, Maxims . OF A. K MERE MAN am: nguaealipwllhfpotthllhngul. Read Everybody I .co9e'.. Prince Edward Island Like the Dew" MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Humour is spice. not spite. By Carrion Oliarlottatowl. dun-aside IIMO pa "mm llaewlieto in 9.2.1. ".00. other Provinces and lJ.l.A. 018.00 per annnn.) CHARLOTTETQWN. CANADA. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1953 RHEE PREPARES FOR DRIVE NORTH IF CONFERENCE FAILS Colossal Sl-iakeup Bar Ass'n Wants End . Of Strike Right Where Public Safety (hinoerned By Richard Daignault icansdian Press staff Writer) Qummc. (CF)-The Canadian Bar Association urged the coun- ryl parliaments Saturday to give 'cderal and provincial cabinets the pou-er to withdraw the right to alrike in labor disputes involving aliblic safety and health. M. M. Mac.l"arlane of Vancouver. -hairman of the industrial rela- iona committee of GBA. proposed he resolution which would make ilsputlng parties subject to the slnding decision of an arbitration xiard. The lively general session, which ended the 35th annual convention at the Canadian body of lawyers saw a labor attorney second the notion and rise in its favor when i standing vote was called. John H. osler of Toronto. who originally put the motion in the sonvenkiion works during commit- tee sittings, came before the meet- mg to say his stand represented he views of the Ontario sub-sec- lon of which he had been chair- nan. Th Protect Public Mr. Macrlarlane said it is wrong lo define the resolution as a lim- ration of me right to strike. It was . measure to protect the public. General session debate and uioption of 41 resolutions dealing vlth legislation and her activities rinsed the week-long session for 800 iolegates from all parts of Canada (Continued on pages col. 8) Coming Events- "Dance. Orwell .1-la1l.. Monday, ..tember 14th. Praserls Orchestra. "Dance, Lorne Valley Tuesday. Turner's Orchestra. every "Emerald Hall, C. W. L. Chicken supper. Tuesday. September 22nd. "Regular Dance in Morell Hall Monday night. Munroe'a orchestra. "Dance in Vernon River Hall Wednesday, Sept, 16. "Chicken supper, Lot 65 ball on Wednesday, Sept. 23. Dance alter. I "St. Andrew's Parish Chicken Supper, Monday. September 14th, Legion Hall, Mt. Stewart. Dance. "Dance at Covehead-Stanhope Community I-ialldwednesday, Sept- ember ltlth. "Chicken Supper and Dance in Brae Parish Hall, Tuesday, Sept. 15th. "Regular Dance, Bonsnaw Inn. Tuesday night. Charlottetonians Drchestra. "Ham Supper and Dance at Lorne Valley, Tuesday. September ililh, in aid of school. "Reserve Wednesday. September Ifilh for a Hot Dinner in st. Teresa Hall. Served by St. Teresa Women's Institute. .4. "Hot dinner st. Teresa's Hall. Tuesday. Sept. 15th, 5 p.m. till I p.m. Dance after, Burke's or- rhestra. "Show, Moreli Hall. Tuuday.' The Great Man Hunt" with Doug- las Fairbanks, Jr. This is a true ltnry, "Buying at once number of mod thrifty pigs over 40 pounds. Paving top market 'prices. Well- Mton MacNelll and son. Bun- zsln & 'Bell's Wharf. "Provincial Plowing Match? All Lracior plow entries must. be mail- -d to the secretary by Sept. 17. Write for, price list. Albert Acorn. 3-ccreteryfcaroig-an a.!t.il. "Buying live foul and ohlokan. Tuesday. I A. M. until noon. only well ilnlshed chicken wanted. High- est market prices. R. L. Diokiuon. New Glasgow. "The ltiverviow Garage at oran- Iud has re-opened under the management of Martin nroe. OPIN- lna special oil one go and grease ioh 32.75. signed shelter Martin. Eldon Marlin. , "Unloading car New Quaker Dllrv Ration Monday. sepumlnr lltli. This is the New liorniula Quaker Dairy nation and is some " the opaeiaiqirioe about her cwt. off car. This introductory Dries cannot be repeated. Buy ifpw. Ellll Bros. Dial 8128. Sees No Aid For Nfld. fishing Induslryjleeded ST. JOHN'S, Nfld.. (CP)-Pish- erier Minister Sinclair