MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN -A-it ,.,,as in relatively on! ,,,.t:'; wii:c nine! in tuition. :, r.E.l. limo. other Provinces to T emu" cliarlottotown, laminar-lids 315.00 per anniun. lllsowlisn um U.8.A. 811.00 per uinuin.) , v”' cover. Prince Edwifrd Island Like the new 's ape Read by Eveybody CI-IARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. FRIDAY, MAY 15, 1953 That may happen to all which can happen to one. Maxims ' 0? A MERE MAN 16 PAGES The Guardian. Five Cents Morning Dally Founded 1801. WASHINGTON, (AP)-President Emnhnuter Thursday rebuffed Bri- "mp Clement Attlee in tl: row M, United States peace aims and prodded Russia anew to back up its pence talk with valid deeds. so far. Eisenhower said. he has seen no T'VlClCI)C6 of good faith by the Russians. The president. at his press con- ierence, dircctly challenged Att- lec's assertion in the British House of Commons that some elements in the 1' S. do not want peace in Korea liise-niiower's Points Eisenhower said: ”I hale met no one in America ma does not want peace." Eisrnhoivcr also: i. Dccllncd to go along-at least lot the present-with Attlee's pro- pmal that Red China be admitted to the United Nations after a Ko- rean llYllllSllC9. 2 Sui!-p0dnllf'd talk of a serious my ili'll Britain over Far East pnlirv. 1-:i,vilig he does not believe it is as wide as it nppeai's-dea- pite a storm of congressional criti- cism directed at Attlee, Labor party loader, and Prime Minister Churchill. 3. Backed up the state depart- ments i”lPClIll'1lllOI1 that any con- lcrence of big power leaders should wait evldelit:e of the sincerity of Moscow's pence gestures. Turning to Churchill's call for Coming Events "Donlt miss "Happy Valley". Kingston Hall. tonight. "Dance at. CC:-ordon Lodge every Friday night. "Dance Howe'l Hall. Beach Friday. May 15. Brackley "Dance at Sandy's Friday. May lhih Blirltc's Orchestra. Yellow Call leaving 0 and 9.30 for Sandy's. "Dance st. Peters Legion Hall. Chalsson's Or- "Dtiitrn. tuwcll Hall. Monday. Mar lR'li. Morrlsey-MacDonald Orchestra. "Don Messier Dance. Beaver l-fall. liontagxze. Friday, May 15th. Ad- muslon 50 cents. "Dancc Mermaid school Mon- th)". Mav iii. Bucli and Burhoe orchestra. Lunches free. "Dance every Friday night. south Rustlco Hall. Cnntcen ser- vice. Charlottetonlans Orchestra. "Show, Moirell I-fall. Friday Ind Saturday. Hiawatha star-ring Vllrnenh Edwards and Yvette . Y- "riecrixv Valley Players will WI!-nt lhmr play in Cherry Val- lw hall Friday, May 15th. cur. min 8.30. Suite of lunches. w"TliP Nlnunt llyan play. which '” in ii" held Monday. May 13. mybg.” P"-Hponed until Monday mzllorth Rustlco Monday. May pm; "15 rim. KlIll(Orn'5 four-act mid-V Admission 50 cents. Sale of m;'Brmklcv W. 1. presents two "1 Plays and specialties, Wheat- Rli'erllrill.M d M 13 A"9lFP5PmcnezerolA17.aIY' 5!” th- !o;"g;:'fi't' Thursday, May 215: C 12'” Valley three-act play. enmudfillln illcross he Hiii'. in ll . John W. A. Ausp cos of St. at '1 We3h';dC0rra.n Ban Players in mm 5 Community Hall, May 'wpo"5”9d by the West Cove- - I. Sale of lunches. "3l'iow M. Ind so 1'13 "l M. Stewart Friday I P'1llmlil.V at 8.30. Aaron Slick nth mniipkln Crick-Technicolor ah 8:009 Htifrglnitr ,:lnnl Younl. . 0 er erri i. This h ' ""1 funny picture. In MT . ,g?:h3;vD1nncr and Dance at .,,.,,.,,' Refine-iday. May rain, 0 in Emblers, Dunstaffnage - Mid team supporters. ' one s . ym m”;:::rlivml'l(l,:ll by Tuesday gm?” Hay seed 70-lb-l0. . . '::;”T1y Red and Alaike. This wn, ,0,'Fg6l;red and Canadian . ,2 Mmzh .LCasb only. Also we om T3 ale Red. Abegwolt .. H, Sdd gitnothy No. l. Mgngel, OM" A" ll soon prices. 