" . MAXIMS OFA f MERE MAN run wrong. ftlabatiorleranbaekiliaala ....u I! carrier: Charlottetown, Iuarnorlldo su.ee , 00.00. other Provinces and 0.3.1" u'"h." in 3.3.1. , c.sv-Eris PrirIc'e' Edwird Islaid Dew CI-IARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1953 CANADA AGREES To LIMIT EXPORT or OATS To U. s. Promises To Consider B. C. Development Plan Exhibition Ass'n Seeks Loan From City For New Built A request for an interest-free loan of 890.000 by the Charlotte- town Driving Park and Provin- cial Exhibition Association. was taken under advisement by the City Council at the regular monthly meeting held last night. The request was made on the basis of a recent Provincial Or- riersin-Council making available to cities loans up to 810 per hand of population by the Provincial Government. A considerable amount of dis- cussion arose on the subject as several Councillors felt that the city would have to borrow on this basis from the Government to finance the new high school. Due to this they did not feel that they should endanger their bor- rowing position by making a loan of this size. However. it was em- phasized that the city fully real- ized the value as a tourist attrac- tion of Old Home Week and if the requested loan would not pre- judice its position serious con- aideratlon would be given it. The Exhibition Association in- tends to erect a new building for the, general purpose of a display source for agriculture as well as for physical fitness and youth training. The completed building is estimated to cost approximate- ly 5150.000 and the Association offered repayment on the basis of 10 yearly installments of S9.- 000 each. Their letter to the Council stated the Association had already entered into a con- tract with the Provincial and Federal Governments whereby it will receive 510.000 yearly from rach until the amount of 070,000 has been paid. It was also stated that in addition to the company's xuaranteo to give the City Cor- poration security as against the new building until the indebted- ness is paid in full. Councillor F. J. Storey told the Council that there was consider- able dissatisfaction with the pay (Continued on page 153-oi. ill Coming Events "Dance Fortune Hall Tuesday, Dec. liith. Mo!lwan'a Orchestn. "Morshfleld Christmas Concert. Friday. December lath. "Dance in Little sands Hall, Tuesday. December lsth. "Dance tonight. Stanley Bridge Rink I-nil. "Christmu concert. Flat River Hall. Wednesday. December 28rd. Springton "Christmas concert. School. December 23rd. "Thistle dnd Shamrock Christ- mas Concert. December 13th. "cud Party. Dunataffnage l School. Tuesday. December lilth. "Meadow Bank School Concert. at Cornwall Hall. December 18th. "Crushing and Mixing every day. N. Aubrey Cutcliffe. "Christmas Concert and Dance, Lot 65 ball Tuesday, Dec. 22ml, 8 pm. "Rmerve Monday: 28th. for Var- lfl-yl Concert and Dance in Lot. 05 a , "Bayou L O. L. annual meet- ing (today) Dec. 15, 8 p.m. All members please attend. "Come to st. ihry'a School. 101. E. Chriatmas Concert. Dec- ember l'lth. "Come to St. Ignatius School Concert in Mayfleld Hall, Decem- ber lath. at 3.15. "Come to cope Traverse School Concert to Cape Traverse I-fail. "Nudes. December 21nd. am 1-. M. "Wheatley school Christmas concert in Wheatley mver hall Wednesday. December 16. "salvation Army Sunday school Ooncert and Christmas Tree. Fri- dlv. Daouubar llth. I P. M. silver collection. "Meeting of interest to turnip dllriurgl. tavveraon and lur'Il::rr'r!lnC . orhon l-I ll ay, December nth . ' "Heb the Milton r-loam Club by atteadlrig their dance Friday "KM. Dec. II It Wtnsioe station hall. notron Bros. Orchestra. "Shur-Gain Amateur Cavalude North rum Hall, Wednesday. Die. 10. Sponsored by North River Hall Committee. Program um: I ifdook. ing Destroyer Haida S Sails Forlorea HALIFAX, (OP)- The destroyer Haida. sailed for Bermuda. Mon- day on the first leg of it cruise back to Korean waters for a sec- ond tour of duty. The warship will spend Christ- mas in the Panama canal zono, where seamen will break out holi- day fare. including burkey and 280 pounds of cakes and puddings baked by navy cooks in Halifax. Heroic Mothei Saves Children. loses Own Life HALIFAX. (GP) -- A heroic mother burned to death Monday after saving her three children from flames that destroyed her home in nearby Lucasville. Her four-room home a-blaze. 