MAXIMS or A MERE MAN The value of experience I not seeing cinch butlla seeing wisely. By can-Int Charlottetown. lennueide in P.I'..l. 00.00. om: Provilen end !1.I.A. Ill.” pee anon.) 015.00 per ocean Elsewhere t Everybody. , Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-TARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1953 taken a long while to make it short. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN A cinr! need not be lone. but it 14 PAGES w The Grserdilll. Five Cents Morning Daily Felndcd llll. ATLANTIC PREMIERS IN ROUND-TABLE TALKS AT MQNCTON Angry Anti - Red Polish Bishop. TCOnfe'sses” To Spying For The U.S.A. LONDON. (Reuters)-A 58-year- old Roman Catholic bishop. who spent two years in a Polish Com. munist prison awaiting trail. was brought into a Warsaw Courtroom Monday and-very slowly-he re- ttttcd a detailed "confession" of spying for the United Bintes. On trail with Msgr. Cseslaw Kaczmarek were three priests and a mm. and of these the bishop said: "I led them astray and I repent for it." Strange Healtatlon In the recorded extracts of the treason trial session played by Warsaw radio, Bishop Kacz- norek's voice was filled with s. sirzlilgo, deliberate hesitation. He zpoke each word of abject repent- mce slowly. pausing often. in the mcnmg session of Poland's first Mg political trial since Etalin died. Here are the highlights of what lisgr. Kcczmnrek. bishop of Klelce old the military tribunal which it-cuses the five defendants of "es- Jtonage, anti-state propaganda and itversionary activity:" 1. In 1945 "at secret meetings" Arthur Bliss Lane, then United states ambassador, "always talked about imminent conflict with the Soviet Union. He did not hide the American intention of preparing a new war." 2. In 1949 he gave tofthe de- zmrting first secretary of the American embassy A memoran- .ium on the aisle of industry in iC(Continued on page if col if Coming Events "Dance. Lorne... yatley every ruaasy.---seniors or-eimm . - "Dance in' Vernon River flail Wednesday, Sept. l6. "Dance at Cmcdon Lodge every- Frldey night. "Dance. Fortune Hall. Wednes- day night. Good music. "Chicken Supper and Dance in Brae Parish Hall. Tuesday, Sept. lbth. ' "Dance every Tuesday night. Stanley Bridge Rink hallt Music or Munroe's Orchestra. "Dance at st. George's Hall, Wednesday, September 10th. Web- Iier's Orchestra. . "Chicken and Ham supper. seaview Hell. Wednesday, Septem- ber ieth. Aid oi school. Mcako sale. Moore to MsoLcod's. September 19th. South Milton W. 1. "Barn Dance. Eugene MloQuli- imrs. Elmwood. Wednesday. Sept. leth. Burns" Orchestra. "Hot dinner st. Teresa's Hall. Tuesday, Sept. 15th, 5 pm. till 9 pm. Dance after, Burke's or- t-hestra. "Hear Miss Pendergasrs Cor- nnatlon talk. Lot 65 Hall. Tues- day. Sept. 15. 8:15 pm. Also var- iety concert and rinnce. "Fenne-r's regular hat-rt dance nu-ackley Beach on Tuesday night.- Good music and -canteen service. nus leaving I.M.T. 9:30. "Been wondering when the Fort Augustus Chicken Sumter to? Mon- day. September Bath. 50 don't for- get. "There win he a Dome in Stella. Marts' Hall. North Rustic-3. Wednesday night. September lath. f-ood.mueic. "lrsrrnen ask about the shor- Galnllfeed Plltence Plan. For per- ticulars contact our local feed mill. Farmers w c break records use Sllur-Gain. ' "Buying live fowl daily except Saturdays. beginning 'MondIy. Aug. 31. We need all grades. paying '09 market price. Island. Co-op. Service (Swifts). -- '-Noiiee - Commencing immed- M91! otr Itore.wili remain often sll dey Q Wednesday: and close at own on 'Seburdsys. The Halifax sees Co. Ltd., Charlottetown. "The Rlverview Garage at Crap- nild has re-opened under the management of Martin Bra. Open- liit mecial oil change and grease JOD 00.75. signed Ohectar Mei-tin. sldon Marlin. leaving for ufzgaliamiidgian Au. .1 . &.d.if."....... Wreckage Of Bomber Eighled vanoouvsm, (OP) -Wreckage of en R.C.AJ'. Mitchell bomber. which disappeared eight months ago on a flight from Saskatoon to Vancouver, has been sighted on fl mountainside 25 miles northeast of here. Search for the missing plane was resumed last week and the wreck- age was sighted Monday northeast of Coquiilam lake. The air searchers. F0, D.M. Levy and F0. Art Lambg re- ported that the main section of the plane appealed to be burned out. The tail section and one wing were ntact. Pledges New Tie With EOC. Reporis htlicale ' By ARTHUR GAVSHON LONDON. (AP) - Britain has pledged a. new tie with the Europ- ean Defence Community project in an important move to speed Ger- man reel-moment, informed offic- ials said Monday night. They reported Britain has in- formed the six BDC member :- ticna she will: i. Join the ministerial which will have the task of map- ping EDC strategy. managing EDC affairs and generally planning European security. 