, .--. MAXIMS ' OF A MERE MAN The fear of lulu someone nu Ion prlsdlwoi a muscular tension which caused premium on the nerve ends resulting in phyllilll POI!!- MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN When you supprell anger the blood flow! to your head; thin cause: blood vessels in the bnln to dilute and gives you a headache. The Guardian. live could. A Morning Dally Founded 1381. CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. .THURSDAY, JANUARY 18. 1951 16 PAGES Subscription: delivered IBM; Mall 86.00 other Provinces and lJ.S.A. 38.00 COMMUNIST CHINA TURNS DOWN U.N. CEASE nus PLAN Allies Look For New Red Offensive In Korea Jrgent Requirements For Fire Department Stressed The urgent need of a portable generating lighting plant. a new fire alarm system and is life net was strongly emphasized last night at a largely attended an- nual meeting of the City Fire D0- pariment. The meeiinil was held in the City Hall with Fire Chief ll. ll. Jewell presidiniz. Fire Chief Jewell called atten- tion to the fact that the doors of the Fire Station should be wider and should open upwards. Other necessary requirements suggested were racks on the Bickle to carry rubber boots and a new pump to replace the Lal-Trance Pumper which is now over 20 years old. The firemen were unanimous in urging that a portable generating plant with a large spotlight 1)" provided so that they could safe- ly place their ladders at niilht fires. captain W. R. Connolly of the Hook and Ladder Company stat- Ni that firemen were in danger of losing their lives at MEN fires under conditions where H0 lighting facilities were nvullalzlc and where they had to deal with overhead wires carrying hilh V01!" age. The need for a new alarm 3)'5' icm was stressed by Captain G. W. Stewart. who suggested that the present fire bell should be replaced with an air horn. "Too much confusion is caused by 1'1”:- lng the fire bell for lllH'P0995 other than fires such as the nine p'clock curfew and funerals," he said. Captains Connolly and Stewart both requested that a life net he provided. "If A life net costs 5600 and saves only one life it will have paid for itself many times Qygr," stated captain Connolly. No Action Taken The members also asked "I6 Fire Committee t.a.-press the urn- ency of the requirements upon the City Council. "We have been requesting a lighting system and a new alarm for the P859 70"? W five years and no action has been taken." stated one fireman. Captain Connolly noted with displeasure that as soon as the fire hell rings a lartle numb" 0? Coming Events "Mail your Films to Garnhum Photo studio, Charlottetown. "Dance. Canovoy school. Friday night, January 19th. Good music. "Auction and Dance. Mlllvlew llall. Friday, January 19th. "Kinkora. Hall, many. J-Hilary min. See "Miss Molly." "Dance. South Melville School. Friday. 19th. Good Music. W. 1. "Card Party. Winsioe station Hall. Friday. January mm. 8.30 ll. M. "Hockey New Glasgow tonight. Cavendish vs. New Glasgow. First league game. Skate after. "Reserve Friday. January 28th for Film Board in Brackley School. linear and Sale of Lunches. "Postponed Annual Meeting of Kingston Public Hall will be held in Kingston Hall on Thursday. Jnnuary lath. at 0 P. M. "Will be loading Cobblers, Moun- tains and Sebago seed (hundredsi at North Wlltshiro until January 26rd. F. J. Trainer 6: Sons. "Hockey tonight at Hunter River Rink. Hampshire Bulldozl vs. Milton Hornets. Skate after. Good music. "Card Party and Dance in Tree- ndlo Hall on Friday. Jululry lilth. Modern and Old Time music. Lunches served. "Crokinola Party in Marshfleld Hall. Friday the 10th. Admission 35 cents and 5 cents. Lunch ia- rludoil. . Wlnloadingrcdr Cafeteria food at North Wiltsh e Wednesdl . 