1.). ' "13 Brm. Central Eisenhower Rebuffs Attlee; Prods Russia To Back Up Peace Talk an early cold-war peace confernicc with the Russians. Eisenhower said he has no objection to such I conference. I-le personally would do anything that gave promise of achieving progress toward peace. However, he added there must first be an advance indication of good faith all around. So far, he said. the Russians have given no concrete evidence of being willing to take steps to- ward pence. Jail mill Summerside Four prisoners escaped from the Prince County Jail at Summerside early today and two were re-cap- tured some time later during I break into a service station, it was reported. Names of the prisoners and de- tails of how they escaped were not immediately available Town Constables arry lvlc.:l(a,v and Keith Champion were reported to have arrested two of the escap- ees at the Jim MacLenn service Station at the railway crossing in Summerslde East. Another two men. presumably the other prison- ers, evaded custody at the service station. The R.C.M.P. have been called in to aid the search. it was report- ed. The break was believed to have occurred shortly after midnight. Parliament Prorogucd Early Today OTTAWA. (GP)-The seventh and last. session of Canada's 2lst Parliament was prorugued early Friday with a speech from the throne which tipped off the country to an early election. The speech said it is anticipated this session will be the final one of the present Parliament-the first time that has been nailed down formally-though it has been generally known. The 5.000-word speech-longest in years-was read in the senate by Mr. Justice Patrick Kerwin of the Supreme Court of Canada, act- ing in the absence of Rt. Hon. Vincent Massey, governor-general. "It is anticipated," the speech said, "that the session now con- cludlng will be the final session of the 21st parliament." Ballerina Becomes Doctor of Letters LEEDS, Eng, (Rt-uiersi -- Prlma ballerina Margot Fonteyn became. the first dancing doctor of letters Thursday, She received the honorary de- gree from the Princess Royal, aunt of the Queen and chancellor of Leeds University. 'tDoctor" Fonteyn said: ”There is something a little funtnstic. about having bestowed upon me the de- gree of doctor of probably the most illiterate of alll the bslicriniu you have ever heard. LONDON. (Reuters) - Clement Attlee said Thursday the speech he made Tuesday in the House of Commons was not an attack on the United states, its people or its constitution. In an interview. the Labor party leader said he has no Oom- munist sympathies. Referring to statements made by U. 8. senator Joseph Mocarthy, Attlee sold: "The British Labor party and I myself have been vigorously op- posing the Communist party in this country ever since its formation -long before senator Mocartthy was ever heard of." Attlee and the Wisconsin M- publtcsn senator have carried on I running trans-Atlantic battle of former prime minister made his commons add:-cu. letters. I amisaskatchewan S5'14.500,000 Attlee Denies Speech Was Attack On The U.S. words since Tuesday when the Britain should apologise for it." by Attleeisdid olalxmf tlgst dur- ; m g n M gnu-yea nut in: the cv war as ad vis- BhOn(0V:l'n'l:::(I: of thlo U. B. is such lted Sphin. hobnobhsd with Oom- thst Congress can frustrate the munists and Elven President's policies and upset my aim salute!- N:w Crisis Develops in Korean Truce Talltsl Reds llejecl New Truce Plan jlnd U. N. Charges By George A. Mt-Arthur MUNSAN, Korea. (AP!-Angry Communist rejection of a new truce plan' and United Nations charges that Allied psrisoncrs have been spirited to Manchurla brought the revived armistice talks to a crisis today. Alter the most bitter session at Panmunjom since the negotia- tions re-opened nearly three weeks ago, the two sides could agree on but one thing-to meet again. Lt.