1 ;2.- to I55? la " '02? co-oi-dirate all aspects of Erfitlch defence with that of the member nations. Britain already has promised to associate olcsely her air. land sea. forces with those of EDC at operational, technical and training levels. she has. however, refused to join the EDC as a. full member, be- cause of her wider commonwealth commitments. The promised new link appears to bring Britain within one step of full partnership in she long-de- layed project. N. 5. Premier And Mines Mlnlsler Going TLScoiland HALIFAX. (OP)-,-Premier Angus L. Maodonald and Mines Minister A. H. Moxlnnon, Nova Bcotlans with Scottish blood in their veins. leeve Quebec City Tuesday for A visit to their ancestral homeland. The premier. accompanied JY his-wife, will officials at final cere- monies of the Dcottish National Mod in Edinburgh Oct. 16. Later he will unveil a plaque in a por- tion of Edinburgh Castle deemed part of Nova acotle since it was occupied by Nova Bectis bsrots in the 11th century. Mr. Mcxlnnon will also attend the Mod. Later he will confer with British mines officials and visit mines in Northern Englanfi. They may also visit the contin- ent during their six-week trip. Health Minister Harold Connolly will be acting premier during Mr. Maodonald's absence. council m Prisoners Feared They Were Being Sent To Comuiunisis MUNSAN. (AP) - Angry. rock- hurling anti-Communist Chinese prisoners balked Monday at being turned over to Indian custody" in the Korean neutral zone and some became hysterical when they thought they were being sent back to the Communists. Indian custodial troops restored order without bloodshed. An additional 2,000 Chinese and North Korean prisoners will be sent to the neutral zone today. United Nations command offi- cers. handling the mass transfer of 14.700 Chinese and almost 0,000 North Koreans from Allied prison camps to stockades in the neutral zone, said it took four hours to get 260 Chinese prisoners into the camp Monday. Another 260 stoned Red ob- servers and grappled with Indian guards. Became Hysterical Col. Edward H. Parr of Wash- ington, D. C, said "several truck loads became hysterical and some prisloncrs were jumping out of the tnicks when they thought .79 were going north." Farr said the prisoners thought they were the first to be taken to the camp. To convince them that 3.000 other Chinese already were inside the stockades. UN officers had the trucks driven along the outside the compounds so the new men could see the other prisoners and Nationalist Chinese flags fly- g. "But as luck would have it." Farr said. "it was raining and there were no prisoners outside L... "at C:(:-cinti:1;e:t:!?on page 1J3::obl School Burned Al Siellarion N. f 0-93'” STELLARTON. Fire raced through the Lourdes parish school here Monday and caused damage estimated unof- ficially at nearly 3100.000. Nunsled more than 300 children to safety and there were no injuries . All that was saved from the six- year-old structure were it few desks. classroom fixtures and books. Officials said the school is beyond repair. - The fire. believed caused by de- fective wiring, started near the roof and quickly spread to other parts of the one-soiorey building. Firemen fought the blue for six hours. It was still smouldering Monday night. - - 5.. (011)- In Demonstration,” Big Catch of insurance Superintendents in Annual Convetttion Here "We strive for unlformityt where possible, diversity whcrel necessary, but certainty at all! times." said Mr. J. A. MacPllce. president of the Superintendents of insurance of the Provinces of Canada, as he presided at the an- nual meeting of the group at The Charlottetown yesterday. Mr. MacPhee explained that the Provincial Superintendents, conjunction with Federal authorities, were literally a law- making body and their primary function was to bring Provincial laws to a common level if pos- sible.' in accord with Federal in- surance laws, in order to rcducei charges to the people wherever possible. It was on this basis that he explained to the 100 delegates attending that the need for Provincial uniformity of insur- gin";-e' lawVs-vvasCnTe7ccs.sary. Th1-i:le- legaies listening to the tion were not members proper as it was primarily a meeting of the H0W8i".'r. there were countless members of the various insurance companies of the countries pre- sent es they came from all paris' of