aald Sun- day he sees no reason for gov- ernment intervention to bolster Newfoundland's fishing industry. The minister cut short it visit to his British Columbia con- stituency of Coast-Capilano to in- vestigate a reported crisis in this province's major industry. Arriving here Friday, he con- ferred with Premier Smallwood, dealers in salt cod and fisher- men's representatives. Mr. Sinclair told the New- foundland Press Club 'he had "no valid reason" for pessimism. Pro; duction in Norway and Sweden, Newfoundland: two major com- petitors, is down 20 per cent for 1963 and this year's out- put in Newfoundland is also ex- pected to fall considerably. He said Canada has under- taken to provide a substantial quantity of salt cod to Greek earthquake victims and she Will likely be called upon to lend food to South Korea. But he promised to take the "necessary action" if the market outlook deteriorated. Aitlee Gives WIIDNES. England. (Routers)- Clement Attlee. British Labor party leader. said Sunday he regrets that Britain associated herself with the United Nations agreement t:l'lo.t it "might be imrposaibleto confine the Far Eastern war to Korea" if the Korean armistice is broken. "We did not take part in this fight on behalf of Mr. ayngman Rhee but to vindicate the rule of law,". he told a political rally in this northern city. "it must never be forgotten that this is a United Natdons fight in support of resistance to aggression. and not a war between the United states and the oommunist bloc. "The declaration signed last month by 16 members of the UN continued on page 5 col a)Tv ll Vehicles Involved In Two Accidents lll..'lZA.B!.'I'l-l, N. J., (AP)-Ten persons were injured Saturday in two separate chain reaction accl- dents involving 1! vehicles on the smogbound New Jersey turnpike. The crashes, occurring in op- posite lanes within minutm of each other, took place about a mile from the spot where 20 vehicles piled up in a chain reaction crash in smog a week earlier. . cent.-la!ter'a.:wsekr lflwmwl In Russian Agriculture lmpl'0V.elll:lil. In living Standard lieporied Aim MOSCOW. (Reuters) Russia launched a colossal plan Sunday to improve Ruaian living stand- ards with a country-wide, top-to- bottom reorganization of the agriculture industry. , The plan was issued by Nikita Krushschev, proclaimed Saturday night as the first secretary of the, Soviet Communist party. He presented the plan to the party central committee. It was emiblazoned Sunday across four whole pages of the party and state newspapers, Pravda and Izvestia. It is designed to give the peas- ants greater incentives to raise their crop yields, and, particularly, to increase the breeding of cattle and other livestock. Seething Comments At the same time Krushschev directed at Russian agriculture the most scathing common-Ls ever alm- ed at any branch of Soviet econ- omy. The period he fixed for "a mighty rise in the whole of socialist agri- (Coniinuecl on page 5 col. 3) Miss America Of. 1954 Selected By JIM TOMLENSON ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.. (AP) .- The Miss America of 15154 crown rests on the ash-blonde treases of Evelyn Marin-mt Av. a tall and striking beauty from Ephraia, P.-l. MissVAy (pronounced eye) won the title late Baturday night in the finals of the Miss Americavpago 'tibn with ill other girls similarly fav- ored with good looks and thlent. She is 20 years old and a student in medical technology at the Un- versity of Pennsylvania. At five feet" eight. she was one of the tallest girls In the contest. She weighs 132 pounds. has a 37-inch bust, 24-inch waist and 33-inch hips. As she exchanged her Miss Pennsylvania title for the robe, sash and sceptre of Miss Amer- ica, which will be worth about 850,000 to her in the coming year, Miss Ay gasped out. ”it's h:lrd.tn express an emotion that's so detply set." She has a lilting