'murs- day Ind Friday. Take deivery off & Id best prices. !.J. Tlllmr A: 1. "show. Moreli Community Hall. ” allow starts Coming rrlday only. igenoor Tracy. Deborah Kerr in ' dwsrd My son." ' ' "Oar Cafeteria feed to arrive North wlltdhird soon. Book in ad- vance for best prices off our. Loud- inl Mountain fobuoa sud Cob- : or a blur "Iced at to d or IIII &u loaded: olsowdood n if the mom ion i on should move at in": ban otthoir crop now. P. 1. Trainer 0 has r. 1 I. C. I Has Token Over Duties As U. S. Ambassador Walter S. Gifford. n:-w U.S. am- bassador to England.,is shown at his desk in the American embassy in London as he took over his new duties. He succeeds Lewis Douglas in the No. 1 diplomatic post. car drivers and youngsters on bicycles head in the direction of the fire and curtail the speed of the fire trucks in reaching the scene of the outbreak. He stated that there should be some" action to clear the streets and that the people should be willing to help the firemen in- stead of trying to race them to the fire. The following men were elected to. the executive: Fire Chief H. H. Jewell; Assistant Fire Chief J. S. Walker; Captains G. W. Stewart and W. R. Connolly, Secretary L. G. Gillespie and L. Ranaghnn. Fire Chief Jewell in his report stated that probably the most important need of the Fire Dc- partment is for a more modern alarm system. He reported that he had taken the matter up with the City Council last year but that no action had yet been talk- en. He recommended that the CHP' Continued on page 5, Col. 2 Eunie ciiiaci With Enemy 0 ls Reported TOKYO. Jan. 18-(Thursday! - (AP)-Allied raider teams Wed- nesday tested enemy strength along the western front in Korea where a lull may soon be broken by a. new Communist: offensive. vifhlle her high canmand rush- ed troops into the west to halt the armored Allied thrusts. Commun- ist china rejected a United Nat- ions plan for a Korean cease-fire. Tile lack of Red pressure against Allied lines worried some United Nations field officers. one said the situation was "very similar to that in late November when the Reds launched their Chongchon River offensive." Chinese Communists at that. time pulled back miles from the Allied front. built up a massive offensive force. turn- ed the U. 3. Eighth Army flank and sent Allied forces into re- treat. Now once more. the Reds had pulled back frcm Allied lines. ap- parently to build up for another smash. Aerial observers reported three Chinese armies with an estimated strength of 90000 men gathering between Red-held Seoul and the air base town of Suwon, 17 miles south. Another Chinese army in the Seoul ares brought the total of massing Reds to 120.000. Cumouflaged Red supplies were detected l2 miles north and six miles northwest of Suwon. Strong Allied Patrol: The Allies sent out strong pat- rols jlnng the western front to keep the Communists off balance and to take the element of surprise out of any planned all-out Red of- fensive. One tank-led United Nations probing unit caught an estimated 1C0.) Chinese Feds off guard in Suwon and. with help from Allied planes, killed about half of them. The Reds apparently comprised a forward force screening the main Red buildup in the west. AP correspondent Jim Becker reported that two Allied compan- ies drove into Suwon from differ- ent dlrectians, caught Chinese troops in the open without guns. and mowed them down with ma- chine-gun and rifle fire. Ten Al- lied tanks headed the Allied prob- ing units. i iiNeW Deal” Coal Miners By ALAN HARVEY LONDON. Jan. 17 - (OP) - A "new deal" for British miners was overwhelmingly approved today, tllus launching a big production drive against a looming coal orlsis. About 100 delegates from the coalfields voted in favor of an ag- reement which will increase wages. provide contributory pensions and adjust concessionary coal regula- tions. Only one vote was cast against. the settlement. In return. the miners agreed to reduce absenteeism. work overtime and accept fcreign workers in a bid to relieve a country-wide coal short- age. Just before the delegations vot- ed, the Conservative Financial News warned editorially: "Nothing short. of a miracle can save an industrial breakdown if a prolonged spell of bad weather should be experienced either in the rest; of January er in February." Wages of miners already average about. SL2 (I36) 3. week. The new For British Approved (75 cents) weekly for surface work- ers to seven shillings for under- ground men. will cost. the national- ized industry abcvut. l:l0.000.000 I year. The new