Canada to hear what the top men of the industry had to say. It was not cnlirely a hard day of business as it was broken at the noon recess just before luncheon when Mr. R. C. Steven- son. O.B.E., Canadian represen- tative of Lloyds of London. on behalf of his company held a re- ception for all delezalcs in the main lounge of the hotel. A welcome to the visitors was extended by Hon. William Hughes, Provincial Secretary, the Continued on pig. a 8:17 inf" Edwards Estate Still Subject Of Controversy Transporl Bd. Opens Hearings Al Montreal MONTREAL. (CPI --- The Board of Transport. Commissioners opened a three-day session Monday to best: protests by the Quebec govern- ment, eastern Canada shippers. ublic utilltie ; g urufgl .1. . . 0 '. rhriixgvridww . edu up n of railway freight rates. Nearly two dozen briefs protest- ing the proposed switch from a blanket rate' - identical charges of eastern Canada to the West - to a imllsage rate' have been pre- pared for submission to the board by the bodies concerned. Trapped Under Tree For 25 flours SAULT STE. MARIE. 0nl.. (CF)-Edward M-acNaul, 39, of Cobalt was found trapped under a tree in the bush north of Iron Bridge Sunday after being miss- ing for more than 25 hours. Search parties went lnokinx for the minor after he failed to re-l turn on schedule from n claim-' tagging trip. The tree. hnri dis-. located his hip n rl MacNaul was” unable to free h msclf. In Doukho KREBTOVA. a. c.. (AP)-Emo-I tions are running high in this, mountain village north of Nelson. From here during the week-end radiated the violence which reached to the borders of this troubled district. and saw five homes burn and lines of naked people parade chanting through the wreckage. It also saw an outburst of hatred. ft-gninsl. the press in which Douk- hobor women cornered a reporter from a Vancouver afternoon paper. For 90 minutes they shot ques- tions at the newspaper man and charged him with being pro-police. Search For Quake And suva. Fiji Iiiiands, (Reuters) - Search parties were organised to hunt for victims in the wake of a combined earthquake and tidal wave onslaught which hit thuc islands Monday. first casualty figures reported at leut two persons deed. Officials feared the toll might be higher since a number of fish- ormon were believed to have been out in canoes when the tidal wave swept the waterfront after the first tremor at mo pm. local time. A second shock. at 0:10 p.m. was not so severe or prolonged as the first trelulli which cracked streets and buildings. and knocked out the city's power supply. highland townqocple rushed into the IGNOII II the first jolt city. Mada cracked and buckled. 1110 ciltonte house titled on its foundations. Many oonereie buildings illiti . and universe, and appeared in una- walls. A two- Dead After Tidal Wave storey block of stores and offices was split through. as though by a. giant axe. - Three minutes later, a tidal wave poised itself over the coral reef outside the harbor. then churned angrily through thrher- bor. Islanders fled to high ground as the wave swamped yachts and other small craft. and boiled over a tract of reclaimed land in the downtown area. The receding water left heavy deposits of mud. send and debris in buildings elong the waterfront. shortly after. natives began coi- lecting fish bit behind. Queen lllubeth and the Duke of lldin-burgh are scheduled to make the first visit in -Fiji by a rotating lritill monellh Dec. 17. vs. seaport. is located on the southern coast of Vlti um. largest of the rat group of about 8! illent. i of them inhabited. it he; a Emotions Running High I IIIOGIH ICIIODOIIBIB ' population of about lo.00fi.pereo1ta. bor Village pro-government and anti-PEEK lie. T During Sunday. some 50 men and women staged a nude parade stori- lng and ending at a converted barn-the Sons of Freedom meeting hall. It was after the meeting that the women issued from the hull and demanded the reporter by CARDIFF. Wales. lR.euters) some 500 Welsh members of one family are stymied in their four- year-old quest for a legendary t5eo.o00,ooo fortune left by an on- ccsier who once owned the land on which part of downtown New York was built. They maintain they were all des- cendants of Robert Edwards. who em-ignited ttr-om Wale. to New York in 1770. And they are all working fast enough. The three ousted officials denied the charge and retaliated by re- fvi6ing to hand over to the rest of the clan the dossier of information they hold. Next Slop Uncertain No one knows what the next step will be. But all claimants are still determined tn'pre.ss their case for slioes of New York's Wall street and Broadwav. where Robert Ed- wards orqinally farmed. and of valuable land In' industrial south Wales which the pioneer Welsh- Amerclan also owned. Association chairman Lew Har- .c3xilnuec7;rT1?EgTe-C3175 C B. G. Legislature Opening Today VICTORIA. (CF)-The full ses- sion of the British Columbia Legis- lature opens today-the first in the province's history under a major- ity Social Credit Government. Premier W. A. C. Bennett's ad- ministration which governed as I minority power from June, i952 until March. 