MAXIMS 011 MERE MAN snuunju path! dill!!! Of gngbflho II ,., n.u,sousuus-i. TIm0uh . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Cl-IARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, MONDAY. DECEMBER 11. 1950 iittlee Has L my George Kitchen) 0-rrAl'i'A, Dec. 10-(C?)-Prime Minlmr Atllse said today that I . mg... identity of vlewa" exists "I:iWPCI1 Britain and Canada on in, present critical world situa- MS." mat was as far as the wieuyrspoken British Prime Min- Mu ....,.,m go in commenting at I press conference on the current mm with Prime Minister St. Laurent and members of the Can- adian Cabinet. who press conference was ex- Coming Events ..-3-he official Opening of win- "Mail your Films to Gasnnum Photo studio. Charlottetown. seed daily. "lminx Timothy llcGuil;an and BOY”- ...-.. "Park Corner school concert. December 21st "Reserve a December 21st mrrlnglon School Concert. for "Msrtrnvale Christmas Concert December 21st. 0 P. M. "llrserve December 22nd for llszelbrook Christmas Concert. "ciiri.-tmas Concert. Mi. Albion School. December Zlat. "Card Party, Launch. HODG mi-er Credit Union Hall. Decem- ber l9th. "Variety Concert. Hearts 1-lail ,t rtoyaiiy. rt-to-v. Becemher set, it P. M. Admission as cents. "Repeat concert in Long River hall Der. ll Al 8 o'clock. if stormy first line niziit. "Cmklnoit- rind Card Party in Harrington Hall. Tuesday. Decem- her 12th. sale of Fancy Work. .4... "Whesiicy School concert. ni- day night, December Nod. if not inc, Saturday night. "Warren Grove Christmas Con- cert, North River Hall. Friday. December 22nd. ' "Annual Meeting Kingston Telephone Co., December 16th Edlar Newson. Secretary. "Riisrrva Thursday. December list. Kelvin Grove Christmas Cou- :ert.. "lir.-rrve December 20iii. Pow- gal Christmas Concert in Pownsl all. "Show Morell Community Hall- "HW Tuesday, Friday. Saturday. show starts ll o'clock. "See Gienaladsle School Con- cert ill Tracadle Hall. Wednesday. December 20th. "Reserve December 20th for ldayfleld Christmas Concert. Sale oiiandy. if not fine. following nil i. "Hear Mrs. Malcolm McLeod lecture on her trip to Copenhagen. Clyde River l-loll. December 13th. It 8 P. M. sharp. variety program. Sale of candy. "F'!'derat.ion of Agriculture School District Meetings. Decem- ber nth to 16th. Consult local 5'"6ilr.v and sea handbilla for in- lormatlon. ...C-. w"'i'he Annual Meeting King lliuin Lodge L. o. L. sting-tan. Iii! be held Monday. Daceinber 'A"'hi Kingston Hall at 0 o'clock. ” Brothers please attend. "Last day for buying it uni. Chicken: and capons will be. Tues- v. December 12th. I A. as till 30- R. L. Dioitiason. New clas- ,.''5'' Santa olaus on Wednes- .;,in Hunter ltivas'fsom a to also. Ratios-lcton frtlss 4.18 to 4.40 'Mhlt;adalban'a fran I to 0.00. km 'u0lfb!.'a;1llo:.Cwnd car and "Mitts - a it my Km! 101' Anew salt. 3:iiad- n Hum rant voiaasa ii” for on farin. oonmt than ,3 am. central and Poul- " tom? i.?i:.'."i..ii'.”5m3r?3.'.' ml”-Day ma main us:--1s' '” 'i"';:i?vu'dua:hos 'siiil”a'aieam' w "" 9” ill! price but must do- gg00ilhlrda.IsIl!0i'IIsad ittle To Say As He Reaches Ottawa pected to be one of the high- lights of his two-day visit here following talks in Washington with President Truman. How- ever. reporters were disappointed by the dearth of publishablc news about his views on his Ottawa and Washington visits and on the world picture generally. Off The Ream-d Mr. Attire opened the confer- ence with I! brief general state- ment, in which he reported that Britain and the United States are "very close” on objectives and methods. He then ruled (hut his answers to ensuing questions must be strictly off the' record and not for publication. Mr. Attlee's press confer- ence was almost overshadowed by a statement to reporters Saturday night by Mr. St. Laurent that the information he has "is that the United Nations are not going to be driven out of'Korea." Mr. St. Laurent. made that state- mcnt after Mr. Attlee. in a meeting I lasting an hour and 20 minutes. had briefed the Canadian cabinet on the broad background of his chats with Mr. Truman and presumably on British policy generally. Earlier. Mr. St. Laurent and Mr. Attlee had met privately for a half hour. Tlcday, Mr. Attlee lunchs-rl with Mr. st. Laurent and was with him tonight at an official dinner at Rldeau Hall. residence of the Clov- arnor-General. Saturday night. too. they were t,ogef..her at. a governntent. dinner for Mr. Attlae. Leave