-Gen. William K. Harrison. senior Allied delegate, charged at Thursday's session that undis- closed numbers of UN command ”personnel" had been marched off illegally to "peace" and "reform" camps in Manchurla. Calls Charges Groundlesu Gen. Nam Ii, who heads the Communist delegation. retorted that the charges were "ground- less" and "unworthy of refutation." Harrison insisted that he had "irrefutable proof" that thc camps existed. Presumably, some of the proof came from sick and wounded prisoners exchanged re- cently. Any move. of prisoners to China would violate the rules of war. Red China. maintains it is not in the war but has only "volunteers" lighting. Harrison brought up his charges that the Reds had by the treat- ment of prisoners red-uced war- fare "to a new viciousness" alter Nam 11 acldly announced that the Reds "resolutely reject" the new Allied prisoner exchange plan. New Allied Plan This plan was worked out care- fully. presumably in ftill con- sullatlon with all Allied nations fighting in Korea. It proposed status of all prisoners refusing to return to Red rule. The disposi- tion of the key issue blocking a. truce. The quick Communist rejection indicated the Reds were not only forewarned that the plan was they would not draw. Official re- action from the Red governments usually takes longer than one clay. -Photo By Sears Cpl. Alfred King Charge N. B. Couple With Roliliery llOYT. N. R, (CF)--Frcderlck Rel-kwilii, 21, Saint John taxi driver, lziid a clizirge of robbery Thursrlay nirzhl. against a couple who znvr-. their names as Mr. and Mrs. Allen Jarios. 33. and 38, of iGeary. N. H. They were remand- in essense the release to civilian 00 if” llmrlnif 0"?” l'l'”'lW?5dd.l'- Bcckwilli said that alter hiring the taxi at Saint John Wednesday these 48.500 prisoners 15 night the r0iiplP nrtiercd him out nf the car ll miles from Gear)". The man had aaidf ”ThIs is R holdup. i want your car." and hail lntlicnted he had I pun coming but had lines behind which his pocket. Police arrested the couple Thursday at A Fred:-rirtnn hotel. lThey were not arm:-rl at. the tuna. US. Senator Farm Income T Down In Canada But Up in P.E.l. OTTAWA. iCPi-Ontario farm- ers bore the brunt of the drop as fai'mers' net income declined to 31.949.900.000 last year from the peak of 52.188.600.000 in 1951. In Ontario. net farm income de- creased by more than sl20.000,000 to S454.600,000 from I5'f6.400.000. the Bureau of Statistics reported JThursday. l Totals for other provinces with ;last year's figures in brackets: If Albertit S372,300,000 0401.300,- j000t: Quebec 526'7.100,000 (5333.- 400.000l: British Columbia s48,.'l00.- l000l is6l,600.000); New Brunswick, 534,400,000 is36,500,000i; NovaSco- tin. 819,200,000 627,000,000); Man- itoba. 5l68.000.000 fSl80,800.000l; (3553.- Island 800.000i: Prince Edward 320,000,000 iIl7.tl00.000l. agreements he ma a. He com- pared this with the British sys- tem where the prime minister and cabinet are directly responsible to Parliament and where the 80V- ernment. can be turned out by losing ii. vote of confidence. Attlee also urged that other members of the United Nations be represented at the Panmunjom truce talks and any wilder settle- ment thereafter. He claimed some "elements" in the United states were opposed to a settlement in the Far East. In the U. 8. Senate today, Mc- Carthy called the Attlee speech I "cheap, uncalled for. fantastic at- tack upon the president and poo- plo of the United States and said He challenged the points mldr Communist- McCarthy In lilltJ3pl:1HAl3ElEl( (in Attlee WASHINGTON, iAP) - Senator Joseph Mccnrthy iRcp.,Wis.i said Thursday that if Britain wants to pull out of the lighting in Korea lether"wlthdraw and be damned." "Then I say let's sink cvery ac- cursed ship carrying materials that results in the death of Amer- ican boys," he shouted. Angercd by former Prime Minia- ,ter Attlee's statement in the Brit- ish House of Commons Tiicstlay ,thiil'. there are element. in the iUnitled States who do not. want peace in Korea. McCarthy launch- led a bitter attack on Attlee in a Senate speech. Makes Fhorges He also charged thnt Chinese Communists own "A sizcriblc num- ber" of ships flying the ..isli flag and trading with Red China. The value of British trade with China.he said. jumped from 3207.