1953. was returned in the June 9 election. "This will be a business session with .1 minimum of entertain- ment," Mr. Bennett said Monday. name. He stepped forward and for an hour and a half was subject to it grilling in Russian. translatedl into English. I His replies were translated into Russian. The question-and-answer net-ind broke up when the reporter prom-. iscd to submit to his newspaper a statement written by the sons of Freedom. The statement. which demanded that spiritual lender Stefan sorokin return from Uru- guay, where he is seeking land for -the sect. was printed in full by the paper. At the end of the interrogation. -the Doukhobore paraded in the nudabefore is contingent of cem- ern-cerrying eight-leers. One amateur camera man was chased down I hill by a nude. pro- testing rrecdomite women. about- ing in Russian. Another nudism demonstration took place Sunday in Oekalla prison farm in Burnaby. a suburb of Vancouver, 250 miles to the west. -Warden Hugh Christie slid the Doukhobors were offered the use of the prison chapel for their aun- day services if they guaranteed not totdemonatrnie inside. They would not give the guarantee and were confined to their quarters. where the warden said. they held their ceremonies. "The men. at least. stripped dur- ing their pre.yerI." he' said. "I don't know if the women stripped." All 100 Dcukhcbor prisoners eon- tlrtuod their hunger strike. which goes into lie-sixth lily Tileedey. Seaman's Strike Moves Step Nearer MONTREAL. iCPl AA paralyz- ing strike of 4,000 Co.nadla.n lake and sea-going members of the sea- farrrs International Union ap- pcnrcd A step nearer with the an- nouncement Monday that one sec- tion of the group favors a walkout in support the unions 40-hour- week demand. The STU announced that 500 members-first of the 4.000 lo be heard from-have voted 63.7 per cent in favor of a strike and that the union had fixed their walkout deadline for next Monday. The 500 are employed nboe.rd 28 ships of Colonial Steamship; Lim- ited. one of four companies in- volved in the dispute over the issue of immediate reduction of the seamen's worlt week from ill to 40 hours. The other companies are Can- sdn Steamship: Linea, Upper takes and at Lawrence Transpor- tation Company. and N.W. Pater- son and Sons Limited. Among-them the four companies nperaig the bulk of Canld&'l in- land shipping 'as well as it number of deep-sea-vessels, all of which would be hit by A strike. - While the DIV announced the strike vote results deedline"only as it conoeml ii: men aboard ships of the Colonial company, the vote among the re- members is be- maining 3.5m lievetl to be complete. conven- . ten Superintendents unlyu membe” 0! "" asmcmtm" me-VI Police unfolded this story when formed in help them lay C13Am Herbert was taker into custody to ht; fzlgtlelousyigigsges. ! 1 Sunday night; pt - . . . V - . fl. --.., t.er”ll'n'a s resfdenfrslt. m"5t7”'”c”"”'”mr' soaiieone shlnlgiiiz lixlit infota- try church-yards in an attempt to parked ca... 5 M, 5,. mm 0... ng document their claim. they fired Hm cm. and 1.” M A nearby the three leading official; of their ham; from when police were association during the week-end. Called. Th-BY Said "19 0"-AC513 Wemnw By the time they arrived the and walkout Swordfish On Grand Banks HALIFAX, ICPI-The 90-ton schooner Violet and Diamond ar- rived here Monday loaded down with nearly 40,000 pounds of swordfish, believed the first com- mercially significant catch ever made on the Grand Banks. Marketed with a Halifax con- cern for distribution in the l'n- ited States. the 123 fish sold for 32 cents a pound or a total of about 313,000. Capt. Clem Ritcey and his 14-man crew harpooned them during a 12-day voyage. G. G. l-larnlsh. manager of Burns Fisheries, Ltd., here. said swordfish have been sighted on the banks before but were never caught on ii large scale. Now three or four ships are in the area hunting them. Swordfishing in ihe Atlantic Provinces has generally been tcentred in waters close to shore. Brideit-tliifoi One Week Held HAMILTON. Onf.. (CPI A bridegroom of one lweek who kept his 26-year-old wife lockeri in their car for three days lVRS ordered sent Po the Ontario lins- pitai Monday for a mental exam- inaiinn. Edgar Herbert. 