agreement. previously approved by the Government and national mineworkers. shows just. how seriously the Cabinet regards the shortage. Few have forgotten the grlm exiperlenccs of 104'! when depletion of stocks stlileci industry and threw thousands out of work. Although Government critics blame nationalization for some of the recent less in production, the present situation pmbably results from two main factors: l. A booming Britain now can- sumcs 6.000.000 more tom of coal than a year ago. ' 2, some 25,000 workers have quit the pits in the last if! months. Many independent observers say this is part of a social revolution. Mer. used to go down in the mines be- cause they had to; new they can get. 3 cleaner and better job in raises. ranging from five ahulings other industries. U. K. Cabinet Shakeup Gives Bevan Key Post LONDON, Jan. in -(Thursday) -(AP)--A Cabinet shskeup today gave Health Minister Aneurln Bevan, fiery left-winger. the Lab- or and National Sirvlco Ministry. a key Job in Britain's accelerating rearmunent drive. The shift of the Welshman from the Health Ministry puts up to him, the handling of day labor dis- affection which may arise should it become necessary to reintroduce wartime controls. including jGov- ernment direction of labor into defence industries. The "national service" part. of his new title means he would be charged with carrying out any partial . or ftull mobilisation of manpower sources the Govern- ment may decide upon. An Innoiunculldat from to no lag sum. Prime Minister guluu offfciol residence, uid ldvaa's Health Mintstrv lob would be taken over by Peniiom Min- ister Hilary Matquand. replacing at the Labor Ministry, takes Marqudndb Pensions post. The new Health Minister no longer will sit: in the cabinet and the Ministry will have severely- trimmed functions. The announce- ment. and an order in council. soon after Parliament mduembles. will transfer several functions of the names Ministry to the Min- istry pf Town and Country Plan- ning--to be called henceforth the Ministry of Local Government and Planning. i A bitter political canny of Con- servative luder Winston church- iil. seven. ss has been llulth Minister since 1068. no is a former ooll minor. Ros -checked Bevan. though left-w or, is regarded as one of the pronounced anti-Cow lnuaim in the Government. no is n popull with Labor: nit emu: sad Izuuliy :1-It-fl Conservatives. no loud In op-pzrtunity of venting his orator- oooru ndgos, whomikevan is. ten spleen union. the aura. W i as far as 20- Gardiner Warns "No Monlieying" With Home Market OTTAWA. Jun. 17 - (OP) - The Govemment. has decided to resume control over the imports of foreign butter. on cfftcial disclosed today. An order-in-council soon will be prepared, placing butter on the list of items requiring a government im- port; permit under the Import-Ev port. Act. The decision follows action by four Canadian butter dealers to purchase 4.500.000 pounds of butter frcm New Zealand for sale in can- add. The Government will permit that butter to come into Canada on the stipulation that the Agriculture De- partment's price-support. branch will control distribution. The official said the prlce-sup- port branch likely will make cer- tain that the butter is dispatched to points in Canada where the de- mand for butter is greatest. Butter was controlled during the second world awar. it was decon- trolled a. few years ago when the government began dismantling its wartime eocnomlc controls struct- ure. The return of government regu- lation over imports is in line with the feeling of Agriculture Depart. ment experts that unrestricted im- ports may "play havoc" with the Canadian dairy industry. the offic- ial said... V . Order Dumping Of Surplus Maine Spuds Hailed WASHINGTON. Jan. 1'1-fAP)- The Agriculture Department to- day halted the dumping of "sur- plus" potatoes in Maine. Officials said this action was taken bcmuse of the possibility that the spuds may be needed for food and industrial uses. The Department has been sell- ing potatoes acquired by it. under a producer price support program at one cznt. for 100 pounds. Such sales were made to the growers who