29- year-old Mrs. Earl Hutt telephoned neighbors for help, then carried two children. aged 6 and 8, to safety. She went back into the house for nine-months-old B arbarn. Flames barred the door. so she dropped the infant from the kitch- cn window. Then she was overcome by smoke. Her body was recovered. Cause of the fire is unknown. The baby is in hospital with severe burns. The other two chil- dren are in the care of neighbors. :Mrs. alum husband; a doctcyard employee, was at work at the time. I I Shipping From Lakelieaii closes FORT WILLIAM. (GP)-Shipping from the Lakehead ports for the 1053 season ended Monday as five grain-loaded ships steamed out of the harbor. I Several vessels still are due to arrive, They will stay here for the winter. Western Farm Hand Sentenced PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE. Man. (CP)-A Zi-year-old farm hand who said he shot at a woman be- cause she "snicker:-d” at him. and then set. fire to the farm house and barn because the farmer hail laughed at him was scntenccd Monday to five years in peniten- iary. William Wit-be pleaded guilty in police court to charges of firing a .22 calibre rifle at another form employee. Edna Hayward. 23, and setting fire to the buildings own- ed by R. H. Allan of South Nor- folk municipality. 70 miles south- west of Winnipeg. Dec. 7. Five- year terms on each charge will he concurrent. The woman was lili- llurt. Fire damage totalled 516.000. RCMP snid Wicbe and Miss Hayward were alone on the farm when Wicbe fired through a win- dow. The shot struck her chair, Police said Wiebe poured gaso- line around the woman's bedroom and set it on fire. LONDON. (AP)-The death of Air Commodore Douglas Leslie Blackford. 58. air attache at the British Embassy in Washington from 1943 to 1945. was announced Monday. Blackford was director of air intelligence at the British air ministry during the early years of the Second World War. wAsil-f'fNG'1UN. tAP)- Admiral Arthur Radford said Monday the joint chiefs of staff feel the United states should base its military strength for the loniz-term on greater use of airwwer. all-service use of atomic weapons-and fewer men under arms. He acid President Eisenhower and the defence department are of one mind that "this nation will maintain a national alrpmver alip- erlor in than of any other nation in the world.” , Radford daclooed the ganorll liner of thought and nude: 000-. cf the Joint chiefs of staff prqared for the Na- tional Pres club. lladford described the basic con- Si. Lauren-i Hears Details From ” Premier Bennett UITAWA. (OP)-Prime Minister St. Laurent promised Monday to give "careful study” to British Col- umbia, proposals for a multt-mil- lion-dollar joint federal-provincial economic attack on ifha Pacific coaatfa hinterland. The proposals, as placed before the prime minister by Premier W. A. C. Bennett. would link up the province's north and south with an expanded rail and road system and protect B. C.'a forest wealth through a 313,000,000 conservation and fire-protection program. Mr. Bennett. who conferred with Mr. St. Laurent and his ministers, told a press-conference he feels sure the federal government will co-operate on all three fronts- rail. road and forests. Federal participation. he est.- imatcd. will cost Ottawa more than 0l50.000.C0(l over the next five years. But: the "investment" would pay off in increased revenue. The money by paying about 38,000,000 a year in interest. The projects would boost federal revenue by about s30,000.000 a year. Rail Bridge Mr. Bennett. l.'ll,cl' flew to New York to tall: with American indus- trialists nbout. investment in BC. Tile B. C. Social Credit govern- ment, he said, "is definitely in flivor of private enterprise." g The B. C. proposals: 1. Extend the Pacific Clroat East- ern Railway from Squamish to Vancouver in tzhe soubh. a distance of 40 miles, and to Dawson Creek from Prince Gcorge in tho nortll, another 271 miles. 2 Build up at new network of roads and highways to tap north- cm resources and attract more tm.1rl.!i5- -. A - 3.It.edlice the threat of forest fires through a province - wide forest protection service. Mr. Bennett suggested that length- ening the Pacific Great Eastern Railway will provide a rail "bridge" between the northern Pcace river area and southern markets. The Peace River area, said Mr, Bennett, is rich in ngricuitiiro. coal. timber. natural gas nnd potential oil fields. In fact. the uhole of northern B. C. was it "vast store--house of untouched re- sources" hcid back from develop- mmt by an inadequate t.rnnspol'tn- lion system. -0114 DEnAYED SARNIA. 