27. of Riverside. Ont, was charged with vagrancy after at resident of nearby West- rlnle saw him flashing a light. Continuing By IRVING C. WHYNOT Canadian Press Staff Writer time Premiers and a Newfound- land cabinet minister met Monday in an historic round-table session to discuss co-operation on mutual problems and ways to bring the provinces out of the poor sister class in the Canadian econ- omy. Premiers Macdonald of Nov; SCOUII. Matheson of Prince Ed- ward Island, and Flemming of New Brunswick met in an atmos- phere of co-operation with P. J Lewis. Minister without portfolio for Newfoundland, s.nd about 50 business and political leaders. The OM-day meeting Was called by the Maritime Provinces Board of Trade in an efiort to have the Premiers discuss common prob- lems. Discussing a variety of subjects ranging from uniform highway and education systems to em- nomics. the Premiers and their ad- vlccrs spent most of their time on a suggestion for establishing a. commission to investigate the eco- nomic posiiion of the four Prov- inccs. Final Decision The final decision was that the Board of Trade would discuss it further at its next annual meeting in October and then the Premier: would take it up with their govern- inio the eyes of someone in his parked car. in hosplt.al.where her condition was described as "pathetic", was Herbert's wife. Police said Herbert. told them he was convinced the world was coming to an cnrl. l woman had collapsed and had in be carried to the cruiser. She was described as attractive and well dressed. Although difficult to question. the woman told police her hus- band had been flashing the light into her eyes for days. Since leaving Riverside. near Windsor. her husband had kept her lock- ed in the car and parked it, in various places where it escaped notice. Police said the. were "bulging from her woman's eyes head" mcnts. . All three Premiers favored some sort of business run committee, such as the council of six New England states in the United States. rather th-an government- named body. The tentative plan is that the Council for the Maritimes it it wins filial approval of the Board and .faur- Governments will include mint and biluineui. ”There is a problem." said Mr. Lewis, "and we've got to face i ” G. G. Anglin of Saint John. N. B.. president of the MPBT. intro- duced ihe subject and mentioned the increasing difficulty of Atlan- tic Provinces industries competing in Central Canadian markets. their lowest per capito. wealth and low- est per capita production and the lack of any great. number of immi- grants. "We seem to be becoming pro- gtessively poorer while Canada as a whole is becoming richer," he said. Premier Macdonald said that through co-operation the Atlantic when they arrived. VANCOUVER, (CPI -The Bri- tish Columbia lumber industry Ls facing an economic crisis so severe that sawmills can buy timber cheaper than it. cost the logging companies to cut it. The situation has been blamed primaliily on the west coststis damp, firc-free summer. which tripled production. coupled with high taxes and glutted markets. ''It is a simple. economic fact." said DM, Mackenzie, president of the Truck Locztl"-T ASSOCMWW. "that. lnrlff restrictions and cur- reocy exchanne difficulties 'llnve caused a surplus of logs and lum- bet; The result is a sharp decline in prices. "Larger operators. lumber camps and sawmills. closing down some of their camps." he said. "They find it cheaper to buy logs already In U19 water than to cut their own. with bolht are Dy GUlTBITTANY COPENHAGEN, tl7teuterst--Den- mark Monday informed the United Nations that Greenland no longer is a colony but an integral part of the Danish kingdom. Greenland now will leave the committee for non-self-governing territories and Denmark will stop supplying information on her north Atlantic possession to the United Nations. The Danish government's note in UN secretary-General Dag Ham- marskjold brings to e climax Den- lna.rk's plan in live the 040,000- square-mile island in the north Atlantic full equality. The transformation of Greenland from a backward. under-developed colony into I fully-fledged part of the Danish kingdom has taken only A few yeera. A Danish commis- sion investigated the .Coniinued on page 13 colrzl B. C. Lumber Industry Facing Econ -o C e a "some of the smaller firms need money badly and are selling their cut. on the idistrcss' market." There are an estimated 12,000 lumber operations in the province, many of them small interior camps employing only two or three men. ”Anyone in hemlock or just can't. exist. unless they have some fir in carry them.” Mackenzie said. "The hemlock and cedar market is giutsted." Hemlock is .