- 000 last December to more than 33,000,000 in January. "lf the British are ll')'ll1l'I to blackmail us into accepting Com- .munist terms on the ground that ithey will withdraw from Korea if we don't, then I say 'witlidrnw and be damm:d'." Mccni-thy said. "This nation has the guts. the strength" to go it. alone in Korea if necessary, the senator added. Senator John Sherman Cooper (Hop, Ky.) who took the floor after Mocarthy said he was "tremen- dously iaturberl" by Attiee's speech because he thought it hurt the chances of peace in Korea. "But lmmodcrate and rash state- ments made in the ....,.::s of the United States would also .-,f'fect the chances of peace." he said. Mcoai-thy said Attlee . cred "one of the most insulting speech- as ever made in the legislative body of A recipient nation against an ally which has been pouring out her economic life blood for practically every other nation on earth." C "The American people are en- titled to an apology for this cheap. uncalled-for. fanta.. . ack upon the President and the people of the United States. "What. shocked ..i: was that no member of the majority party arose tocontut what he had said." Mccarthy did not refer to Att- les'a tstement that "one wonders" whether Eisenhower or Mccarthy himself wields the greater power do us. foreign poll-y. Retiring After Atlvenluroust Career With Mounted Police "-"ii A man who fought a gun battle with the infamous "Mad Trapper" - in the frozen wastes of the Far North is retiring May 31 from the service of the R. C. M. Police. He is Cpl. Alfred King, who for the past five years has been in charge of the Borden Detachment. A nirtive of England he moved to this country with his parents and settled in Ottawa. Ha contin- ued to live in the Capital until 1926 when he Joined the R.C.M.P. On completion of his training his nrst posting was to Yorkton, Sask.. for several months when the urge to ”go north" made him vol- unteer. Up near the top of the world he served at Dawson, Yukon Territ- ory ,and later with "it: Detach- ment at Melville. There it. was necessary to make all patrols by saddle horse or dog team and on his rounds he made many friends among the goldminers. As remind- ers of those days he has many souvenirs made from nuggets which he panned himself. Northlanrl Service Then in 1029 he was stationed 'at Hnzleton. 30., but the lure of the northland was too strong and once again he volunteered for ser- vice there and eventually arrived at. Akiavlk, in the Northwest Ter- ECYPT TIGHTENS ECONOMIC SCREWS IN CANAL ZONE Mayne STEM me Of Blockade Of ' British Forces , I CAIRO, (AP)mEgypt has tight-, ended the economic screws on the, British forces she wants to drivel out of the Suez canal zone. New! bitterness boiled up in tho. olil riispuis. over control of the Ill'EllE-' gin waterway. l Premier Mohammad Naguibisi cabinet Thursday imposed , trade l restrictions barring all commer-l cial transactions with the Britishl in the canal zone except. by al special approval from the "ap-l propriate authorities." Long-Ran go Supply The order requires special per-. mission from the Egyptian supply ministry to sell the British food, alcoholic beverages, building mat- erlals and other necessities. If no permission is granted, Britain will be forced once again-as she has during past flare-ups-to ship in from long distances the supplies usually purchased from Egyplans to keep her 80,00-strong zone garrison operating. The new restrictions are viewed by Egyptian political circles as the start of A blockade against the British forces. Prcvloiis Boycott A similar boycott was applied soon after Egypt's renunciation in October. 