0ni.. (CF)--A leak in the new 1.743-mile pipeline from Edmonton in Sxirnia will delay arrival of the first oil by two weeks. E. C. Irwin. local termin- al superintendent, said Saturday. Originally scheduled to reach here Doc. 15. the oil will not or- rive until about Doc. 28. NEW DELHI. (CP)-A possibil- ity the l'niie:i States will help arm neighboring Pakistan has caused uneasiness in India. Both the US. and Pakistan have denied such in- izlifllllofll. Communists. however. are jubil- ant. They and worried Congress party members are telling Ameri- cana that ll. Red victory in the Feb- ruary electlona in India's Travan- core-Chochtn slate is likely in view of the preaent climate of opinion. "What are you waiting for?" laughed a Communist member Parliament. "We would be so thankful if you would sign up with Pakistan quickly." The influential Times of India. Suggest Greater Use Of Airpower In Defence .....D.................. oept u the developmem of an "armed posture" which can be supported year-in and year-out for u lorgr its 20 years if necessary- He said the program drawn up and presented to President Eisen- hower last week follows this con- cept. and in his view ”would pro- vine the basis for winning a wa.r- an all-out war or it limited war- lf war is forced upon us," Redford said the emphasis in the planning for the long pull on well as today is upon "the creation. the maintenance: and the lion of modern air power" but thu there would be continuing need "for an indeterminate period in the future" of complementary for- cu on land and aea. WNDON, Eng.. Dec. 14--The Queen has approved the appoint- ment of Rev. Cuthbert. Aikman Simpson. D.D. (Oxon). professor of Old Testament literature and interpretation at the General Theological Seminary of New York. to the Canonry of Christ Church and Reglus Professorship of Hebrew at Oxford University. The announcement was made. yesterday from Prime Minister Churchill's official residence at 10 Downing Street. Dr. Simpson was educated at St. Peter's Cathedral Day School in Charlottetown and King's Col- lege. Windsor. N.S. After serving in the Canadian Army from 1916- 19 he want to Christ Church, Ox- ford, as a. Rhodes Scholar, where he was ordained in 1921. He be- came Rector at St. Aiban. Wood- side. Nova Scotia in 1922 and left there to take post graduate work at Columbia University in 1926 being awarded his Ph.D. there in 1927. In the. same year he enter- ed the General Theological Sem- inary of New York as instructor. (Rev. Dr. Simpson is a son of the late Canon James Simpson of St. Peter's Cathedral. Charlotte- town. and Mrs. Simpson. and a brother of Mrs. H. L. Palmer and Mr. H. M. Simpson, both esiding in Charlottetown. Dr. impson visited his relatives here last summer. His wife is the former Miss Jessie Kemp, who was born in Weymouth. N.S.) TORONTO. (CTF):-;Winter...s1a-.51.. so 'aE:rbis'Il:astei-' ll Q.n'Ad'd'."fmliI the Great. Lakes tn the Maritime: Monday night. Rain and wet snow snarled traffic. caused countless minor ac- cidents and gave rise to scattered communication troubles. Bus and piano schedules were disrupted. One death was attributed to the storm. A woman driver. apparent- ly unable to see properly due to the swirling snow. was killed in a head-on collision at Barrie. 50 miles north of Toronto. Telephone operators reported a delay of three to six hours on calls from Toronto to Owen Sound. A telephone company spokesman said there was "quite a bit." of trouble in the region surrounding Toron- to. with poles toppling under the weig'n.t of sleet on the lines. In a few cases. the poles were knocked down by skidding automobiles. on the east coast. snow fei.i dur- ing the afternoon, then tumcd to rain in the evening. The forecast was for continuing snowy and (Continued on paize 15, col, 1) Uneasiriess In India Over Possibility Of U. S. Arming Pakistan .. A.:.A--- which publishes in both new Delhi and Bombay. said editorially: g "If the United States persists in what-a.p-pears to be its present course of working for a military al- liance with Pakistan. the ulti- mate nnd disastrous consequences will be lncaiculable.". The normally pro-Weatem Hill- dustan Tlmea of New Delhi. edited by Devadaa Ggndhi, son of the late Mohandas K. !GI.ndhi, said editor- tally: Awe cannot conceive of a more of unfriendly act. toward India than the conclusion of the proposed agreement. by the Uniled states. We cannot believe that the object of Washington is to alienate India from the United stataa and weaken the forces of democracy in Ada." Prime Minister