MAXTMS . OFA MERE MAN'S .----1 Ignorance may find I truth its doorstep seeks in the stars. that erudltioo vainly 3', can-iari OIIIIMMIOWI. Iumasrlds limo peg anion. Elsewhere ""503 C1100 DO! anon.) in r.E.i. 80.00. Other and ll.l.A. Cove-r's Prince Edward CI-IARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. Read Island Lilretlici Dew y Eve MONDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1953 Independent thought, without which all our would lose their savour. t MAXIMS or A MERE MAN x- the salt liberties 16 PAGES Guardian, Five Cents The M L, Daily Founded llll. CHURCHILL MAY GO ALONE FOR TALKS AT MOSCOW Ministers Study Second Gouzenlco Requeslti Royal Couple Spends Quiet Day Before Beginning Tour By Fern Iich LONDON, (Reuters) - Queen Elizabeth and the Duke of Edin- mn-gli spent a stay-at-home Sun- day relaxing with their family be- fore they begin their 50,000-mile tour of 14 Commonwealth coun- tries. completing the family circle in the seclusion of the Royal Lodge at Windsor were Prince Charles and Princess Anne, Queen Mother Elizabeth and Princess Margaret. It was the occasion for private far:-wells. - Tonight the couple will soar away lmnl Lo' in airport in the Strato- ci-uiser ' hopus" bound for Can- der, Nild.. on the first stage of lllEll' six-month journey. The plane will refuel at Oanderw an unofficial stop-and two hours later will be speeding for Bermuda where the Queen and Duke will spend one day. Next they fly to Jamaica where, after a short stay, they board the liner Gothic for the long sea journey to Fiji, Tonga, and finally to New Zealand and Aus- lralla. Duke Goes Shooting On their homeward voyage they will visit the Cocos Islands, Cey- Continued on page 15. col. 6 Coming Events "Dance in st. George's I-fall Friday, November 27. "Dance in Pleaadnt Grove Hall, Wctlnesrlay, Nov. 25. "Unloading Old sydney Coal todpy at Milton. Vernon Gillespie. "Bingo and Dance in Vernon River Hall, Tuesday, November 24th. "Dance. Cardigan I-fall, Monday night. November 23rd. 'rumer'a Orchestra. "Meeting in Elliott Hall, Novem- ber 24th of Directors and all those interested. and 8.1.. "Buying D:-used Geese Ducks. Thursday all day. Dickinson, New Glasgow. "All Star Shur-Gain Cavalcade, North Rustico, Wednesday. Novem- her 25th, 8 P. M. "Legion dance, Bonshaw Inn. Tuesday, Nov. 24. Music supplied by 'I'oole's orchestra. "Auction sale on the premises of James Bushey, scuris. Wednes- day, November 26th. at one o'clock. "Dance tonight. November 21rd. in the new school at. New- ton. Good music. ”see the Montague variety con- vert in Belfast 1-ls.ll Thuildld. Nov. 26 at 8 pm. sponsored by Eldon W. I. "shur-Gain Amateur Cavalcade. Vemon River Hall, December 10th. send entries to Mrs. Andrew Doyle, AlbeirYY Plains. "All interested in the North River Community Hall please at- fvnrl fll0Pl.ll1K in hell on Monday, Nov. 23 at 8 p.m. , "Buying live chicken. oapons and fowl, Tuesday, 8 until 12. High- est prices paid. R. L. Dickleson, New Glasgow. "Dan Messer and his Islanders It Crspaud Hell. Wednesday, Nov. 25th. Entertainment and Dulce, in aid of Crapeud Women's Institute. "Hot chicken supper and dance at New Hall, Mt Ryan, Thursday. Nov. 20. supper served from I till Pm. "Chicken supper and Dance at Charlie Gillis', Indian ltivc. Wed- "udly. November 25th. sponsored by C. w. L. "Auoticm Sale, Milton Rink. Wednesday. November aiitfi, 1.30 P. M. of boards. pom, generator. pulleyl. ahsftln . hill, pumps. Wailers. rubber lines, etc. "The Annual Meeting of the Mount Stewart lraneh. Canadian Legion, will be held in the neglect Room. on Monday, Novembc am. It uo. an veterans please attend. Rm Pig starter. Daliry on. Mash, Fat Mash ailitkwaartc. lmn Dillon an "There will all fishermen of West Prince County in Palmer Road Hall, Wedne-day. Nov. as at mo p.i'n. '0 discuss possible changes in ronaq-vstion laws relative to local fisheries. be a meeting of Hampered in Nfld. Trade WINDSOR. N. S., (CP) - The Hunts County Federation of Agri- culture said Saturday lhal. lack of transportation to Newfoundland discouraged sale of Nova Scotin cattle on the "growing" market there. At its annual meeting the federation passed a resolution asking that the provincial and federal governments see what they could do about providing better transportation to the is- land province. Representing P.E.l. liberal Women Al National Meeting OTTAWA. Nov. 22 - (Special)- Liberel women of Prince, Edward Island will be represented at the silver anniversary meeting here this week of the National Feder- ation of Liberal Women of Canada, by Mrs. G. S. Inlnan of Montague, who arrived in Ottawa. on Satur- day. This week-end, Mrs. Inman, who is president of the P. E. I. Lib- eral Women's Federation, was con- gratulated by national party work- ers on the very effective part play- Oontinued on page 15, col.