Today For U.l(. Mr-.Attiaa and" f ' . I vlsers will leave tomorrow by air fer the United Kingdom. Today's press conference was in an oak-panelled room on the first floor of the House of Commons. Peering over his spectacle; and sucking a briar pipe. Mr. Attloe gava generally short precise an- swers to repcrters' qiiestlons which ranged the broad front of the world struggle against Communist imper- ialism. At times. with an impish grin. he would say that he could not com- Contlnued on page 5, col. 4 No War Scare In Europe Ailel PARIS. Dec. 10-(AP)-The wzir scare isn't. scaring many people in Europe-yet. It has got Europcnna worried .a little and it has driven them i to n more intense reading of news- papers. pcrnhps. but there are no signs of war Jitters. an Associat- ed Press survey of the major capitals of Europe shows. vs. The big news currently is Christmas. The stores are decorated for London's Father Christmas. Parls' Pare Noel and" Berlin's Saint Nicholas. Shoppers are Jamming the .countt-rs. ' There are no traces of an exodus. Airlines and steamship companies say their business is normal for this--time of the year- lndia Heads lip Efforts To Get Selileinenl By STANLEY JOHNSON LJAKE SUCCESS. N.Y.. Dec. 10- (AP) - India's efforts to obtain a negotiated settlement of the Kor- ean war went into high gear to- day with high-level conferences in- volving represent.atlves,of at least 15 countries. Britain's Sir Gladwlm Jebb met India's sir Benegal mm to get 8 detailed account of R.au's mcetinll Saturday with the Chinese Com- munist representative, Gen. Wu Hslu-Chuan. After saturdayla meeting Rail told reporters the Peiplng Oom- mimist: Government wants to end the Korean fighting as soon as possible and is giving careful con- sideration to a peace appeal signed by 13 Asian and Middle Eastern cclmtrles. Rau today authorized his infor- mation officer to deny a report that Wu mm told him the Chinese Ravi.- had altered to stop at the 38th par- allel to give time for neI0U3'-10n9- John and Britain's Minisftr of State. Kenneth Younger. also in"- Uniixed States delegate Ernest A- Gross. An American spokesman said the China Reported Considering Peace Proposals St. Laurent Hears U. N. Forces To Hold In Korea "Seriously ill .,WwwW. The Gunrdion regrets to rclmlli thni Mr. Horace Wright (5b0V9)- chairman of the Workmens Com- pensation Bonrfi..is very serious- ly ill in the Prince iatiward .5- land Hospital. Mr. Virlllilt W” taken to hospital inst Thursday (Continued on Page 6 col. 3) Poinlsllp Giatiil - WAS!-l:lNOTON. Dec. 9 - Dofance secretary George Mar- shall pointed up the gravity of the world crisis Saturday by saying r-resident Truman "is seriously considering" the de- claration of a national em- ergency. '- The Cabinet member told reporters this as he stepped from a rce-hour closed con- fexencg with senators consid- ering President Truman's re- quest for nearly 810.000.000.- 000 to strengthen the United siates' fighting forces. Several of the senators. who had listened to grim reports from Marshall and army. navy and air force leaders. wanted to go beyond declaring a mt- ionai emergency to at least a start on "all-out mobilisation." Most senators said the chief value of a presidential declar- ation of emergency now would be to put inc American public on full r.-slice. Pope's Christmas Message Dec. 23 VATICAN CITY. Dec. 10-(CPV --The Pope will broadcast his us- ual Christmas message on Dec. 23 instead of on Christmas eve. it was announced Saturday. The reason is that on Christmas we the Pontlff will its busy with the cioslng ceremonies of the 1930 holy yenr. British Earl TACOMA. Wash. Dec. 10 -(AP) - The 60-year-old Earl of Essex and his 37-year-old fiancee left their honeymoon cottage hora sat- urday night for a quickie marriage remony after discovering that they were not legally wed. They had lone to the cabin for the night after having appeared before a Seattle judge. They as- sumed they had been married. and so told reporters. But a query to the fudge dilclosed that at had granted them only I wai on the legally-prescribed three ay wait which is supposed to precede all marriages. The news flashed on the radio. Brltl.sh- consular officers heard it. The landlady at their motor court was notified. She rushed breath- less to their cabin and told them. Near midnight the Earl and his fiancee went to the home of Justice of the Peace Delbert Breaemann. lresamann said