195i. of the old treaty permitting British trops to guard the canal. The renunciation and Britain's refusal to pull out led in violence that cost. the lives of ritory. Here for months he was in charge of a motor launch on pat- rol between Aklavik and Herschel Island with an Indian guide nam- ed only "Lazai'us” as his sole com- panion. La7.ai-us was an excellent guide and a great 1101;) with 3. dog team but in the boat in II rough sea he was more hindrance than help due to fright. It was while Cpl. King w sta- tioned with the Arctic Red River Detachment that. he. encountered the Mad Trapper. He was a man ,by the name of Johnston of whom lthe Indians complained that he irobbed their traps. and of whom they were in terror. I-lowever, before he could search Continued on page 8, Col. 4 Assault Begins On Mt. . Everest Today KATMANDU, Nepal, rReuters)- Today is D-day for the British ex- pedition on Mt. Everest, highest mountain in the world. Weather permitting, a tiny group of Britons and Nepalses porters will lgather in the shadow of the giant lmountain for the assult. They hope to reach the top of the 29,000-foot "mother of the snows" within the next three weeks. be- fore the June monsoon. The final ”dasli"-the perilous, inch-by-inch climb to the summit- will be made b.i' A small picked team from a filial ramp Just below the top. The final assault mu-t come be- fore June 5, when the monsoon is expected. There usually are a few fine days before the. monsoon when the 3.9-Bllll. will be possible. Ship "c:;.'..T..:.I; All Warned of Iceburgs MONTREAL, ICPI -Ship captains have been warned by the depart- ment of transport": siiziinl service to "proceed with cniitinn" because of massive icebcrgs and floes a- round areas leading into the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Scores of icebergs have been re- ported by masters of inland ships. They also reported several station- ary "Radar targets" presumed to be icebergs or grnwlcrs. Captains were asked Thursday to notify the commander of the in- ternational ice patrol which is Charting the positions of the ice. Vital Statistics O'l'f'AWA. tt'i'Pi -- There were fewer birth: and marriages, but more deaths, in Canada during February than in the same month last year, the Bureau of Statistics reported Thursday. Births decreased to 27,078 com- pared with ZRM7 in February, i952, with declines in Newfound- land. New Brunswick. Quebec, Manitoba and Alberta oulweighing increases in the other five prov- inces. The Fe-burary decline in mar- riages was 0.325 from 0,370. All provinces except Newfoundland. and Alba:-ts registered increases. Deaths were higher diirlng Feb- ruary of this year in all provinces except Newfoundland. British Coi- umbia, The all-Canada total ad- ll?!) Egyptians and 34 Britons ln lthree months. l Egypt's clue! of staff, Lt.-Col. lGamal Badel Nasser, has predict- ed 5! popular uprising against the British unless they withdraw from llllb Suez canal area by mid-Aug- lust. Rrllaln has expressed will- linizness to withdraw her troops. liut insists on keeping 5.000 Fri- lll5h ti-clinicians to operate the Ihasn. The Elzypliana maintain the lnrwralinn could be carried on lwith only 500. who would train .Eg.vptians to take. over. Angryllebale ' Over New C.M.H.C. Headquarhers OTTAWA, (Fri - An angrv Commons Thiirsdav figuratlwl.v bounced all over the most enn- troversial floor the government Ilhair built in years--the 37.500 spring floor that Nln he used by employees of tho federal housing agency for dancing and badmin- ton. Progressive Conservative-s cried extravagance and Accused the Central Mortgage and I-louslnz Corporation of "building palaces for itself ivhcn it should be bulld- lng homes for the people.” Re- sources Minister Winters defend- ed the right of CHMC to build I 340,000 auditorium with the con- llrovr-rsial floor in Its new 3l.R00,- 000 hentlquartc-rs on the outskirts of Ottawa. Civil Scrvnrils. he said, are on- ifitlcd to he treated as well as em- .plo,vI-es of lndilslry. . But the Conservatives thought. otherwise. They sold the govern- ment. has no right to spend pub- lic man:-3.: on such things, wt-rc skeptical of the Pn1DlD)('P! using the aiiclilnrium much because of, its distance from the Pll,i'--nhftllt; four miles from downtown Oll- nwn- anti wcrc skeptical, ton. of Mr. Wiiitci:' Dx(ilnll.'lll0Vl lhal thci auditorium 1: more than an cm- plnyer-s' pin.