-Lil: LONDON, (CF)-Scientists were staggered Seturdsy to learn that for the last. 40 years they have heen victims of a gigantic hoax- the "Piltdown M " is a fake. Someone had put over the most outrageous hoax in paleontological annals. famed Plltdown Men belong to 5 Nth century ape, man who lived 100.000 yea ago. A scientific report p . hcd Saturday by the British Museum said chemical analysis proved the jawbone and teeth were "deliber- ate fakes" of the supposedly fos- silized skull. Startling Disclosure This startling disclosure solves a riddle of human ancestry which has baffled scientists since the relics were found. Hundreds of Breeze Takes Away Snug NEW YORK, (AP) -A brisk southeast breeee late Sunday thrust aside a. blanket of smog and amaze which had hung over New York City for live days and replaced it with a curtain of clean, moist fog. The fog, as had the smog, crip- pled alrport operations and slowed highwdy traffic to a. crawl. But for minions of New Yonkers who had hacked and coughed fin nearly a week, it ems a good and welcome trade. Only the coastal areas received immediate relief from the smog-- s, mixture of smoke and fog-and amaze, a. mixture of smoke and base. Conditions showed little im- provement inland. with northern New Jersey and Rockland and Put- nsm counties in New York still amended by throat-tingling atmo- spheric mixtures Sunday night. The wind. reaching velocities of 16 to no miles and hour-was given moat of the credit for breaking the smog's grip locally. lielucian-lily Drawn lnio U. S. Spy Hunt OTTAWA. (OP)-Canadian cab- inet ministers, reluctantly drawn into the Washington congressional committee spy hunting activities, worked overtime this week-end. They were studying a second re- quest from the senate aub-commlt- tee on internal security for access to Igor Gouzenloo, Ruuian em- bassy clerk who9led his post in Ottawa eight years ago with in- WASHINGTON, (ATP)-Gtato Secretary John Foster Dulles Sunday was asked by Senate probera of Communism in gov- ernment to relay another mes- sage to Canadian authorities in support of a. request for per- mission to question Igor Gouzenko, former soviet code clerk at Ottawa. formation and documents that sis.-rted the great espionage trials of 1948. A first request was rejected a week ago on the grounds that Gouzenlfo had revealed all he knew eight years ago and that every particle of infonnation was transmitted to the United Stiles authoritlefl since 1946 Gouzenko has been living in an Ontario town under an assumed name and under con- stant guardianship of the RCMP for his own protection. He was given Canadian citizenship and lives quietly with his wife and two children. External Affairs Minister Pear. son. who interrupted a speaking tour through Niagara Falls and New York, returned to Ottawa sat- Th b d . .' . 9 jaw one Ml teeth M ”"'lfoi'ced to the conclusion that the and not to al o3rTii'nuc-cl-aT13EETi37&o1." 5 Scientists Staggered As Gigantic Hoax Revealed : books and essays have been writ- ten on the subject. For the skull of the Piltdown Man, with its essentially luimnn cranium hrziin-ruse and typically apelike Jawbone anti teeth fllfl not fit: in with accepted theories of human evolution. Bewlldered anthopologists were Piitdown Man was a strange ape- man throwback and an inexplic- offshoot from the main line of man's development. Charles Dawson, lawyer and amateur nntiquary, dug the Pill- (l0Wfl relics otit of in Sussex irra- vel.plt lirftveen 1911 and 19l.'l. After a few initial doulits, many anthropologists hailed them as Ia historic pointer to man's early history. Deliberate Plant Now Dr. K. P. Oakley of the British Museum and Oxford Un:- verslty professors J. E. Weiner and W. E. lo Gros Clark report. chemical tests prove beyond doubt that the vital jawbone of Dawson's discovery was a delib- erate plant faked up from the skull of an ape that died an un- timely death at 10. The epeis jawhone and its can- lne tooth found with it, they said, had been ariifically stained to match the appearance of skull fragments found earlier. in addi- tion, they said, the tooth had been nrtifically pared down to disguise its original shape. The investigators said the cran- ium itself still stands as a gun- uine foasll. But they