EDMONTON (OP)-The prairies' second general killing frost in as many nights hit Saskatchewan Monday night bringing almost cer- tain lower grades for unharvested grain crops and blackening gar- dens. . All of Saskatchewan's major crop regions were bitten by the frost. carried in by a cold air movement direct from the Arctic which had dealt Alberta's late crops a hard blow the previous night. r The frost also nudged lightly into Manitoba but most of that province was guarded by wind and cloud. Warm air moving in behind the Arctic system kept all Alberta above freezing. Hardest hit Saskatchewan points were Moose Jaw, with eight de- grees of frost. and Regina and Prince Albert, with seven. Saska- toon slipped one degree below freezing. Freezing is 31 degrees. Normally. almost-ripe and fairly-dry grain can take two or three degrees of frost before suffering serious dam- age. Much of the western graini crop. particularly in Alberta, stiii is not harvested. GALT, Ont: '(CPi-George Mant- . ler, a farmer living near this southwestern Ontario city. re- ported shonting a 50-pound wolf orei his farm Monday. it was the firsq wnlf to be killed in this area i years. A WOMAN'S FACE.- is HER FORTUNE ONLY wi-IEN IT " . DRAWS A LOT TORONTO (CP)-Minimum MU maximum temperatures: in Max Dawson . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 17 43 I Vancouver 48 66 Victoria . . . . .. 52 G2 Edmonton 39 67 Calgary 37 67 Saskatoon 31 69 Regina 25 61 Winnipeg . 39 50 Toronto .. 51 63 Ottawa .. 45 04 Montreal 52 67 Quebec City 53 64 Saint Jnhn.... 40 69 Monctnn . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 6'! Halifax . . . . . . . . .. 53 71 Fredericton . . .. 4R 6.0 Charlottetown .. 54 in I Sydney . . . . . .. . 55 00 Vermouth 50 63 St John's, Nfld .. 50 - HALIFAX (CP) - The weather office here says a disturbance centred over Ontario is moving to- wards the Maritimea causing an end to the fine weather Wednes- day as an area of rain moves into the district. Regional forecasts: , New Brunswick and Prince Ed- ward Island: Overcast; intermit- tent rain. cooler: southeast winds 20. Low-high at Fredericton 41 and 00, Saint John and Charlottetown so and as. Houston 41 and 09. Ed- mundeton ed Campbellioa as and 00 Bay of Fundy: Light winds in- creasing in the mornin to south- east 10 and in the s ernoon to southeast 25, diminishing Wednes- day evening to southwest is. inter- mittent rain: visibility 10 miles lowering in rain and miss to as low as one mile; little change in temperature. high tide today at Charlottetown at I10 e. m. and 7.51 p. In. High tide today at the Nostil lhore at 12.52 a. in. and l.Id p. In sunriaeetodayats.sla.as.ali sets at all p. in day. (The time is "sumac gnioaaaii A-X--...-. s-.,,.:.. 0 i I ; ,.' l