musical voice and read a poem in the talent division of the pageant. During the week, lhe girls were judged according In their poise in nn evening gown, their talent, their personality and ,of course, how they looked in a bathing suit. The 10 finalsts were narrowed down to five as the evening pro- gressed and the tension mounted. Representing Canada in the con- test was 19-year-old Kathleen Archibald of Kelnowna. B.C. Miss Canada is n hazel-eyed brunette, five feet five and 136 pounds with a. 36 bust a waist of 24W. inches and 37-inch hips. she plans to he a veterinary surgeon. Miss Canada did not reach the finals but gets 3100 scholarship just the same. U. S. To Test New Radio Defence Plan Next Week By Jack Adams WAS!-lING'1V0'N, (AP)-Conelrad. the tricky radio operation designed to thwart any effort to use broad- casting beams to lead bombers or guided miniies to U. 5. cities, will have its first national teat next Wednesday. nperts of civil defence. the fed- eral communications oornmlssioii. and the air force hope to learn Jlllt how good is the device worked out to keq) an enemy from hurling on a U. 5. target by getting a navigat- ion "fix" on a radio station in a "Reserve Monday, Oct. 12th, Victoria United Church' annual Thanksgiving supper. "Hear Miss Pendergaatfs Cor- onation talk, Lot 66 Hall, Tuss- day, Sept. 15, 8:15 p.m. Also var- iety concert and dance. . "A missionary rally will be held in Tryon United Church Fri- day. September 18 at 2:30 p.m. with Miss Dulcle Cook guest speaker. "Come in the missionary rally at Tryon Friday, September 18 at 2:30 p.m. Miss Dulcie cook will bring a message direct from Japan. "Fenner'I regular barn dance Brackiey Beach on Tuesday night. Good music and canteen service. Bua leaving I.M.T. 9:30. large metropolitan area. In the late war. regulations call- ed for a quick shutdown of all broadcasting as worn as an enemy approach was suspected. This rob- bed the enemy of direction beams -but it also robbed civil defence authorities and the general public of a vital means of communication at a time when quick com- munications were mom needed to keep people informed and to dir- ect the civil defence force. so Cornelrad was developed, a joint effort by the FCC, civil de- fence, the air J ' command and the broadcasting industry. The word is short for "control of electromagnetic radiation." lls lnonsoralike to call it "planned confusion” for the enemy. lhtirely reversing the previous approach, the system needs as many stations as possible kept on the air, with the largest stations sharply reducing power and every station shifting promptly. to a frequency not its own. Thus an ap- pronohlng enemy would be provided with not one beam. but more than he could handle. The scramble renders the known direction finders on planes useless. The Wednesday tests will find 1,200 standard radio stations across the country contributing to the con- fusion while 20 air force bombers. including some B-209. try their In 28th L. Major D. J. Mccormack, acting officer commanding the 28th L. A. A. Regiment, has been promot- ed to Lieutenant-Colonel and to command the unit. The promo- tion, one of four within the regi- ment, was announced by officials Saturday night. Other promotion: were those of Capt. Michael Campbell, to the rank of Major; Lleut. Vernon Walter MncLcan to Captain, and Corporal Wanda MacMlllan of the orderly room to Officer Cadet. It is believed that the latter is the first such appoint- ment to be made here since the last war. Col. MarCorrnack first joined the 2nd Medium Battery as a gunner in 1939 and was on his way overseas In January the fol- lowing year. He was commission- ed as a lieutenant in 1943 short- ly before going to Italy. He re- turned to England in 1944 for an A.O.P. course and qualified as ti pilot the following March and" proceeded to the Northwest Eur- opean