put its age at 50,000 years, half iho prev- iously widely held minimum. Starts Controversy The exposure started a bitter controversy raging over Dawson. who died in 1916. A monument to him stands near the gravel pit in which he found fame. The London Times declared that if a scientist turned outta he t.hn hoaxer "lt would be but one more instance of desire for fame since money was certainly not here the object leading a scholar into dis- honostyZ"- Ramfl, (ATP)-The Food and Agriculture Organization FAO said Saturday that falling prices and mounting stocks of unsold food. particularly in North America. threaten to widen the gap between the world's few well-fed and the many hungry. on the eve of a three-week con- ference of the on-nation United Nations Organimtion, it disclosed that its letut surveys shows a trend back to "the dilemma of the '80s, with excess food co-existing, with hul1IGl'-" its exports urged that "a more i Gap Between Well-F ed And Hungry May Widen selective approach to agricultural expansion" present policy of mere over-all in- creasing of food output. quickly replace the sessions of the seventh world conference of FAO bqin Monday. The delegates will take up for study one of the moat optimistic sets of figures yet published by FAO. They show that for the first. time since the war, world total food production has slightly pass- ed the world's increase in popu- lation-meening that. per oiipito, here is a little more to eat. By Bob Joyce Canadian Press Staff Writer MONTREAL, (CP)- Montreal's tram and bus workers went back to work Sunday, ending a. 24-hour wildcat. strike that tied-up public transportation in the city saturday. Buses and street-cars began rolling shortly after 3:30 a. m.- regular starting hour for Sunday's reduced services. By noon the Montreal Transportation Commis- sion reported services nearly nor- mal on most routes and said they would be on schedule today. Montreaiis Wildcat Bus And Tram Strike Settiedw The break in the work stoppage came suddenly Saturday night at a union meeting at which union chiefs bluntly told workers the strike was illegal. They warned them they would have only them- selves to blame if in flouting the law they undermined the union. The workers are seeking higher wages and better working condi- tions. Early speakers at the four-hour meeting were shouted down and it was not until shortly before mid- night that the men agreed to re- tum to work. n.E'iEsT.3yT& Building Al Maplewood Early Sunday morning fire tot- ally destroyed a building on the farm of Mr. Matthias Malone of Mapiewood, near Kelly's Cross. The building which was an old dwelling house had been renovat- ed and remodeled to serve as s store-house and contained some- thing liver six hundred bags of seed potatoes, a large quantity of turnip.-; and about it hundred and fifty bushels of wheat. A valuable act of carpenter tools was also destroyed. The fire was thought to have started from a boiler used to boil pig food although this was being used early in the afternoon and everything seemed to be in order when Mr. Mnlorle was last in the building about seven-thirty on Saturday evening. The fire was ciisrovr-red about 4.30 Sunday morning and as the building was all ablaze nothing could be done to save either it. or its contents. However, the neigh- bours were aroused and quickly gathered. Through their efforts the main barns on the premises were saved although a straw stack near the large barn was ignlghted by the flying embers. The owner estimated the con- tents of the building at about one thousand dollars. He added that the small amount of insur- ance ('ul'l'l9d would practically M' '. H negligible in comparsion to the loss sustained. . Liner Struck Closing Down , , orrawa, (CP) - The British B Flood Mission, establlaherl in 1946 to take care of the many food ...... agreements between Canada and the United Kingdom, is closing KINGSTON. Jamaica, (Reuters) down. -The 15,900-ton liner Gothic, with its closing, Sir Andrew which will take the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh on their Com- monwealth tour, was struck by lightning during the voyage from London, it was disclosed when she arrived here Sunday. There were no casualties or damage but the lookout man on" duty in the cl-ov."s nest. on the: foremost. where the bolt struck, was shaken. Opposition T6 EDC In France Gaining Ground PARTS, (Reuters) - The mn,i0T' foreign affairs debate in the Froneh assembly has shown clear- ly that opposition to the EurnP'; can Defence Community and other