-ground. Henry Hnskiiiiz (L-Wellington South) said A growing Canada, will n-pntiinlly make it. nr-cr-satiri- in mm ihp auditorium info of-' fires sn,iwnv. l Norway For OSLO, lR.rIltersl gave An enthusiastic welcome fol royalty and other distinguished; guests arriving for l village-church wedding today of I Thousands flocked to Ain's Princess Margaret. the first the wedding. Princess Margaret. looking fresh and happy in R black skirt, whitey jacket. and black velvet be-ret.,; smiled as she curisleri to so-vesr-, old King l-lankon. Then she kissed Princess Ranghnlld and Princess Astrid, her second cousins. and shook hands with the rest of the royal party. Later a. salute of guns from med- ieval Akershus fortress heralded the arrival by yacht. of King Fred- nnced to 10,308 from 9,746 in 1061. suck and Queen Ingrid of Den- ,, "WA - - NOYWEKIZIDE mark. the fnirytaleytho "love airfield outside Oslo to see Brit-lNorws,V. Life Of Caris orraws, ice)-A new Nation-l at Research Council discovery -7 - boost the life of your car's lubri-l rating oil many times-and pm. long the life of the engine, too. Brainchild of two NRC scientists, the discovery may help cut driving E-Xllenses. Instead of changing ev- ery 1,000 miles, you may be able to keep old oil in the crankcase for 7,000 miles or more. The two scientists are also devel- oping a new sand-based,hlgl1-teni- perature, wuter-repelling grease that may be of particular value to military trucks and jet planes and high-speed factory machines. The Secret The council. in announcing 1 oil discovery Thursday said the secret is in the insertion of the right amount of certain chemicals or metals into the oil strcr thus braking the oxidation that gradu- Scientists said organic acids which increase this oxidation also are-the villains that eat into the engine's parts. After years of research. the two scientists-Dr. I. E. Puddington and Dr. A. F. slrianni-foun" that the chemical villains can be hit hard by adding lithium, sodium. Potassium, magnesium, or their salts and oxides. A piece of the required metal .could be attached inside the oil Splug. or the protective material could be built into the oil filter. The process is part of a formula for which NRC is obtaining pat- tents in Canada. and elsewhere. Whenever the patents are mar- lketed, the scientists may get. about lnve. per cent of the royalties which will pour into the Council's treas- iiry. Hally destroys the properties of or- i ' 53"" dinary hydro-carbon oil. 1 gan, I-lope w Discovery May Boost Lubrication ll.ll.B. radauf Mr. Derrlll MoGulga.n is among the class of students receiving post-graduate degrees in Edwa- tion at the encaenial exercises at the University of New BTllIl.'Wi'lt'.k. Mr. MoGuigan, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Emrnett. McGui- Rlver, received his early education at St. Patrick's School. Hunter River. from when he entered Prince of Wales Cni- lege on a scholarship for Qur-en's County. After completing high school and normal training at Prince of Wales College, Mr. Mc- Guigan went to St. Dlmstarfs University from where he gradu- ated with it Bachelor of Arts de- gree in I949. At present Mr. Mod-ulgrm 15 pm the staff of Queen square School, Cha.rlot.t.e-tnw-n. 1 An excellent. year for butter pro- ducers of this Province in Iorseeri by Mr. Henry MacDonald. Dairy Superintendent of the Provincial Department of Agriculture. To prove his contention he cited the production figures for last month show that the 259,040 pounds of butter in April represented an over the. 224.300 pounds in April. 