theatre. At the end of the war he returned to Canada in September with the rank of cap- taln. Like so nlnny other former nctivr: service men he. entered the Reserve Army in 1946 and won his majority in 1950. At the time he was named to command Number 204 Battery comprising men from Montague and Sourls. That. same year he was named second-in-command of the Relzl-A Wrist Radio ted States army says it has almost caught up with Dick Tracey. It announced the development of an experimental wrist radio sim- ilar to the fictional Job employed for years by the comic-strip de- tective. The new wrist radio, capable of picking up broadcasts within the range of 40 miles. has been dubbed the "Dick Trllcy", the army sn- nouncement said. The radio weighs 2 5-8 ounces and is worn like a wrist watch. It has an ear receiver, resembling a hearing-aid, mnnected with a short antenna wire and cord con- cealed in the wearer's sleeve. The army said the set is pow- ered by a battery little larger than the tip of a pencil. SupplymShipIT Returns From Arclic Voyage QUEBEC, (CF)-The government I supply ship C. D. Howe, carrying a cargo of 5,000 pieces of Eskimo sculptures. steamed into Quebec Sunday from a lwo-and-a-half- molith trip to Caliada'Il Arctic. Capt. J. P. Fournier, 40, of Mont- real, who has commanded the ves-, sel for the last two years on its annuall Arctic voyage, said the trip was. made without incident, even though "we encountered ll. lot of fog and ice." "We covered about 9.600 miles and brought back 11 members of lhe Baird expedition from the north pole, as well as a 23-year- old Eskimo who will be treated for a heart disease at the immi- gration hospital here.” Captain Fournier, who has been sailing ships for 17 years, and has made four trips to the Arctic, said he saw this year, for the first time, a polar bear in its natural icy surrbundings near Ungava bay., The C. D. 1-lowe's cargo of Eskimo sculpture was collected by Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Houston, of Montreal. for The Canadian Handi- craft Guild. . Houston said the objects were all reproductions of either bear or seal. Begin Jot Service To Rio De Joneiro LONDON, (AP)-A British Comet jet airliner left London airport Sunday night on the first Jet pas- senger flight. to Rio De Janelro in preparation for a regular jet aer- vlee on the south American routs luck in finding lame cities with theoretical bomb loads. next year. The Comet will maln- saips at Lisbon. Dakar and Recife. 'l Promotions Announced A. Regiment l- "' M Cabinet Faces Tough Transportation Decisions iii. lirliiyiialsi WASHINGTON, (AP)-The Uni- i"V"r5 LI.-Col. D. J. McConnack merit. Col. McCormack was born at Souris Line Road, a son of Mr. Allen J, McCormnck nnd the late Mrs. McCormnck. He attended Souris High School nnd St. Dun- stan's University. He is present- employed in a civilian ca- ' Succession Duty officer ncame Tax Office. He is to the former Miss Pat- oymigh, Souris, and the -Continued "or." pa ge - 5 I Ccl.W5 '- -tri'r.iwA;-vcrw-.. 'l'hrF' eahiim funds a tough political prohlem in arriving at decisions on two ma- jor trniisporiation issues. The de- cisions may have repercussions in the next Parliament. The two issues, both from pro-election carry- jnre: 1. The plea of eight provincial g0YPl'llllli"fllS that the federal ad- minislrntion throw out the sev- ,on - pt-r - cent, .5'iR,500.000-a-year ,-freight rate increase awarded to lthe railways last March. l, 2. The appeal of Canadian Paci- ficc Airlines for a Vilncouver-tm tMontrc-nl air-cargo lli'fJi'iSe which, lln client. would break the mono- Tpoly of the crown-owned Trans- i'Ct-innrln Air Lines in this field. T Prime Minister St. Laurent has .announccd the cnbinet will take gun these issues next Thursday. I'l'r:ide Minister Howe, a senior lminisler, will be absent from the !meetings, participating in Inter- national