plans for sacrificing French sovereignty to a West Europe "auperstate" in gaining ground. The debate, which has already taken up four days in the as- gsmhly was dramatically Inter- rupted Friday by tho rollaPl" from exhaustion of Foreign Min- ister Georges Rirlnult. He was re- ported much better Sunday. The debate will he resumed Tuesday morning and will and Premier some time that night. Josr-ph Lanlcl will be the last star orator and is expected to take a less strong line in favor of the European Army idea than was taken by Bldauli. lIf.Al;lMllL-Titus-CIYTH on Lisawicx, ilhelland Islands. (Reuters). -- seventy islanderil of nuts, so miles from here have been cut. off for so days by nice and high seas raging north of Scotland. Gigantic waves MVP made it. impossible for boats to get, through. Claims Air Speed Mark Of 1,327 Miles An Hour LOS ANGELES, (CF) - A sell- satlonal air speed record of 1,327 miles an hour was announced Sat- .urda y. ' Test pilot Scott Crossfield said he flew the Douglas Skyrocket re- search plane at twice the speed of sound Friday in a,flight in which he corkscrewed the craft at top speed to test her strength and power to manoeuvre. "I rolled her around 300 degrees twice-and that was about all the manoeuvres we had time for," he told newspapermen. The flight, high above the southern California desert, lasted 11 minutes from the time the tiny Skyrocket dropped from a B-29 mother plane, until it glided down onto the dry lake that is Edwards Air Force Base. The swept - wing needle - nosed plane was launched at about 32,000 feet, and climbed to an altitude "in excess of 60,000." Gilded Back Crossfield said it burned up its three tons of fuel-liquid oxygen and aicoholAin three minutes, at tho rate of about 200 gallons a minute. The remainder of the flight, back to Edwards, was an eight- mtiiute glide. The National Advisory Commit- tee for Aeronautics, which is using the plane for high-altitude. high-, speed research, said the top speed was mach 2.01, 01' slightly more than twice the speed of sound. Crossfielrl said Friday's mark was achieved in almost level flight. British Food Jones, energetic director who has guided the mission since the out- set, ls leaving Canada to return to Britain where he plans to re- tire to his country home in Wilt- shire, near London. For Sir Andrew the Canadian job is the last in a varied career of services for the United Kingdomp government in West Africa, Oer-, many and Canada. I Sir Andrew said closing of the British Food Mission is the result of the gradual process of turning from bulk buying to private trad- ing which has been taking place over the last two years. The change, he says, is one of method, not necessarily of quantity of purchase. Small Tornado Reported In Florida PANAMA OITY, Fla, (AP) -- A small tomado hit rural Woodfville. 2'! miles northwest of here Sunday morning injuring 21 persons and destroying six houses. The Red Cross in Atlanta re- ported that another storm struck near Broussard, Fla., during the night, destroying or heavily chm- aging 22 houses. The only person seriously hurt in the Florida twister was an un- identified child who suffered a brain injury, h was reported. A number of automobiles and trucks were turned over and dam- aged. All power lines in the area were down. ATOM CHIEF DIES IDNDON, (Routersi A Warsaw radio has announced the death of Stefan Plenkovaky, who was put in charge of Polandts atomic re- search in 1947. Pienkovaky was an observer at the 1946 Bikini atomic Has Shelled Plans For Big Four Meeting By Stanley Priddle . LONDON, (Reuters) -- Sir Win- ston Churchill's plan for personal talks with Soviet Premier Georgi Malenkov in Moscow la dominating all speculation here about the Ber- muda. conference next month. British officials no longer deny reports that their Prime Minister has shelved his proposal for a Big Four meeting at the highest level. Churchill would have raised this proposal at the scheduled Big Four meeting in July which was post- poned because of his illness, Now many officials feel Chur- By WALTER. Ci-RAY Canadian Press Staff Writer TORONTO, (OP)-A 30-year-old former newspaper man and school teacher was elected leader of the 0017' party in Ontario Saturday. Donald C. MacDonald, of Ottawa, national organizer and treasurer of the COT” party, was chosen by 373 delegates at 3. leadership con- vention as successor to E.B. Jol- liffe, provincial leader since 1942 who retired in August. He won out over Andrew Brewin, Tm-onto lawyer, and Fred Young, political action representative