Ne-hra aaid Sun- day in Calcutta that the subiect la "uppennoet. in the minds of every thinking Indian" and that aiming Pakistan by the U. S. would have "serious raperouutona, not merely in India. but in the whole of south- east. Asia." Indian official political circles cite a statement by Sir Moham- med zsfruliah Khan. Pakistan's foreign minister and head of its delegation to the UN General Aa- sembly, on his departure from New York Dec. l0i.hat"thereha.ve been conversations with respect. to mil- itary equipment for tip Pakistan mnyn . Alan oiled is an interview which Pakistan's Prime Minleter Monom- mad All recently gave in Karachi IA wu ,. I k LIE touring U. 8. Vice-Preddent Rich- ard Nixon. Thid interview also dealt with the prwoood military aid. which the" .remier aald could not ptnlbly be aimed at India. Appointed To Canonry At Oxford University r Rev. C. A. Simpson, D.D. Winter Weather Slashes Across Eastern Canada iiiniiiliffofuiiif Land At Seattle SEA'I'l','L-E. of 300 Canadian soldiers '-v ine serpent. by-passing Vancouver. All had been in the Far East for a. year. Minister To Give consideration To Special War Gases OTTAWA. Dec. 14-(Speciaii- State Secretary Pickeregill today told. J. Angus Macbean. Conserva- tive member for Qu-een's, that he would give consideration to grant- ing of special prisoner-of-war ben- efits to prisoners who had escaped but had been forced to spend long periods in enemy territory. The State Secretary had spoken briefly of prisoner-of-war claims now being placed before the spec- ial comrmisslon of which P E. I Chief Justice Thane Campbell was chairman. Mr. Macfean asked: "Has consideration been given to to personnel of the services who escaped from prisoner-of-war camps and were in enemy terri- tory for a long time? For iii- stance.I have in mind an air force officer whom I know and who es- caped from, a. German prisoner- of-war camp and fought with the underground in Poland for he would not be eligible for ben- efits during that period." "I really cannot. say," Mr. Pickersgill. replied chief commissioner to them." Plan To Develop New copper Mine VICTORIA. Columbia. Newrnnrit. has put. up 960.000 an edge of Leduc glacier. from Stewart. 3. C.. at the hen of the Portland canal. (Ci?) -A contingent from Korea landed here Monday from the United States transport Mar- The Canadians, from units of the 25th Infantry Brigade. left here for eastern Canada by train, extending prisoner-of-war benefits two years. As the situation stands now. "whether or not consideration has been given to such cases. However if the honor- able member would let us know of any. I would undertake to uk the look at (C P) - Ne-wmont mining Corporation of New York. one of the largest mining and de- velopment companies in the world. has joined Granby Consolidated in plans to develop Oranduc, a new copper mine in northern British Stanley Smith. 3. C. superin- tcndent. of brokers. and Mondsy The Granduc property is at the 25 miles H697? s.".; ooiii "Not Happy" Over Situation OTTAWA. (OP)- Prodded by the United States government. Canada has reluctantly agreed. "ea loner M evils." to rutriot market. The decision. announced Monday, both here and in Wuhingfxxn. is to limit shipments to m.ooo,ooo bilab- ela in the pulod Dec. 11. 1053- Oot. 1. 1954. In that similar 1952- won 'n'ade Minister Howe said in the Commons that the Canadian gov- ernment. is not happy about the situation. The limitation is not de- sirable and is undertaken only as "the loser of evils." "It is not a limitation which should cause significant concern to the producers of oats during the added. "Oats are not in over abundant supply in Canada." I Nevertheless. "our government is not at all happy about a situa- tion of this kind which can only be resolved by measures which are which trade has been developed between Canada. and the U. S,” Long-Term solutions "It has been the S. government would, in its own interest and in the interests of the free world. decide not to impose any further restrictions on imports. "We may take encouragement. 