were free to use livestock feed. fertilizer or other uses. Officials said there still remain about 46.000.0oo bushels of 1950- crop potatoes in Maine which are entitled to price support benefits. it is not. known yet. Just how many can he moved into the general market for food use. It is possible, officials said, that the portion not bought. by the food trade will be needed for other government outlets for surpluses, such as institutional feeding, and diversion into starch and flour. It still is possible. they added, that some of the excess spuds may be made available for conversion into alcohol. Gvrowers have urged such use of the potatoes. A decis. ion on use for alcohol may be made within a. few days. The Department's price support operations for potatoes will and when the 1950 crop has been dis- posed of. It: has announced ' that there will be no support for this year's crop. R. C. A. F. Search For Trawler Abandoned HALIFAX. Jan. l7 - (OF) --The R. C. A. 1''. tonight gave up the search for the missing trawler Ctudrun and her 17 crew members but American planes and ships will- make one final sweep tomorrow. The Gudrun. out of t"'oucost.er. Mass. radioed early Sunday that sits: was sinking some 800 miles from St. John's. Nfld. ,Slnce then. American and Can- adian planes and ships have criss- crossed the area without finding a trace of the vessel. Halifax Man Gets Five-Your Sentence MONTREAL. Jan. 11 -- (OP) - Augustus Williams. M.' of Halifax, was sentenced to five years in the penitentiary here today after he pleaded guilty tothrse charges of theft and two charges of attempt- ed criminal assault on I nun and her mother in I Roman oitholio NIVQB. v m iproduction and importation em fort the result that the price of butter Ottawa To Resume Control Over Foreign Butter imports TORONTO, Jan. 17 - (OP) Agriculture Minister Gardiner cau- tioned govermnents today not. to "monkey" with the Canadian mar- ket. for butter. He made the reference to butter in a speech ranging widely over the Canadian agricultural scene and forecasting the eariy.end of govern- ment bulk-purchasing food boards. He made these other pcints: 1. To all intents and purposes Canada has no new food agree- ments with Britain. 2, The 1950 Anglo-Canadian cheese contract has been ex- tended. apparently until next. spring. But there vrill be no government requisitlonin-g of cheese even if a new contract is signed. 3.'lf there is any need to re- duce hog product-ion. because of the cipening of the United States market. then the reduction should be made in Ontario and not in the West. 4. However. he believed that unless there is a "great change." Canada will gain more than the United states in the movemen: of pork between the two coun- tries. The speech. prepared for delivery before the Ontario Crop Improve- ment. Association. was Mr. Gardin- er's seoand today. Earlier he spoke before the University of Toronto Liberal Association. attacking Soc- ialism as a state monopoly leading to freedom's devastation. In an apparent reference to the shipment of New Zealand butter soon to arrive in Canada. Mr. Gar- diner said the daily industry could be ruined "lf anyone inside or out- side Canada is allowed to destroy the market for Canadian butter which is entirely in Canada." He recalled that two govern- ments were defeated on dairy in- dustry issues and added: "No one needs to advise the dairy farmers what to do with any gov- ernment which monkeys with the Canadian market for butter. 'I'll:.-y have already proven they know what. to do. If the dairy constitu- encies all go against. any goverr- ment ln Canada - and some of the Provinces - that govemment is on r.. The King Government was de- feated in 1930. he said. when New Zeaiancl butter was aiilowed into Canada at a rate of duty of one cent. per pound. "with the result that butter prices were out to half." "The Meighen Government was defeated in 1021 in the dairy con- stituencies because it permitted the with was cut to half." In Ottawa, officials said the cab- inet has decided to invoke import controls on butter. as a result of the 4.500.000-pound shipment of Newzealand. which four