the couple was "very nervous." Thay were accom- aaiod by two 'racon-tans. J. 8. tuaoiswahi and Mildred A. Cooke. "I gave them a quiet offloa wad- diag - a iiwa-ring ceremony with cl.ndIOiig,ht,' he said. "I didn't know the Iarl from Adam. That's the first nobility l've He's Not Wed To Bride Discovers C......MM.,,ggggggg.ggg The Earl and his fiancee arrived in Vancouver last Wednesday from Melbourne. Australia. They motor- ed Saturday from Vancouver to Seattle. The noblcman's family name is Algernon George De Vere Cspell. He is the Eighth Earl of Essex, a name prominent in British history for nearly three centuries. His bride is the former Z. Mildred Carlson. a native of New York. It was the Earl's third marriage. His first wife was Mary Eveline Stewart Freeman. whom he mar- ricd in 1000. She divorced him in 1926. the year he married Mrs. Alys Montgomery Scott-Brown. who last October obtained a decree trial. the Englwt equivalent of an in- tarlocudory divorce decree. The liarl and Miss Carlson mat in Melbourne. Australia. The cou- ple had left Seattle Saturday for a leisurely honeymoon trip to ” uda. At a press conference in their hotel. suite there. they blithely lntonned reporters that they had been married in a civil ceremony before Judge Henry Clay Agnew. But a telephone call to the Judge dlscioaad they hadn't been married. "All I did." he explained. "was grant them a waiver on the three- dsy wait before s ceremony can Canadians Lead Naval Force In Big Operation ever married. be performed." after suffering at heart nlinrk. orrAwA. r.:.. 10C (CPI --The navy told Saturday how a United Nations destroyer force under it or Nm-th Km-can port, and than shel- led the harbor. . It was the biggest naval lob On the Korean west coast since the lnrglmn invasion and. despite lack of enemy fire. it was a hazardous undertaking. But there were no Canadian casualties. -1-he gm diggtroycrs that covered the Tuesday withdrawal. 1 about 7.000 United States soldiers and Koreans included Canada's Cay- uga, Allis-baokan and Sioux. 3” under Capt. Jeffery Brock. SW10? officer of the Canadian group. The other vessels were the Australian Warra-munga and Bataan and the United Slartcs' Forest Royal. ' From'Chinnamipo. 001"! M the North Korean CW9"-3,1 9! Pynnr yang. transports carried out gist? withdrawal of wounded and clv - tans, while tank landinl SNPS imk on army personnel and cQUl'PmfT;f- They were moved to a base fuit - or south. About 1.500 U. S. troops and 1.000 Korean civilians were taken out in I the warships. Thousands more . Km.,.an5 fled from the aEiVBnCll1E . Reds in junks under cover of the , desiroY9T5- Tell Dramatic Story The navy gave tn:-.s account of th tion: frhjgecr-Soraiion vvos initiated with icontinued on Fast 5 C0'- 1i News in Brie? WASiliNG'1'()N. Dec. 1(l-(AP)- State Secretary Dean Acheson is rrporird to have told Congress Saturday that the United States can't legally use the veto to KEHP Communist China Out Of Nit! Ullt ltori Nations. Pl-IILADELPII A. Pa. Doc. 10- (AP)-Harry Gold. research chem- ist, Saturday wns sentenced to 30 years in prison as the self-co:-v fesscd courier of a Russian atomic gpy ring-g crime he told the court was a 'tcrrible mistake.” OTTAWA. Dec. 10 -iCPl -The Mines Department has signed an agreement to conduct joint re- search with McGill University aimed at development of an of- ficlem coal-burning gas turbine locomotive. it was announced to- day. SAXNT JOHN. N. 3.. Der. 10- iCP) -- Premier Smsllwood of Newfoundland said in an inter- view here tonight that details of another industrial plant for his Province will be announced -this week by Hon. Edward Russell. Newfoundland Minister of Natur- al Resourcaa. ' BUCK HILL FALLS. Pan Doc. 10 - (AP)-- A foreign mission executive said tonight that "das- plte all advarsitias. Christianity lives and even grows" in Com- munist china Dr. Eugene L. Smith told the board of missions and church extension of the Methodist church in session here: "Most of the churches iinychinai . Supply Renewed are open. with surprisingly large attendance ' l By Douglas flow OTTAWA, Dec. 10 - (CF) - As Canadian troops neared Japan. Prime Minister St. Laurent said Saturday night his information is that the United Nations forces will llold,on in Korea. Military opinion backed his view. The opinion in hiigh places is that Korea can be held without pouring in more U. N. formations. that Ls outside keeping thcce now there up