-ellmg on the Von- cedar cnuver market at 327.50 per thou- sand feet. operators said it costs them 537 in produce the lumber. "Our nrdrr books are sht'inkim'.." another industry spokesman nairl. ”0ur traditional markets have shrunk in an extent where tlt'as'.lc price cuts are needed lo keen no sales. We have inst .fhe U.K market to a great extent. and the Prairie and eastern demand is slackening nff." Greenland Now A Parti Of Denmark , U. N. Told Greenland elected I. national Court- cll Landsraad. giving the coun- try a political voice. t Under an amendment. in the con- stltution. Danish voters in a pleb- isciie last May approved the inte- graliou of Greenland into Den- mark. Two representatives from the island will sit in the Danish Parliament for the first time later this year. Strategic Greenland. peopled by 22,501 Eskimos and mixed-blood Clreenlanders and 1.061 whites. has been connected with Scandinavia for nearly 1.00 years. Eric the Red. a Norwegian im- Greesilnd in me. Two years later Danish colony. MONCTON, (CF? .. Three Mari-i here A rrf'o';nbers' aimed by both goverrt-- Mini migrant escaping it murder charge visibility in Iceland. founded it colony there run in the son. in us. His colony listed for about five.centuries before it inter-mixed with the natives and became ex- at 1.60 A. M. and 8.22 P. M. tlnct. Missionary l-fans Egede re- opened the connection in 1731. lay- future of in; the foundations of the modern, Committee Likely To Be Appointed !Fcur Reunited After Long Separation MONTREAL. (OP) -- Three eld- erly sisters wept with joy when -reunited with their '75-year-old Tin-other during the week-end, after nearly 50 years' separation. Denis St. Denis went West on a "few weeks" harvesting excur- lsion in was He got back Satur- dav. His sisters are Mrs. Jessie West. 77. Mrs. Margaret Reid. 69, land Mrs. Katie Jean-Louis. 67. Mr. St Denis. who has lived ll Nelson. B. C since 1903, and his sisters said they tried several 'times to -get together but circuivr tsfances prevented a reunion. N. B. Heading For Record Tourist Year FRELDERLCTON, ICP) - New Brunswick is headed for a record- brcaking tourist year, the provinc- ial travel bureau said Monday. During the first seven months of this year 82,086 automobiles en- iored the province from the United States. an increase of 5.2 per cent over the same period in 1952. The report said only three other provinces - Quebec. Ontario and British Columbia -- surpaxi New Brunswick in United States car entries. Traffic into this province from Quebec and Ontario has reported running at an all-limit: high. Wife Of Movie Actor is injured l-l0l.l..lS. Oklalf (AP,i..-- Mrs. tKcenan Wynn. wife of the movie actor. was severely injured in all automobile accident. near hem Monday the ltighway patrol re- ported. She was a passenger ire an automobile en route. to New York which overturned out of control into a ditch. A Coco Swfcil orft-:N . IMPRDVES A calves BAD M:tNNERs r 1 TORONTO, (CF) -- Minimum land maximum temperatures; i Dawson 42 . i Victoria 54 T7? IE(in1onlon 16 6.1 t Calgary 13 Til Regina 4:4 7') .ll'lnnipcg 47 SE , Tnroni n 41 N; tOitnu'n 40 hi: 1 Montreal 43 37 t Qucb:-C 45 5'7 tfininl John 14 61 i Monclnn '3'! 64 iifallfax .. 38 (ET Charlottetown . BR 54 Sytlncy ... .. T5 N4 - Yarmout ll . R0 St. John's. Nfirl. 5'1 HALIFAX. tCPi-The Dominion- .Public Weather office here says skies will be mainly sunny in the southem Meritlmes Tuesday witt- afternoon temperatures in the high boa. While in northern New Bruns- wick and eastern Quebec the weather is expected to continue cloudy. Prince Edward Island. eastern N. If. counties. lower St. John river valley: Sunny with I few cloudy intervals mainly during the afternoon: cool. with vector- ly winds 15. low-high at Char- lotieto .. is and 80. Mencion 42 and Gil. Fredericton so and M. saint John 42 and 00. Upper st. John river valley, Bay of Chaieur: Cloudy and cool: west- erly winds 20,low-highatl!klmund- ston 38 and 52. Campbellton 40 and 52 i. may of Fundy: Westerly wind: 20 diminishing by evcninil '0 151 Clbfir with a few cloudy interval-; is miles with temper” lligh tide today at Charlottetowl High tide today at the Norili Shore at 9.38 A. M. and 10.08 P. M. sun rises today at Bill A. M. and .aets at us P. M. V