Canadian butter dealers purchased for sale in Canada. Wartime controls were allowed to lapse after the second World War. Claxien To Visit Military Bases HALIFAX, Jan. 17 - (OP) Defence Minister clan-ton arrived here tonight on the first stop of a Maritime tour and told reporters Halifax is getting more defence mcney in an-portion to population than any city in Canada. During his three-day visit to the seaside Provinces. the Minister will visit Saint John. Fredericton. Moncton. Sussex and Chlthaim as well as this seaport. He will deliver a number of speeches to boards of trade and military personnel. Mr. Ciaxlon confirmed a pub- lished report earlier today that ex- penditures of more than 33.000000 are planned for the Bheuvwater navy airport near Dartmouth across the harbor from here. The construction - including 8 u.4oo.ooo barracks block - would bring the aieorwafer base to approximately the size of H. M. C. S. stadnoona here. Canadian Irsslerlss..- Lu. naciargnnu TORONTO. Jan. 1'! - (Cr) - Canadlm Breweries. Ltd. had con- solldatod net profits of Ob.06!..'M.'l. or 0230 it share. in the year ended Oct. 31. compared with ssosesas. or 38.04 trshare. in the previous your. sales of 3l00.3'l4.4i0 were at. a peak level and 05,321,000 above 1040. E. P. Taylor. chairman. states that profit. margins were reduced through increases in uncontrollable ex- penns, such as wages. molt. Mr- tond. freight and other distribution Williumdentodhohadovorbeen cost: oonvtotod before. but Judge an- aid Almond pzoduced a record sheet that showed convictions in Hall- ax, Calgary and Montreal. 'wc'rung capital of ua.ua.ooo was up 0500.011 nd ratio of ourrmt as- ldts to curl" t liabilities was high- euuswi. istudv the turn of events il.S. Spelresmani Rejects lied Proposal (By Francis W. Carpenter) i LAKE SUCCESS N.Y.. Jan. 1'1 -(AP)-Communist Clrma today. turned down the United Nut.lons' appeal for I cea'I-fire in Korea! It proposed instead a seven-country. conference in China to work on' the Korean war. Formosa and other for east problems. The Pelplng regime insisted Feed China must be seated in the U.N. before talks begin. State Secretary Dean Acheson promptly rejected the counter- proposals. American delegates at the U.N. laid plans for bringing up a resolution bran in Red China as an aggressor in Korea. The 60-country political com- mittee was called to meet at 3 P. M. EST tomorrow. The Americans expect to have their resolution ready for that. session. with a long. list of countries including some in Asia backing it as sponsors. The prospect was the committee would adjourn to give members time to Plan Unacceptable Acheson said in a. terse Wash- ington statement that the plan is itunacceptble to the United States Government." He added it doubt- less would be unacceptable to the United Nations generally. The sharp American reaction came swiftly after first news of Red China's counter-proposal was pick- ed up from the Pelplng radio. Red China's Foreign Mlnisteizi Chou En-Lai, listed his demands in replying to last Saturdays cease- fire appeal by the General Aisem- bly's political committee. Chou made it clear Peiping will not talk about stopping the Korean fighting or about anything else until the regime is a member of the U.N. He denounced thie"eease-fire appeal as "ambiguous" and said its pur- pose was to give the U5. troops in Korea breathing space. Then he made these counter-proposals: 1. That negotiations be con- -ducted on the basis of agree- ing to the withdrawal of all Will Boost D By Douglas I-low OTTAWA, Jan. 17 - (CF)-The Government has sent Canada's Air Chief to Washtngtonlfor high-level discussions linked with plans to of- fer to build fighter planes for oth- er North Atlantic Treaty powers. notably Britain. Entry into this field would con- costs which are expected to zoom to about sl,5D0.000.000 in the next fiscal year. China's rejection of the latest Korean cease-fire offer was seen here as eliminating any doubts that Cabinet shortly will go before Parliament with a defence budget of that magnitude-nearly four times this year's original defence budget. and nearly twice the one finally authorized