tariff talks in Geneva. . There are indications the cab- linct has nlrenriy roach:-d tenta- Ativo conclusions on the two up- pllvrltinns: to reject the provin- ccs' bid for revolution of the freight-rate boost and toss out the CPA attempt to compete with TCA for trans-continental air- frr-ight business. days. ' But these conclusions will be open for ro-examination next Thlllcsrlny 'lmfnrc the vablnei's for- mal decision is handed down. Rejection of the appeal of the eight provinces-all except on-l lnrin nnd Quebec--likely would see western members. particular- ly. pron-st sharply at the next session of Pnrlinment scllcdlllcd to open in nlld-November. It ujnlilrl place government supporters from the outlying provinces in an cmharrassln: position, Mr-mbr-rs may .fintl it difficult to tie in support of the caliint-l's (lf'('lSl0ll with the de- sire of local voters. ToronioIMilIkI Strike Settled TORONTO, ICP) - Settlement of Toronto's three-day milk strike was announced late Sunday follow- ing an afternoon meeting of the striking I milk drivers. Details of the settlement not immediately available. Earlier it had been feared that settlement of the walkout of the 1,700 drivers would not be achiev- ed during the week-end. Fire Alarm On Canadian Liner were l.lVERPnOL. England, flitti- lersl - Five lire engines ' were summoned to the 20.448-ton Can- adian Pacific liner Empress of France In dork here Sunday when smoke was seen coming from one of the decks. The smoke was traced to an electri- cal fault in the forward peak of B dork. No damage was caused. The liner arrived from Mont- will Act if Any Chinese Troops Remain SEOUL, (Al?)-President Syng- man Rhee urged South. Korean army troops Saturday to 'pretDal'6 for a drive north if the forthcom- ing Korean political conference fails. "As long as there remains even one Chinese troqp in our territory there is no peace at all," Rhee said in his troops during a tour 0! the front. ' ”Should the forthcoming polit- ical conference fail to expel all Chinese troops from North Korea," Rhee said. "we must. march to the Yalu to fight, whether they are Chinese or Russians." President Syngman Rhee is wag- ing a sweeping poet-war cleanup campaign in almove he vows will rid the Republic of Korea govern- ment of corruption and suspected suhvei-sives. Political and youth organizations were included in the reshuffle. In addition Rlhee ordered the south Korean army counter-in- telligence corps to investigate and arrest Koreans suspected of engag- ing in Communist espionage cr anti-government activities. The Korean CIC recently arrest- ed a well-known South Korean newsman on ohargesof spying. Chung Kook Eun, editor in chief for R South Korean daily has been undergoing severe interrogations since he was taken into custody Aug. 31. Three high ranking officers of the South Korean army, including the former chief of the Republic of Korea (ROK) army intelligence bureau. Brig. Gen Kim Chang Pyung. are now being tried by.ihc high military court at Taegu on charges of violating the national defence law. The national police have ar- rested their iormer assistant. cil- rectnr Kim Eang Bong on charges of plotting against the government. Police alleged, Kim had formed, "unauthorised" group with mo . than 1.300 members in an attempt to "overthrow the government." , In other moves. Rhee: 1. Ordered dissolved all South Korean youth organizations in- Continued on page 5 col 6) Actor Lewis Stone Dies Suddenly l-IOLLYWOOD, t A P) Stone, the popular ”Jurlge Hard, of the movie and a show hu ness figure for more illan 30 years, died Saturday night. The '73-year-old actor collapsed on the sidewalk and died of in heart attack at his home after chasing teen-age boys who had been prowling around his su'in1- sciousness. The widow, Mrs. Hazel Stone. ming pool. He did not rcgnin con-y lold police that previously boys had thrown garden furniture Ln, the pool. A Stone, known for his lx'lil(lnP.'