of the United Steelworkers (C10- CCL) for the 56,000-a-year post. M, J. Coldwell, national OCF chill, in an effort to salvage a piece of his plan, will seek the ap- proval of President Eisenhower and French Premier Joseph Laniel to' "go it alone" to Moscow. This tie-Q velopment is bound to color all the Bermuda discussions on the West's relations with the Communist world. Has Peace Hopes Churchill, a staunch defender of Anglo-American unity, would never make any move which he thought might jeopardize relations between the two English-speaking nations. But the Prime Minister, who will be 70 next week, has long hoped that before his political career ends he can lead his lia- tion to permanent peace as he led it in war. He feels informal talks at the top level can do no damage and might help to chip the ice from East-West relations. Preliminary exchanges between London, Paris and Washington last week show that relations with the Communists in the Far East will be a key subject at the Bermuda talks Deena-B. Churchill believes, according to diplomatic quarters, that there is still room for diplo- matic manoeuvring with the Com- muniats in the East as opposed to the rigid East-West deadlock in Europe. Late Closing Date MONTREAL, (CPl -- Steamship officials predicted Saturday that "if the sun sticks around a few more days" the port of Montreal will have its latest closing in many years. Unseasonably warm weather also prevails in the St. Lawrence canal systems, where navigation :isI scheduled to close Dec. 5. ship- pers said that if the balmy breezes continue these waterways also may ron:.ain open beyond that date. Despite a slight upswing in ship- ments of grain to Europe, the her- bor still ls congested with 18 canal ahipa waiting to discharge nearly. 1,500,000 bushels of grain. Most. elevators are filled because of a slow export movement, but' some additional space was found in a new elevator extension at Trois-Rivieres. N. S. Innkeepers Annual tjeeling HALIFAX, (OP)-J.R. Freestone of Sydney was be-elected ptreaid-ent of the lnnkeepers Guild of Nova Scotia at the guild's annual meet- ixu Saturday. other officers: HOWNTd 3. Elliott. Halifax, vice-president: George Amour, Antigoniah, second vice- prealdsnt; Mrs. Victor Barclay. Halifax, acting secretary: and H. W. Phinney, Lake Kedgemakooge. ti'ca.surer. The lnnkespers endorsed a na- tional sefaty campaign that the traditional "one for the road" at private and public parties should be a cup of hot coffee. They also protested the elimina- tion of the crown from provincial highway signs. a move made by the highways department to make leader, said after the election that the national executive would meet. in Ottawa at the end of the year to discuss the appointment of a new national organizer. The posi- tion carries an annual salary of s-L000. Mr. MacDonald was born in British Columbia and raised on a farm in Quebec. He taught school, worked on the Montreal Gazette and served overseas with the Royal Canadian Navy in the Sec- ond World War. He has been a full-time OCF worker ince 1946. He unsuccessfully contested the Kootenay East riding in the Aug 10 federal election. Rent Control Plea In a banquet address Saturday night, Mr. MacDonald said the CCF movement in Canada. "with all its weaknesses is a giant among the group of socialist pygmies in the new world." Saturday afternoon, convention delegates passed a resolution call- ing for a reduction in interest rates on housing loans to not more than 3?; per cent. Another reso- lutlon urged the provincial gov- ernment to continue rent controls for as long as a housing shortage exists. After an appeal by Arnold Peters, Tmimins delegates, 8570 was collected from the convention to aid striking hardrook miners in northern Ontario and Quebec. Ontario CCF Party Elects New Leader irederal-Provincial Agricultural Talks To Open BY HAROLD MORRISON Caziadtan Press Staff Writer OTTAWA, tcP)-Demands for federal cattle price props, eotior: to increase the flow of cash to prairie grain growers and bigger outlets for expanding dairy produc- tion likely will be voiced at the annual federal-provincial agricul- tural conference opening today. The three-day conference in tha House of Commons railway com- mittee room will be attended by federal and provincial agriculture ministers, heads of organized farm groups and a. battery of federal farm experts. They will review the farmers achievements during 1950 endthen scollr the horizons to forecast Just how well farmers-and consumers tooemay do in 1954. spokesman