'fl-om the allnounced intention of the U. 8. government to review its agricultural policies in an attempt to find longer-tenn solutions of a constructive nature." Mr. Howe said. The Canadian dociaion, first of its kind. followed a. report to Pres- ident. Eisenhower by the U. S. tariff commimion recommending that because of domestic surpluses and U. 5. price-suipiport programs. imports should be restricted. I An exchang, .of views and cor- respondence ween Canadian and American officials followed. The Canadian government real- ized the "serious consequences" which would result of the U. S. had imposed her own import. curbs on oats "extending far into the fut- ure." The decision was to agree to a "temporary arra.ngetnent. whereby Canada undertook to limit exports of oats to the U, S. to a reasonable quantify for a relative- ly short period." Market In Canada Unlike wheat. the big marketfor Canadian cats is in Canada it.- self. Of Canada's 466,000,000-bushel I952 crop. about 373,000,000 bushels were used in Canada. This year Canada produced a smaller 405,500,000-buaheul crcvp. which mgether with a. carryover of 136,500,000 bushels. brought. her supplies on Aug. 1. to about 642,- 00D.000 bushels. In the period Aug. 1-Doc. l. 1052. Canada. exported about 30,000,000 buahela no the U. S.. her only major market. Prauming she ships the 23,000,000 bushels allowed her before the crop year ends next July 81, total exports to the U. S. in the current crop year would amount to about 53,000,000 buaheis. bushels to the U. S. in the 1962-53 CPOD year, Eiseiiliwiteiwiiiiies Civil Defence WAS!-IINGON, (AP) -- President Eisenhower said Monday it, in prac- tically impossible to exaggerate the need for American cities to prepare themselves for a possible atomic attack. Eisenhower told it White House conference of mayors there in time, however. to make such prepara- tions sensibly and without hysteria. "Organised haste will save you and panic will destroy you." he said. The president addressed some 175 mayors of the country's larger cities at the beglnnkig of a two- dey closed conference on problems of national defence. ' Federal Aid (OP)-The federal been asked to OTTAWA, govemment has life through level crossing dents. The Canadian Good Ronda As- d k about h K th Cornmimionara. iii-liniilye ogiiiumierna for in halef .d390Mc1l1Y- the 00” P"8""" in t Increased federal aid for the (1 road ... ing the exports short period it is in effect.” he contradictory of the principles on. Canada shipped about 60.000000. Cut Crossing Accidents boost. financial aid in the drive to cut. down the "alarming" ion of acci- sociatlon Mud Monday it mnde the proposal in a brief submitted last week to the Board of Trarimort. protection of mod traffic at. rail- s. I. National stock-taking of level. 16 PAGES more than men. u MAXIMS ' OFA MERE um: Be disposed to judge of measures The Guardian. Five Cents Ilarnlng Dilly Founded H587. Problem 01 OTTAWA. Dec. Although bctter highly-skilled airman and 14-(Special known as member for Queen's. gave water conservation. The Quee cial conference on of Canada's natural resources as more modern ed in large measure to the essential." Mr. MacLean were not spectacular. cos. some conquering armies. "When aries. it became over-populated tilily of the soil began to be ex- (Contlnued on pagtrlti. col.-l-i- U. S. To Exdoin Suspension Of Peace Tjlks WASHINGTON. (AP) - T h e United States called in ambassa- dors representing its 16 Korean war allies Monday to explain why special ambassador Arthur Dean has suspended talks with the Com- munists at Panmuniom. Deputy undersecretary Robert Murphy. it was learned, conducted the special briefing for the dip- lomats at the state department. Murphy emphasized. officials who attended the meeting told a reporter. that Dean is suspending the talks - but not breaking them off entirely - until the Communists withdraw perfidy charges against the United States and show a genuine willingness to negotiate. No agreement was reached. these informants said. as to what steps the United Nations should take next in an effort to arrange 11 final Korean peace conference. Bogus 320 Bill iieporteiiliound 'IORON'IO. (OP)-A hard-try detect. counterfeit I20 bill-first found for many years-waa dis- covered Monday by a. Toronto bank hixanch and turned over to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. Inspector John Cruiksh.a.nk said the bill. brand new. is an excel- lent imitation of genuine olive- green bill issued by the Bank of Canada but the ink used is a lit- tle too dark The inrrpector said the paper is a "very good grade-much the same. if not the name. as the paper in genuine bills." Inspector Cruikshank aaid the counterfeiters may try to get. rid of a flood of their bills during the Christmas shopping rush, He said no counterfeit :00 bill has been found in Canada. for many years. Most recent large- scale counterfeiting was of :10 bills. some 5750.000 worth were 'pui. into the Canadian market be- fore that. counterfeit ring was amashed three years ago. some of the boom! Iloa still are being found in Canada. Asked To crossing danger poin 3. A co-ordinatied country-wide program of driver education un- dertaken by governments. railways and other interested bodies to re- duce "driver error”. remonoible for a large number of level crossing deaths. "Provincial and municipal gov- to do much more than they now are dam! to crossing protec- "The federal government is the only agency that is financially able to the alarming loss of ammonia are unable improve grade Lion." the Amociation aaid. help curb life at level crossings." )D a pilot. I. Angus Macbean. Conservative evi- dence in the House of Commons today of extensive knowledge of the problems of soil erosion and n'.s t member was speaking on a reso- lution to call a Dominion-Provim conservation Quoting Flat and Shelley as well g re.-imicgllym-a'.n.iChristmas railroad strike. ed writers. Mr. Maci..ean contend- that the decay of great civil- izations of the past had been due failure of their peoples to conserve soil "I think it is not only wise but said. "that we continue to control our soil erosion. In the. past. civiliz- aiirlns made the mistake of ignor- ing these forces of nature. which forces of nature. which were dragging. in- sidious things. But these insidious hapg gftthglinrces destroyed civilizations just Canadian government that the il.jn! completely as if they had been ioverthrown by some outside for- Nnrth America was first. settled along the eastern bound- in that area, and when the fer-. Queenls Member Discusses Soil Erosion ill. K. Cabinet? Seeks To Avert iilail Waliioiit 1 LONDON. (Reuters) - The gov- ernment Monday night began a , desperate race against time to 18VEl1 a threatened country - wide With nnly six days to go before 400.000 key rail workers walk off their Jobs. Sir Winston Churchill called an emergency cabinet. meet- ing Monday night. No announce- and forests. This was true of ment was made of any decisions North Africa, he pointed out. andltakgny also true of countries of the Middle East. Korean Pays Warm Tribute To Canadians VICTORIA. (GP)-Tribute to Cer- adlans in Korea came Monday from Pak Kun, 26-year-old Seoul newspaper man who is in Canada for a poet-graduate course at tho University of British Columbia. "The behavior of Canadian armed forces has been very good. even better than the British.” ho said. "Thu experience with Ameri- cans has not been so fortunntn "There are. do many U. 5. troops. that msy be part. of the reason. But the Koreans don't have as much faith in the Americana now ae before the truce." Pak's trip is under tho sponsor'- ship of Reginald Bowering. direc- tor of the provincial covemmenve division of public health GITIQIHCPI”-' ing. and Bill Ban, CIMQUI3-lJ”'P.i'H.'o.I correspondent. formerly in Korea and now in Moscow. Pak will study political scleiico at UBC. For what he has seen of Oanads no for. he has one word: "Wonderful". , - i PINC" DAYS site? A Dilti. SCiiol.AR orfeu Sliitiid IN Aocir-.f-r 9 5 ZIORONTO. (0Pl- nlmum anti maximum temperatur s: Victoria . 42 40 Edmonton 24 30 Calgary 2?. .'l0 Regina 5 '25 Winnipeg 3 10 Toronto 36 36 Ottawa 28 32 Montreal - 30 -'43 Quebec -. 25 29 Saint John 23 34 Moncton 23 33 Halifax . . 35 39 Charlottetown 30 33 Sydney - 33 St. John's 24 35 HALIFAX. (GP)-The wenthcr ni- fioe here aaya three to six inch-I ot snow fell over most of the dis- tricts Monday. The snow changed to rain over most of tho Marl- times. Skies will he cloudy and widely scattered showvrs and snow- fiurrlcs arc forecast for most. rc-in ions 'nleaday. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward island: snow chang-lng Mi rain ending during rooming. cloudy with widely nat- tererl rainshowers changing in en- ning in snowflurrli-s: valid with eaat winds, 30. trials I0 40 Mid shifting during nmrninr to mull!- weai. winds 25. Early morning and In i d-afternoon temperature a i Charlottetown I0. . East:-rm N. 8. counties. lower St, John River valley: gloudv with widely scattered showers changing in afternoon to lnowflurriea; mild with southwest winds 25. High-low at Moncton. Fredericton and saint John 40 and 33. Upprr Si., John YlVFl' vailcy. B-'V of Chaleur: Cloudy with anowfIur- rles: mild. with aoiiihwest. wind.- 25. High-low at. lldmundaton and Campbelltcn 3'5 and 30. High llde today at Charlottetown at 5.16 A. M. and 5.32 P. M. sens at 4.31 P. M. Sun rises today at 7.44 A. M. and