-K to movie beginners in his posi- tion as unofficial dean of IIoll,v-. wood actors, was an honoredl guest last week at an M luncheon. 16 . PAGES The Guardian. Five cents Morning Daily Founded lllf. German Reds In Shake Up Of People's Police BERLIN, (AP) The Eastern German Communists have shaken up the people's police, underground ;HOLlrC9S said Saturday. A tough new ,detachmcnt apparently has been assigned tn' guard the border sur- 1'Ol.ll"iClilg West Berlin, For a month. there have been shootings almost nightly. Uniformed newcomers are seen on pnirol. Western agencies heard that police from Saxony were ship- ped in East Berlin and police of that city were sent to Tllurlngia. Refugees are fnding it more dif- .ficult than ever to elude the con- trols. As in result, only about 4.000 have come over in West Berlin this month. The daily nverage is slightly above 400, where once it had run as high as 3,000. Tile blockade tactics appear to Western authorities aimed mostly at those hardy East Germans who want to pick up Allied food pm"- cols. Farmer's Wife Wins 345.000 .0n Sweepstakes MONTREAL, (CPI - A hard- working farmer's wile won s-16.000 on the running of the St. Ieger raice Saturday at Doncaaer, Eng. 1 Evil. Compartnat of. Law- , ceviile, 90 miles southeast of Montreal. held an Army and Navy sweepslake ticket on Premonition. winner of the annual classic. In a telephone interview she raid: "I'-m still too nervous to even think what I will do with the money, but I certainly need it.".' She lives on a farm with her husband, A former resident of Montreal. she said she has been buying swecpsiake tickets for more than 25 years. Two other Canadian-both, from Montreal-won large sums in the slvocpsiake. l Sonja Be.-mi-mzard of Montreal lhclcl a ticket on second-place NM"- lihern Lights and will collect S27.- ooo. Dr. Albert .1. Despnrols of ;Mo...iml Won 517.000 when the ;Q'.iecn': horse Aurcolc Placw lilllrd. Dr. Dc.-'pslrois' a 65-year-old 1'6- ,llred Montreal medical man took :the news of his K0011 101”-lme callmli. "'l'”he amount is reasonable.” he slid, "and it will help ii. lot." l-In had no immediate plans for vnmlion but indicated he may nnatc some of the money to char- bt-1'm" nut sorry I won." he said. 3. ii .lt lFive Violent DeaThs In N.S. Over Th Halifax, lCPl -. Five Nnv-I Scotians died violent deaths over, the. week-end. I-lerhsrt McNamara. 59. of Hol- llax, drowned after being stricken by a hearl attack while drawing water from a well at White's Lake. . Fifteen-year-old Gerald Osborne of Halifax died after being thrown hendfirst. onto a rockpile when his motor scooter left the road-at In- e Week-end 'Conierence May Result In Joint Economic Committee. By -Irving C. Whynot lVlONC'I'ZllN. (OP)-The old silli- ject of Maritime union cropped up again Sunday as premiers of the three Maritime provinces and a Newfoundland cabinet minister prepared for an historic meeting here to discuss mutual co-operal- ion. The meeting was first planned to include Premiers of the four Al. lantic Provinces but pressure of business prevented Premier small- wood of Newfoundland from at- tending. P. J. Lewis, minister with- out porlfaiio. will represent him at Mondays session with Premieis Mecdonald of Nova Scotiis, Mathe- son of Prince Edward Island and 1"'lemming of New Brunswick. One of the top items on the agenda is the proposed establish- ment of it committee to study all aspects of the Atlantic Provinccs' economy. Others concern co-opera- ticn on industrial develorpmenl. promotion of natural ruources and the tourist industry and uniform highway codes and education standards. workable Alternative Q There has been no hint that the oft-debated subject of Maritime union will ever be mentioned but some of the 50 or so business and political leaders here to attend ill sessions said the meeting co Continued on page ll Col 7 . CNE lac DEVIL ill! out But Nor A t TORONTO. (CF)-Minimum and ' maximum temperatures: Min Max Dawson ,, 34, Victoria .1: arms Edmorlton 50 75 Calgary 44 vs Rlljiitzi ,, 46 70 Winiilpcg . 44 55 Toronto 43 55 Ottawa 5-: 5.3 Montreal 61 0.3 Quebec . 60 66 Saint John . 48 67 Moncton . 48 68 Halifax . 51 63 Charlottetown 32 - Sydnev 47 M Yarmouth .. 49 68 St. Johns. Nfld. . . 42 59 HALIFAX. lCP. - 'I'he Domin. inn Public Weather office here says a band of showers has reach,- ed the western Marilimea and rviiids have increased from t I south. Gusly westerly winds in d much cooler ivenlher foilolvl the gttaniport, about 20 miles West 05 here. Dgvil Higgins, l8, was fatally ,irl,iurel when run over by n bull- ,do7.rr near his hcmc in Middle Musqundnboif An lngcvnmr llSl1el'l'llilll, Alfred by a car at Shelhurne. T Gerald Bourgeois. 19, was struck .bv the hoist of a highway machine Aaboul srven miles from his lchetlcnmp linmc. Doukhobors In Anti-Scho (By Joe Mncswec-n, (Jnnadinu Press Staff Writer) KRESTOVA, R.C.. (CF) -Flames across the interior Koolonay noukhobnr country during the week-end signalled A now out- hreak of extremist. Sons of Free- dom protest aiuiinst a govern- ment order to send their children to achooh At least four homer hnvc heen real Friday. Meanwhile at Okalla l 01 Protest during which they sought direct l prison 0 Use Fire noar Van!-ouver, the 148 arrested lDoukhobnrs continued R'l1ul1RIEl' lsirikc they began when lh9l' were picked up and charged with Aconirihutinlz to juvenile delin- Aqllcntgv lvnrinosrlwv. Prlsnn rials snlrl tvio oldrrly lies who took part in have been taken to hospital. A spokesman for the prisoners am rho hunger strike would be ad 3howers,0CCli5lOl1u!liy mixed will landed when they got word from mownurnu; morn; l l 8 who believe In following only th word from God on action against. laws of God and regard man- the government llnck-In-school marlo laws as n slight to God. paltry, ir.-ullliomally use arson as means of mar ml. offl- Freedom- lllc fut to 30 in afternoon. showers Tcmperutlres around the Great Lakes Sulidav were gener- ally in the 50's while snowflurriel ,liGl'8 reported in northern Ontario. l The cooicr all" will reach the In estern Marilimcs Monday and line 0BSIf!l'n regions Monday night ncarbv Cook, 44. (llC(l after being struck when frost is likely in most sec- lions. Regional forecasts: St. John River Valleys: Cloudy with showers until mid-morning llllPn variable cloudiness; coo'.ei' 1'1 afternoon: southwest winds 15 be- coming west 20, gusts lo 30 also noon. Low-high at Fredericton . alld 60, Saint John 52 and 65, Ed- muudston 50 and 55. Prince Edward Island: Cloudy, showers ending in afternoon; llttii change in temperature. Southwest winds 15, shifting in afternoon of west, 20 with gusts in 30. Lowe high at Charlottetown 52 and 65. Eastern N B. Counties: Cloud with showers ending about noon cooler in evening; southwest wind 15, swinging in west 20 with EU" Low-liigh I Moncton 52 and 65. Bay of Chaleur: Widely scatter light wind reported burned. The RCMP said God. incoming W51, 35, gusts m 35 1 they feared n mass protest by, The ill-l rhlldlrn nl the arrest 13” mornhm L,,,hhwl., M cum. first would spread through lhclod IRTYIIHPS have horn taken to almmon 50 and 55. whoi. n.,..ky.olm rnunlry holnrqaglllsn m (tnllimhnra. sannlzritflgll g gggggggg -. . order is restored. w are lav nrv "lmh Mr" C , . hm-lnlipim The latest fires, all not Slindn,v,;h,v Dnukhnhor women and wei-A alxiwzg L:d'Mt.oE&I:dhz1'3g P, M, followed a series of meetings hvlfnrr workers. . m'h Hide tad”, at H", NO” the 3,513-strong Sons of Freedom The Frcedomlle Doukhohors. K - shore at 0.25 A. M. and 9.17 ?- summeraldo tide cmhteen utea later than Charlottetown. .: Sun riser today at 5.50 A- M- M . item at 0.21 P. M. C