for organized farm- ers Sunday said farmei's' positions, in some cases. are far from satis- factory. Dniry men are particularly cori- cerned over declining prices for secondary milk-milk destined for concentrated milk factories. Though the Ontario cheese aur- plus has been eliminated by the recent sale of cheddar to the Uni- ted Kingdom, productlon of milk is likely to increase in 1954. em- phasizing the need for an expen- aion of domestic and foreign mor- kets. some major outlets have been developed in Europe and Latin America, but United States curbs on dairy imports have drastically curtailed the U. 8. market. JAMAICA TREMOR KINGSTON. Jamaica. fCP)- An earth tremor shook Kingston and the eastem sections of Jamaica Saturday night but -caused no damage or casnialtiea. WASHINGTON, (AP) -Senator Alexander Wiley (Rep.-Wis.) says that despite adverse reaction ab- road congressional investigations of alleged Communist infiltration into the U. 5. government "are not going to be stopped by any- thing." But senator Michael Mansfield fDem.-Mont.) predicts that if the Republicans try to roll out for pol- ifical effect a series of exposes similar to the Harry Dexter White case they may keep Congren in such an uproar that vital legisla- tion will be lost Wiley, who heads the Senate foreign relations committee, said in a stateanent Saturday that many strong anti-Com niet leaders ab- road "are obviously deeply kep- tical. to say the least. of of: con- gressional investigations" Exploited By nae. He said this is being exploited by Oommunists and is contribut- ing to the ”wldening gulf" in Al- lied co-opera-t.ion at a critical time. elected to the House of Commons in 1.926 and was re-elected again the signs more legible. the following year anti in 1901'). mysterious animal. believed to be A panther, is sought near here af- ter terrorizing school children and farmers. Armed farmers are hunting for the animal, the general description of which fits that of e panther. once believed extinct in eastern Canada. Traces of the animals were found in New Brunswick in less although none has been cap- tured or mot. Jean Bird, a young school girl. rushed for the sheltor of herachool when the animal chased her. she said the animal lay panting out- side for more than an hour be- fore leaving. leafs. Another child, Winston Nichol- Mysterious Animal In son, reported spotting a grey- brown animal under a tree. He said it was big.as e collie dog but thinner and with a long tail. The animal did not attack as the youngster ran away. asverei older persons in the area also reportod sighting a sim- ilar animal. Douglas Hildebrand spotted it crossing I road. Bruce Wright, a director of the Northwest Wild Life Institute, said he plans to go into thh area this week-end to Join the seerch and take ' salons of the footprints of the annual. The last panther shot. in New Bi-unndck was in iii! and the In- ” ”""l!Ea' P0" lacing Ahead With Hunt IF or Reds Despite Criticism Jone Foi.Ks'9afca..uP " ' Oink faouoiss uaful ' TOR.ON'I'0. (OP)-Minimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Mal .-?1ni'ltlnllNl on-iprgrls, col. 6 t J :1 RCCCEWR-SC" Edmonton . 20 .19 P c h F Calgary . N 44 Ill Regina .. 6 46 R f . Toronto . .. 44 66 en row South lites own -0 on Montreal . . as M T " Quebec . 30 - UTTAWA. ICP)-Dr. Martin J, sum, John a 55 3l.”3'.'5i..”.'..i'??.YllSh.3l'5: l.”.2'.?.' Mame to 51 i ' Halifax . 5 51 321....” ..?Z.”.”'.2'"?."J. ?.".'. sT.i"iZf." Chmomim is 39 5" following is lrngthpy illnessll Hle, Sydney . 0 ' 0 N S3 was '78. Dr. Maloney was first 8'" John 5) Nlldt t '” '14 HALIFAX, (CV?) -- Dull, miltl uoather is forecast for the Mari- iimes Monday, but a few sunny intervals can he expected in the afternoon. the Weather office here says. Beg-ional forecasts: Prince Ecl- ward island, eastern N. B. omin- tles, lower at. John River valley: Cloudy with a few sunny inton- vala Monday afternoon. llliidol with light winds. Low-high II Charlottetown so and 55. Monctmr so and M, Fredericton 45 and s1. saint John all end 58. Upper st. John river valley, Bay of Cttaleur: Cloudy with a few showers; milder; light winds increasing during morning in south 15. Low-high at Edmund- Mon 45 and 55. Cnmpbclllon 40 and 52. nay of Fundy: Light southerly winds; cloudy with bus and fog patches. Vlsihllity sight miles lowering in fog patches to near sore; very mild. High this today at Charlottetown atituta wants a specimen for study purposes and museum display. at 12.51 P. M. Sun rises t-ndsy at 121 A. M. Illfl sets at 4.38 P. M. -