at the special session in the fall. , Fighter production for Europe would be a big item. The tribute heavily to Canadian defencei planes other resources to keep up that would go is the F85 Sabre dnd' production. A Canada May Build Jet ' Fighters For Pact Allies; efence Costs they cost around 3400.000 apiece. Air Marshal W. A. Curtis. chief of the air staff. flew to Washing- ton Tuesday night and may return tomorrow night with a report for Cabinet on discussions with Am- yerlcan and British air leaders. llls report will concern what can be done to step up Canadian air- ',craft production by increasing the flow of jet engines and component iparts from the United States. Y The serious shortage of Jet en- wzlnes is a major problem for all :the Atlantic Pact powers. It is a. lrepetition of a shortage which iplagucd Allied aircraft production iall through the last. war. The sup- ipiy of engines always set the pace gf0l' the supply of aircraft gener- : ally. ', It is a tlnrtage no one country ;can beat alone. The Americans, gfor instance, are the key power ; but they need Canadian nickel and their Mrs. Claire Weeks. 31-year-old wife of William Weeks, on trial in the Supreme Court in Charlotte- town on a charge of murder in connection wit-h the death of James Mullins. testified on her husband's behalf yesterday afternoon. The Court was adjourned by Mr. Justice George J. Tweedy until 10 o'clock this morning, and it is thought the trial which has con- tinued from Monday. will be con- cluded some time this afternoon. Mr. R. R. Bell, K.C., counsel for the defence. has at least one more witness to present this morning, and if he should bring in a second it is expected it will be the prison- er who has not been heard to date. Mrs. Weeks-in her evidence testi- fied that she had -been married foreign troops from Korea and the solution of the internat- ional affalrs of Korea by the Koreans themselves. 1 2. That subjects for negotiat- ions must include the with- i drawal of U.S. turned forces from Formosa and the Formo- san Straits. and other problems concerning the Far East. .1. That Communist China, the Soviet Union. Britain, The United states. France. India and Egypt. take part in the negotiations and that the place of Red China in the U.N. be established "as from the con- vocation of the seven-country conference." 4. That the conference -be held in China. on the basis of past. declarations by U.N. members, this counter- proposal war doolncd to rejection in the General Assembly's polit- ical committee. The Unlted States opposes negotiations before the fighting stops and the recognition of Peirplng by the U.Nfb'elore all questions are settled. The U. S. res- (Continued on Page 5 Col. '7) Comforting ' Thought, Russian No -Sailor PORTSMOUTH. England. Jan. 17-(AP)-A British admiral said today one of the most. comforting thoughts for the west in the pre- sent tense world situation is that "the Russian is no sailor." "There is not. enough water in the At.- lantic to wash the mud off his boots." Admiral Sir Arthur J. Powell. commander of the Ports- fifteen years and had two daugh- ters, Eileen. l4. and Wilma, 11. After telling of the work her hus- band had done during the first years of their marriage, she said they had bought a home on Doug- las Street for 3800. and after liv- ing in ii and her husband work- ing on it for some years had sold -it for t2.800 in August 1950. It was mortgaged at that time. They then bought a house on Gerald Street for 51,650 cash. Just previous to December 4 her husband had been unemployed and had been working around their new house. Took Nervous Attacks After they were married she found her husband would take nervous attacks and complained of pressure around lhil heart. He would be weak. shaky. and couldn't get his breath. This condition continued all through their married life. Asked about pay envelopes received by her husband while he was working. the witness stated he always brought them home to her, and that during their seven years on Douglas Street he had ' been a good father and a perfect husband. i They had no trouble at home ex- cept in the int few years when he had started drinking. This commenced -a-bout five years ago when he was employed at the Charlottetown Hotel. Before that time he never drank. and witness said when he was drin-king he was not the same man. W-hen sober he was mild. but when drunk he wanted to break things. He would tear up the linoleum off the floor. mouth naval base. said in a speech. Costly In N. TRURO. N. S.. Jan. 11 -tCP)- There are more porcupine shouts than porcuplnes in Colchester county. or so it would seem. County council took a long look at some staggering figures today: Total number of porcupine snouts turned in during the last year. 34.000; total cost to the council in bountles. 017.000. The deluge of shouts began last January when the council, hearing complaints that trees were being destroyed by porcuplnes. offered a 50-cent bounty for each dead little quilled monster. Presentation of a shout to county authorities would be evidence of the par- cuplne's demise. Miss Ms.bel.lohnst.one. municipal clerk and treasurer. declarld many pines in oolohutor. there wouldn't bl amsple tree left standing." woarily: "if there were half that i break the glass in the doors, break Porcupine Bounty Is S. County pects there has been some smugg- ling of porcupine: from neighbor- in: counties. where no bounty is offered. A councillor declared that every porcupine has five shouts when a bounty is in tho offing-the ani- mal's foot lllds odn be "treated" by "experts." The procedure was to burn or punch two holes in each removed toot pad, to resemble nostrils. and attach tail whiskers to the re- sulting "snout" with glue. Such a rroduct. would often pass the eye o the Justice of the peace who does the counting of a pile of usually over-ripe snouis. Om- councillor said that in his district Gcnlal Warden Bill Ross sus- P.. Mrs.WWeeks Testifies On Accused Husbands Beha f - . mirrors in the home. and would not recognize the witness. .Mrs. Weeks said she would some- times buy her husband good ii- quor but always he seemed to fin- isih with bay rum. and this was his biggest drink. More recently he seemed to think of nothing but drink. ' Once or twice she had hodihim arrested because she thought he would harm himself. On the mornihlof December 4 she had gotten the children off to school and then had gone in the unemployment office with the prisoner. He had been drinking on the Friday and Saturday previ- ously and was not feeling well. They had collected unemployment insurance. and the ollfice had told her husband about a job to be started in the afternoon. ' Cashed Unemployment Cheque He cashed the cheque in the Bank of Montreal and gave wit- ness the money. They walked down to Bevan Bros. where he was to work and prisoner told witness after he came out that he was to start work in the afternoon. On the way up iihe street he asked if he could have a bottle of wine and wiincn Continued on page 15. Col. 3 SOME Books ARE iititteu to av. READ: others To rittfuc ., i-ioi.Es ill (in: 9 Book CASE! lal forecasts issued by the Domin- ion Public Weather Office at Hall- fax. synopsis: l Mild southwest winds caused sharp tempe ature rise at Yar- mouth this evening. sending the mercury to 40 degrees. Mllder weather is forecast for all but the northern regions. The forecast is rorenough var- iation in the cloud to allow ap- preciable sunshine on Thursday. Regional forecasts. valid until midnight Thursday: Prince Edward Island.-Variable cloudiness and milder. Southwest winds to steadily using temperat- ures reaching I high Thursday at- ternoon as follows: Charlottetown I2. Moncten and Fredericton ail. p son: John 40. High tide today at 7.44 A. M. and 6.06 P. M. Sun rises ai.,'I.47 A. M. and sets at 5.01 P. M. Bummersido tide eighteen min- utos later than hsrloitoiown. IOIDIN - CAPE TOIIMENTINB they could get. as many as 13 ,.l3.y ugylcg; snouts from one porcupine. no u". 3'... L." C. -L dirlnt so? how. ti. AM. 3.” I". Miss Johnston: said that. in one day alone 19 snout forms were en-gm; ygggvmg received. i no of which were fill- ed out for 119. 121 and 129 por- have Borden bone C. 1'. cupines his 0.45 PM E 0 ' ' BK .1! r . HALIFAX. Jan. I7-(CP)-Offio-i