1052. Though the. first three months of this year were down one percent over the some period of last year the upsurge in April gives an overall increase to date. Part of the reason for the in- crease is the earlier spring and the good appearance of the pastures and this leads Mr. MacDonald to believe that the increase will be maintained at least until we come to the season of heaviest product- ion of last year which was Jilly. After that it. is an acknowledged fact that production goes down. Last. year there was a steady in- lcrense to the end of August and af- for that figures fell below ll10SP. nl ll95l due to the warm, dry weather lwhich meant the after grass was not so good. Although 1052 had led iln production for eight months the final figures showed a 3.04 per- cent decrease. The total figures for the two years were 1951 5,292,000 pounds, while in l952 if. was 4,849.- 840 pounds. This indicates the dif- fercnre warm and dry weather can makc, in the late summer as for the first. eight months of 1952 was ahead by 8 percent. I-”cai' of falling prices will not effect production for the next two years at least. The Federal Gm"- crnmcnt floor price of an crnts pct pound will continue that long if the price should fall below tlic floor Princess Margaret In Wedding The whole country has worked itself in an excited pitch about match" between I'l1.i' 23-year-nld Princess R n K n hi id. princess and A commoner. li-laughter of Crown Prince Olav Ii'ornehu'nnd Crown Princess Martha of Lorentsen. They and Eriing handsome young shipowner. of the royal guests to arrive. Shclivei-e engaged on Valentine's Day will represent Queen Elizabeth at this ycni'. The couple met in June, 1040. when Inrentren escorted the royal fnmilv back to Norway from their wartime exile in Britain. During the war I.m-ontzen served with a Norwegian resistance! group after training in Britain. The fact that Princess Ragnhlld is marrying a commone makes no difference to the line of succes- sion to the throne. as this goes only through the male line in Nor- way. But the Princess will keep her row privileges. . . . approximnie increase of 15 percent r Foresees Good Year For Island Butter Producers the manufacturers will simply so their product. in the Agriciiltur Products Board which will pay tho the 58 cents and put the butter int) storage. , g yA-Boat-:1-,isT A ('.UY)Nl-lo-NEVER, U119 .YoUli(Al.K.' I . A-' A .rABou1y: iCPl Minimum” and TORONTO. maximum tcnipcraturcs: Min. Max Dawson .. . 40 '77 Victoria . . 48 58 Edmonton 38 65 ,Cal;zar.v 34 5" Regina 32 56 ivlnnlpciz 34 -7 Tni-rintn -... 42 '12 Ottawa .10 Eli Moiiti-cal . 46 of Quebec . 40 R1 Saint John. N. F. 40 47 Mnncinu 4l 4i ('li:ii'lntfeinivii . 41 -151 Svdncv .. .. .17 55 Yarmniith .. , M 40 S'. Joliiii.-. Nfld. .13 04 llAl.Il-TAX. (CF)-The Dominion Wcntlier Olflcn says skies are ex- pcctnd to become sunny in tho iioi'ihci'n Maritime regions on Fri- dav but not much change is inro- casi, for the southern regions. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Iiilarid. eastern N. R. counties. lower St. John riv- er vallrrt Cloudy and rnnllniilnl cool; light easterly winds; Inw- hlgh at Charlottetown 40 and 50. Moncton 40 and 52. Fredericton -Ill and 52. Saint. John 40 and lit. l'pper St. John river valley, Ray of Chalelir: Sunny with a few cloudy intervals: mnfinliiniz cnnl: light winds; low-high at l-'.rlmlmrl- ston and Campbclltnn R5 nnd 50 Bay of Fundy: Easterly winds Ill: overcast with occasional driz- zle: visibility l0 miles lowering to four miles in drizzle; temperature in the 40s. High tide today at Charlottetown at 12.24 A. M. and 11.39 A. M. I-ligh tide on the. North Shore at eal A. M. and 1.57 v. M. sun rises today at 4.44 A, M. and Atufl-3533 . a. C 9.”-ii-"QC . ti: