.1111!-. . :-MAXIMS- .QFL Juana M-AN The evil that mass dojiveal them. at n Guardian. rive c-In Mm-Iain; may rounded rm. Read by Eveybotiy Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew . CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. MONDAY, JANUARY 15, 195i 12 PAGES The house gocsmad when women MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN labaerlptlona delivered 50.00: Mail 30.00 other Provinces and U.s.A. 53.00 ENTIRE U. s. ZND D Loolts For Mass U. N. Evacuation OF Korea seven Killed VVIten Big Plane Crashes; Heroic Stewardess Loses Life By Lee Llnder PHILADELPI-IliA, Jan. 14 -AP) - A four-engine commerci- .':i airliner crashed and burst into flames at International Airport to- ...ty, killing seven persons includ- zng a heroic stewardess who rescu- Ni 10 passengers from the fiery plane. The National Airlines DC-4 skidded on an ice-sheathed runway and smashed through a picket fence. Burning gasoline was spray- r-d over a 200-yard area. An oiificial at the morgue said the victims were five women and two baibles. a girl and a boy. An eyewitness said fire broke out 15 seconds after the plane hit the ditch. Some of the 24 passeng- ers and three crew members jump- through windows to safely. Miss F. Housley of Jacksonville. Lla.. the stewardess. gave. her life in her rescue mission. A sailor, who jumped through a g Coming Events "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo studio. Charlottetown. ' "Parkdala community concert, five nights, opening Feb. 28. "Garden Seedsi send for free Catalogue. Arthur Veaey. York. "Garden Seeds! Send for free catalogue. Arthur Vesey. York. .'3Afton Hall. Purina Hog show. 7.30 P. M. Wednesday. January "Holy Name Box soc-lei. Dlngo.' Dance. Town Hall. Georgetown. wbdncsday, January 24th. "Show. Moreil Community Hall. every Friday only. Show starts 8 olclock. "Crokinole party Mt. Albion Hall. Tuesday night. Proceeds for "March of Dimes". O "Come to the crokinoie party in Wlltshire Hall on Monday. January 15 in aid of Y.P.U. "Tho postponed social in Springfield hall will be held Wed- nesday. January 17th. "Rummage sale C.W.L. Hall over Provincial Ban Saturday, Jan. 20 at 2 p.m. - - "Annual meeting ofstrathalbyn Royal Scarlet Chapter meets at Bradalbane. January 17, 7.30 p.m. "Reserve Saturday. Feb. 10 for Valentine Party sale at l-lolman's. Ausplces C. W. L. "Hear Dr. Florence Murray .-peak on Km-Qa at Afton Hall on Jan 16th. Lunches. Rico Point Women's Institute. Time 7.80. "Annual Meeting. of Sthathalhyn Royal Scarlet chapter '1neets at gticxdalbane. January 17th. 1.30 "Receiving hogs at Crapaud for Canada Backers Limited. until 12 noon each Tuesday. Robert Daw- son. . Wuceivins Boss at Crapaud for Canada Packers Limited. until 12 noon each Tueada . Robert Daw- spn.. ' - "Postponed annual meeting of Kingston Public Hall will too hold in Kingston Hall on Thurs- day, January 18th at l p. m. "Skating tonight in Hunter River Rink. 8-10 with good mu- .-ic. Admission 20 cents and 25 cents. - "j P "S "So you think you can play vrokinolc. if an let's lea you move it at tWtltshire Hail to- night. . "Card Party and croklnole in Belt-Ti window, told a reporter "I watch- ed the stewardess lead 10 persons to safety. then go back into the -burning plane. She never came out" Marine Pte. Richard Benedict. iii, said he leaped to safety through an open door. "1 went back into the plane as flames burst all around me and grabbed I woman and child." he said. "That's all I remember. The next thing I knew I was walking up the bank in front of the plane. I could hear people screaming and I saw flames and smoke pouring out the top of the fuselage." it was dim and dark as the DC- 4, en route here from Newark. N.J., came in for a landing. A light snow was falling on the ice-glaz- ed run-way. - Ovcrshot Runway "The plane 0VCfSllOt)llhQ run- way," said Col. J. Victor Dallin, chief of the Philadelphia Aero- nautical Bureau. "Ice and snow on the ground probably contributed -to the fact that the pilot didn't have enough normal braking act- ion. However, we are not sure of that." One airport guard narrowly mis- sed being hit by the plane. Guard Charles Rogers said he -was timaking a tour of the air- port" in a car and that he had to apply h.i.s brakes. "skidding off the road in order to avoid being struck by the plane. My car was covered with gasoline." "Many people unwed out of the planet? Bogota dclddingz "One. wolillii.-J p " ed out with her dust on fire. he-thre-w off "the coat and ran away." ' it was the first crash at Inter- national Ainport sincenhe big air hub in Southwest Philadelphia was put in operation in June, i940. And Dallin said-t'he crash would not have occurred if a 2,000-foot extension of the runway, now un- der construction. had been com- pleted. r FIBE IN MONTREAL MONTRIEAL. Jan. 14 -. (CP) - An early morning 350.000 fire to- day gutted a tbs-as-storey cement building housing the Star Dyers and Cleaners in suburban Verdun. No casualties were reported. Several explosions rocked the building after the fire reels got to the scene. Newsman-llome From Korea Gives Views (Editor's Note: Don Whitehead. world famous Associated Press war correspondent. has Just re- turned from the front lines of Korea. Whitehead writes his own personal opinion and impressions of the fight of the U. N. forces to stay in Korea. He is not optimis- tic as the article reveals.) (By Don Whitohead) NEW YORK. Jan. 14 -(AP)- United Nations troops are head- ing toward a mass evacuation from the Korean cockpit of war. Overwhelming numbers of Chin- ese and North Korean Red troops are driving them into the south- east corner of the peninsula. And the bleak. bloody story of Korea is approaching an end. These are the hard facts of a slhtiuution now clouded in censor- s p. . Sea Evacuation Inevltnbla Many military men in Korea and most war correspondent: who have followed the army for the last five months look upon an evacuation as inevitable. It is surprising do one Just re- turned from Korea to find a great debate in Washington over whether We ihould or should not stay in Korea. The Defence De- partment says .no policy has been changed and that the army in- tends to stay. This debate is academic. The onlv question is whether We can hang on even if we want to. it is as tragically simple as that. The Communists outnumber the United Nations torus possibly up to five to one. And the Reds are in a position to increase these odds against the Eighth. Army almost at.,wili with millions of manpower in "Man- churia and in China. The Chinese have made it abundantly clear since they en- tered the Korean conflict that they intend to drive the U. N. forces out of Korea. One American officer said to me recently: "Now it's a question of saving face or saving our hides-and we'd better save our hides. Wc'll need 'em in the fu- ture against these people." He meant the military neces- sity of saving the United Na- tions army from destruction for out weighed the political consider- ations involved. Some officers-army. navy and air force-believe the U. . for- ces can pull back into a tight perimeter around Pusan and hold out indefinitely. The reason the Allies could lay down such a cur- continued on page 5. Col. 1 Three Dead Affair At N BR:tDGl.'!OWN. N. 3.. Jan. 14 - (OP)-Three persons -- two men and a woman-died of gunshot wounds here today in what a cor- oner's jury decided was a double murder and suicide. need are: William Jarvis. 70. Mrs. Jarvis. his wife. 10; and Ger- ald Clements. 29. The comer's jury found that Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis met death as the result of wounds from a shot- gun in the hands of Clements in the Jarvis home. A third verdict said Clements died of self-inflicted wounds. t Mrs. Nbra McGowan. a dauiihter of Mr. and Mrs. Jarvis. and her 13-year-old son. James. witnesses to part of the tragedy. cave evid- at the inquest. Mrs. Maoaowan said she was In Shooting . S. Centre ..m....LL..................:m a commotion in the living room of the small one-storey home in this town nestling in the Annapolis Valley. She said she went to another bedroom next to the living: room where she found Clements holding a rifle. She said he told her: ” 'I'm going to shoot you too."' Instead of shooting her. she -said. he forced her to stay in the room and watch him shoot him- self. James Mcciowan said he was awakened by the sound of a shot and went to the living room. He said he saw his grandmother on the floor and Clements pointing a rifle at Mr. Jarvis. He said he saw Clpments shoot Mr. Jarvis then turn the gun on himself. Investigating police did not say whether they had uncovered any lying on her bed when alto heard Canadians. Is OPIWAWA. Jan. 14 -- (Q) Bradalbane Hall. Tuesday. Jan- "lfy 16th in aid hf hockey team. Lunch served. "Hockey North RI er rink. Monday. January..15th, outhport Ramblers vs. ..Coi-nwall Meteors. Ca lean service. Gama um 0:30. 3'! to letter game. - "Correction--In Saturday's an- :oII'I,;ieem'anc our ad read: "Re- ! ads 'l!ackei'a rLid.. e on Thursday until. noon'..'. This should. have read aacir-; Tudldw until noon as IFIEIWI issue. R. -M.PDoii-on. - and by about t2,sn0.000i.000 the previous mi. of st7.too200o.ooo in. at Cr paud for Can- 1'50 added. good! of aid, mm. an increase . of ”' is dismissals .. with Government economists predict belt-tightening for Canada. this yen, even itltouug: 1 this avidly; snding coua a mans a record-smashing I30.- 000.000,000 in goods and services. They estimated that the gross na- tional pioduct, sum total of every- thing Canachlyroduccs. W111 I!- Cdnadah national income. the! ly will run to a peak all 0 th I050 - e::ssi.'.r.;;i.;e Iovlot-' Tcaaraonist was its banana. aggression fac- ibc prospect of I 5'4 ghtening - ear in' uardoliar increase of total likely motive for the moottngs. For Predicted is dim. increased living stands ” the economists say. ' A looming record peacetime de- fence bud t. linked with tax boasts an price inflation. is ex- pected to devour most of the 82.- llW,000.000 increase in total pro- duction. Intimates of a defence budget of more than 01.000.000.000 for 1951-52 at 1 have been fora- eaet. Fina Minister some told the mo Federal-Provincial 'eon- tfersnoa this nowufisoal budget may rurrto about 03.0m.0&.000. against O2.000.0tll.000 in 1080. Price lndlatlon already has sat in. The eeonorhlstrprodiet rlcas may Jump between five and. 0 per osntin lI0iiThaewilibeaietae- production. Another factor will be volume. This is expected to run to about three or four person; 2 . LAKE SUCCESS. N. Y., Jan. 14 -(AP)-The United Nations politi- cal commlttee overwhelmingly approved Saturday a five-point plan for an immediate cease-fire in Korea and a Par Eastern con- ference attended by Communist China. Russia voted bgainst it and high diplomats said this foreshadows rejection by Communist China. The vote was 50 to 7. It came un- expectedly after a committee sess- ion marked by crles of "appease- ment," "blackmail" and "sellout" against the new proposal. The cease- fire appeal is the fifth message on the issue of ending the fighting to be sent Communist China. since the Reds surged into North Korea last November. All other messages were rejected or ignored. The committee asked the sec- retary-gcneral to send t.hexc1ecla- ration to Peiping with a request for the hinese Communists to say wheth r it wou1d'be acceptable as a basis for consultations on a cease- Russia Votes Against New U. N. Peace Plan .m::...m.;.....mm The committee adjourned without setting a date for its next meeting. A key point of the committee decision was that the cease-fire would he in exchange for high- level talks with Rod China can the future of Formosa and the hinese Red request for a seat in the U.N. The five members of the Soviet bloc plus Nationalist China and El- Salvador voted aginst the declarat- ion.. The Philippines abstained and Afghanistan and Costa Rica were absent. Jakob Mailik. Soviet Deputy For- eign Minister, said he voted against the principles because the people of North Korea and the Peiplng re- gime were not represented in talks forming the principles. This was expected here to be the line of the Peiping answer. The United States voted for the or no answer is received within a week, it; was said, the Americans and others are ready to push .a resolution to brand Communist fire. The vote on this .was 45 to 5 (Soviet bloc) and eight abstentions. Planes In Se Says Reserve Aiiiiy Needs More Men VANCOUVER. Jan. 14-(CP)- Maj.-Gen. M. H. S. Penhale. rc- tiring array chief of Western Com- mand. said Saturday Canada's reserve army needs snore, ,j. ""1 am in favor or any kc em! that will fill up the ranks of the reserve force," he said in an inter- view during his farewell visit to Pacific coast military units. P Asked if he favored the Canadian Legion plea for compulsory milit- ary service, he said: "Just about every other country has had to come to this." I-its successor. who takes over later this month. is Maj.-Gen. Chris Vokes. Death In New Mexico .From bubonic Plague HOBBS. N.jM.. Jan. 14 - (AP) -- A Hobbs physician said Saturday night a man died here last week of bubonic plague. Dr. A. H. Rutledge said his findings had been confirm- ed by the state health laboratory. The victim was Bailey Everct White, who died Tuesday. It was the sivth case of bubonic plague reported in New Mexico in the last two years. Seek To Keep 'FIu Epidemic From U.S. NEW YORK. Jan. 14--(AP)- Health authorities took safeguards Saturday to prevent Europe's severe influenza epidemic from spreading to America by airplane. They said arriving passengers are being subjected to intensified health checks. The authorities minimized the possibility of "flu" arriving by ship. They said the incubation period was 24 to 2'7 hours. allowing ample time for its discovery at sea. Four Die When Truck Plunges Into River MER.RI'1'1'. B.C.. Jan. 14-(GP)-. Four persons died Friday when a truck plunged into the Nicola River near this isolated interior British Columbia town. 1119' ' " were: Erncst George. 27. John Alexander. about 30. Tessie Jimmie. 25, and her infant child. Alexander's body was found on the river bank Saturday, first in- dication of the accident. He appar- ently dicd of exposure after pulling himself from. the swirling river The other three bodies were in the cab of the truck BODY CBEMATEI) ROME. Jan. 14 -(AP) -The body of Sinclair Lewis. Nobel prise-wining American novelist. was cremated Saturday. There was no religious service. The ashes will flown to the United Qtates. Lowisvdied Wednesday. He was 05. ------s IRANIAN j,llN!!.'I"ll IIIIGNS Tl-IRAN. Iran. Jan. 14 -tAP)- Finance Minister Gholam Hussein rorouhart resigned Saturday. ac- n on - ”"”.”'.....".i” l”.!li..'. '..'.'.".'.'.' 3731. fgaInn's' uncall rat; laioliilar beer or r parliamentary and as l' met since Dec. 1 when,iie.was.ccm- pellod to back down on an Angio- Inniaa auppiunoatal oil deal. MP saw the Canadian leader off at the airport. lie said st. Laurent had assured him that Canada would not found object to France taking part in any n ions terms for discussing a cease- fire order in Korea. solution on the subject had not. specifically mentioned 1'1.-ance as one of the negotiating countries. At a press conference Saturday.--st. Laurent said Canada is pinning hopes for world peace on a proposed conference talk about the Far East. "we hope that such a conference would proceed to the settling of all matters Eastern conflict." China as the aggressor in Korea. arch For. Trawler In Distress HALIFAX. Jan. 14 -- (GP) .-The R.C.A.F. Search and Rescue unit here reported tonight that a. Lan- caster search plane had returneri to its base at Greenwood. N.S.. witlncut. having detected any slzn of the Gloucester trawler Gudrun. Later, an ominous report from Argtcntla. said the United States destroyer Povwer had sighted some painted plank- ing but .nothing- else.- - ' Heavy seas, whipped by winds of more than 40 miles an hour. tprevailcd at the time of the dis- tress signal. T-wo United States coastguard cutters and tw.Q...dcstroyers con- tinucd an intensive search of the area, with two fishing vessels also assisting. Fvou-1' aircraft from Ncva Scntia and Prince Edward Island will set out at dawn in. a further quest for the vessel which reported herself sinking early today. She gave her position as.about 300 miles south of St. Johns, Nfiti.. end 100 miles east of the main Grand Banks fishing centre. Sl1ips'a.nd planes headed for the .rea after the Department of Trans- port radio station at Canso, N.s.. picked up an 505 from the Guel- run at 4.40 A. M.. A.S. T. The United States freighter Am- erican was due to rot: the report- ed position of the d tresscd ves- sel at 2 pm. A Canadian fishing vessel reported she would be at the spot before 230 P.M. No further messages were received. Two Canso aircraft and a Lan- caster from Greenwood. to be join- ed by a Dakota. from Summerside. P.I'.'.l.. will resume the search at daylight. The Gudrun. foumerly named the Boston College. of no net tons. was built at Bath. Me. in 1929. she is registered at Gloucester. Prime Minister Si. Laurent leaves Paris For Home PARIS. Jan. 14--(CP)-Pirima Minister St. Laurent of Canada left tonight for home after two-day conversations with top French offl- cials. He came to Paris after! attending the British Common- wealth conference in London. St. Laurent and French Govern- ment members confirmed a "funda- mental lndentity of views on major international problems." the French OTTAWA. Jan. Foreign Ministry announced. Premier Rene Pleven of France ogoiiations with C ' Ghihg n case Pslping accepts United Not- A Commonwealth conference re- of the big powers to The Canadian leader said that arising out of the Far The conference was proposed earlier, last week at the common- wealth meeting in fiondon. ca a tool: h leading part in fiirning he proposal, which has been sent to the United Nations. V I . a. selective system of selecting men for train- Commander of I linii Replaced; Noixplamiion High Ranking U. Officers With MacArthur In Tokyo. 5. By ROBERT EUNSONO (AP) - Up to 30,000 infiltrating Korean Communists Sunday threat- ened to cut. off the entire U. S. 2nd Division in frigid Korea. . Simultaneously the division com- mander was replaced and the U. S. army's chief of staff, Gen. J. Law- als from Washington arrival in Tokyo for ocnferences MacArthur. chief; Lt.-Gen. nchief of the 'an.:ter R. Bolling. chief of staff for intelligence. - The Tokyo censor withheld news of Codlins' and Vandenbcrg's ar- rival until it was announced several hours later in Washington. Significant Meetings While officially depicted as rou- tine. this array of high military leaders portended meetings of un- usual significance at a tlrne when the Allied east flank was imperilled and the United Nations forces in the west; were expecting another Ohlnese Red cffensive. In Korea, the Eighth Army an- nounced without explanatlon that Maj.-Gen. Robert B. Mcclutre was being replaced as 2nd Division com- mander by Maj.-Gen. Clark L. Ruff- ner. McClure had been named to the command only Dec. 11 after its men in h7C'ld.lfig back the Chin- csc Red offensive in North Korea to permit the Eighth Army to with- draw. Dil.i'll'i(; the last week. the division has stared off repeated Communist smashes in south Korea on the iwon-ju front. but today was con- fronted with a dire threat of being loutflanked and cut: off. In detailing the Rod manoeuvres. a division spokesman in the field told AP correspondent Tom Brad- shaw: "There are growing indications that the enemy rtvlll not be content merely to drive us off the Korean peninsula. They want to separate us and cut us to pieces.” , 2nd Holding Fast The U.S. 2nd Division, with bat- taiions of French and Dutch infan- try operatim: as part of its effect- ive strength, was still holding fast to a. wedge in Communist lines. The wedge was 25 miles deep and 40 miles wide at its base. For a week. this force with its northernmost tip just south of Wonju, has denied Communist forces access to an important net- work of mountain-pass roads lead- ing directly south to the old Pusan defence lines of last surrmer. Field dispatches Sunday said the infiltrating Reds were sneaking through the snow-banked Soebai: Mountain passes trying to link up with guerrillas. which the Eighth Army said were operating as far as 100 miles south of the 38th paral- lel. - - Bradshaw. with the 2nd Division. said Communist forces had crept through U. N. positions in the sec- tor between Chechon aind Yongwcl. Thcse points. 21 and 31 miles so-utheast of Wonju, respectively. endanger the entire 2mi Division Conferj TOKYO. Jan. 15 - (Monday) -- East-Central V ' I ton Collins. and other high gener-, with Gen; Besides Gen. ool-llns, they were? Gen. H-cyt S. Vandenberg. Air Force ! waiter Bedell Smith,; U. S. Central Intelli-t principles. If the move is rejectedlgence Agency. and Maj.-Gen, Alex-l army assistant! the 2nd Division lost one-third. of .. Shaping Up M. P. T0 DEFEND TELEGRAPIIER. CHARGED I HIITH Alfred John Mhel't0lI Alfred Joihn Abherton. arrested in Saskatchewan on a manslaughter charge in connection with the Nov. 21 troop train wreck at Canoe River. B. 0., will he defended by John G. 'Diefenibaker, lawyer and Progres- sive Conservative member of parlia- ment for Lake Centre. Twenty-one persons died in a head-on collision between it troop train and an east- bound passenger train which re- sulted when 9. dispatchers orders were incorrectly transrnitted to the troop train. Atherton. former C.N.R.. telegrapher at Red Pass junction. B. C.. was suspended from duty follcwing disaster . Legion-Memorial Hall Destroyed By Fire TORONTO. Jan. 14 - (CP)-The Canadian Legion, Memorial Hall at suburban Mlmioo was destroyed by fire today and firemen were still quelling the four-.a.la.rm blaze al- most 12 hours after it was first re- ported. Damage was unofficially es- timated at sl00.000. The fire is be- lieved to have started in the base- ment. Its cause ha's'riot been deter- mined. r.rrr-: SENT!-JVNCDI ROCVKFORD. Ill.. Jan. 14 -(AP) -John L. Edmons, 71, Saturday was sentenced to life imprison- mcnt for sinying his 64-year-old wife "hccausc she looked at other position. men." Edmons-pleaded guilty to the murder charge. Compulsory Training r 14.-(CP)--Com-i pulsory training for Canada's re-j serve army was urged upon thaj Government Saturday by the Con- ference of Defence Associations. The conference - consisting of former army officers in 12 military I ” n. in sharp language a demand it has made annually since the war. The Can- adian Legion issued a similar call Friday. A resolution adopted unanimous- ly at the Conference's annual meet- ing said it is "vital to the security of Canada that the Government introduce immediately it. policy of scrvice in the reserve (army) force." This. it said in would involve a iration system and ...,y a sin to-mrnt. national regis- an enforced in. Conference officials said later this would not involv taking train- ees away firm: thelrlobs but would compel them to undergo evening training with units in their home towns, plus two weeks camp in the summer. They said the Con- i For Reserve ArmyUrged ference. considers each man should be given two or three years of such training. The st.ai.emeni.- submitted to Defence Minister Claxton-little more than a fortnight before the opening of a parliamentary ses- sion at. which the issue likely will be aired-said that under the pre- sent voluntary system much mon- ey has been wasted in inducing men to join the reserve. ause of the heavy turnover of men. most of them got "no train- ing worthy of the name." new re- serve unlts could be ready to go into action in less than six months ' iuding anti-aircraft and others that should be ready for immediate action. "To say that in! reserve force is 40.000 strong. and to give the Can- adian people the idea that it has 40,000 men who could quickly be ready for action. is a travesty of the facts." the Oonnranae declared. Canadians. nth; antenna: bug. Wm PYIPCN PK! ii a ' creased taxes for sedation but were not ready to wasted. MANSLAUGHTER : see their inonewmaavs nerdea ' rl.all'.I. Huge Refugee Tragedy In Korea; Thousands Face Death . By John Randolph J SOUTI-I KOREA. Jan. 14-(AP). A new and appalling tragedy is building up in Korea.-the terrible fate of at least 2.000.000 refugees. who now are beginning to die along the road in their blind flight south- ward. Unless some kind of help on the widest scale is speeded to these people. the United Nations may be confronted with one of the guest- est. human disasters of modern. times. Already this flight of the refug- ees is a made-to-order atrocity story for the Communist propag- anda mili and its cynical theme of "heartless western imperialism." It will make no difference to the Communists that the Chinese Reds are driving these pitiful people before them to harass and embarrass the American and Allied forces. Problem Grows swiftly The refugee problem is growing so swiftly and steadily that it is difficult to evolve any plan big enough to meet it. Ever since the Allied defeats in North Korea late in November. both North and South Korean civ- ilians have been shifting south- ward to escape the returning Com- munists. . At Hungnam. where t.l1e Allies evacuated Northeastern Korea ..m.......m....L......m (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) lPresby;arions Plan 7 'Moni'real Churches MONTREAL. Jan. 14-tCPt4I'hII Montreal Presbytery of the United Church of Canada will launch a campaign Peb,.l. to raise 0505.000 ' . for-- the -building of m churches in greater Montreal. it was announced Saturday. The campaign will con- clude Feb. 15. Cost; of the new churches is expected to be about ti.6'i6.oo0 of which 51,140,000 is to be raised by the congregations in- volved leaving the remainder to be raised by the campaign. l MANY A FLIRT like 3' CAuc.ti1' iiiaa Ftnctas IN A Ytibomc. l I 5 i . . i i . l TORONTO. Jan. bf-(GP)-Minn imum temperatures observed be- tween 7:80 P. M. and 1:30 A. M. DST; maximum temps between 7:30 A. M, and 7:30 P.M.: Victoria 20 40; Edmonton .5 28: Calgary 17 3.2; Regina 13 24; Winnipeg 3 10; Toronto 28 35; Ottawa zero 1'7; Montreal 13 18; Moncton 9 15: Halifax 23 3!); Charlottetown is 28; Sydney 22 25: Yarmouth 26 35; St. John's, Nfld 21 24. HALIFAX. Jan. 14 - (GP) -05- ficial forecasts issued by the Do- minion Publie Weather Office at l-la:lifax.l - Synopsis: ilixcept in Eastern Prince Edward island and Cape Breton where some very light. snow was blowing in off the Gulf. fine weather prevailed over the district tonight. However, this weather is not ex- pected to last. A broad belt of snow. treezing rain. ice pellets. and rain was advancing not-theaatward. 'r.-as weather will reach the southwestern Maritimes before dawn and spread throughout the rest. of the district at Monday. Regional forecasts. valid until midnight. Monday: Prince Edward Island -. wet, rsnow or freezing rain beginning mo Monday morning. changixg to run in! the afternoon. Miidw. Light w nds increasing aftunoon to southeast. 20. Low and high no;-id" at Charlottetown 15 and O0. , I-ligh tide today at, I.” A. M. and 4.13 r. M. ' Bun rises at. 1.41 A. u,-Q4 .33. at 4.81 P. M. .? '- Summersitlo tide eight -. mm. utes later than Oh P IUNDA I i. IVISION FACES GRAVE THREAT IN KOREA