to fighting strength. Unless a diplomatic solution is found in the meantime. the ex- pectation here is that Canadian soldiers will be committed to the fighting possibly in late January. joining in what is shaping up as a grim winter cam-paign. it is expected that the 2nd Bat- talion of the Princess Patricla's Canadian Light Infantry will com- l picto training -- it needs six to eight weeks - in Korea and then join a Commonwealth brigade to fight. By that time there may be a Commonwealth division. Princess Pats Near Japan The Batlal-ions arrival in Yoko- hama. Japan. is expected to be announced momentziriiy. its l.000 man may already be there. Dc- fence Headquarters said they had no information. Any announce- ment must come from Tokyo in line with security regulations. Mr. St. Laurent spoke to re- porters after he and his Cabinet mat late Saturday with Prime Minister Attlee and Britain: No. l soldier. Field Marshal Sir Wil- 'liam Slim. chief of the Imperial General Staff. A reporter asked: "Can Korea be held?"' .- y-Q1 ca; ' -......,.,-v'.r1- A '1' am no soldier b'ui. the ipjor malion I have is that the U. N. is not going to be driven out of Korea." He said the cabinet was ”Quite comforted" by what Mr- Attlee and Sir William told thenl. General Optimism , He reflected a general opiirnism i which flowered here during the A-iiiec ialks. it was an optimism based on the military situation in Korea alone. however, and was confined to the belief that Korea can be held for good. sound mili- tary reasons. - g - Mr. St. Laurent's information is that it can be stabilszed. This view is believed to be held not only here but in Washington and London as well. The military reasons are these: The U. N. forces have tattered heavy but not shattering losses. (continued on page 15 col. 3) Cariirls,--Gar Go; FUNCHAL. -Madeira Islands. Dec. 10 - (AP) - The naval radio sta- tion here said Saturday I antral boat from Flores Island. Azores. has reached the ocean-crossing amphib- ious jeep of Mr. and Mrs. nen Car- in, gbmlt 100 miles northwest of here with a supply of 135501019 "W American couple requested inst. Tuesday. I A radio message said the carllns. were well. ' The Carllns, who left Halifax in their seagoing leap in July and .il'- rlvcd in the Azores in late Auiusf. C '&!Dl'i.' f.htl"f1lOv6mei1f 16 25.000 iliiines. Soldiers Suffer Heavy Casualties Expect V-Ills-tie Force. To Reach Coast To- day. TOKYO. Dec. 11 -(Monday) - (AP)-Twenty-five thousand cas- ualty-ridrlled American marines and soldiers broke out of :1 Chin- ese Communist death more in the "frozen hell" of Northeast Korea Sunday. By Sunday night about one- third had reached the vicinity of the eastern est-ape port of Hung- nam. a field dispatch reported. Tenth Corps headquarters said only that forward elements were in the Hamming area, six miles in from the sea. but would not pin- point their location. The whole force should reach the coast amt safety sometime late today. field dispatches said. It will complete the greatest. blood- iest retreat in Marine Corps hist- 0T.Vmalmo:-it 50 tortuous miles. Casualties were heavy for both sides. An estiinotcrl three Chinese Red Divisions-l6,ii(l0 to 24.000 men-were destroyed in the Amer- ican drive to freedom from the shores of the Changjin reservoir. Only a conservative figure of more than 4.030 wounded was available for the Americans. with deaths unreporird. An on-tho-spot cs-ilinal.a that marine casualties those at. Tarawn. , The outnumbered Marine Division. loll British Royal Marines and elements of the US. 7th Division. however. were Mmmwi 01A ' MERE MAN7 ---a-. Ia ya wise as aaa-push. ud harmless as doves. PAGES KMERICAN UNITS BATTLE WAY our OF TRAP IN KOREA subsoripuoaa Deuvorad U300: Ilail II-Nu other Provlsscaa I I7. I. 07.00. Shortage Of By HAROLD MORRISON OTTAWA, Dec. 10 - (OP) - With two sources of supply-Clhlna and Korea-already cut. off. Canada fares the grim prospects of war with a critical shortage of strategic materials. The shortages are most apparent in such metals as cobalt. mangan- ese. tungsten and chromite. all es- sential in an expanding armaments program. Government plans to overcome these shortages are not yet crystal- lized. If the need becomes desper- ate, ft is likely ccnslderatlon will be given to subsidizing mining of de- posits in Canada which normally are considered too poor for p.-om;. able extraction. Or Canada mny seek to share in the stockpiles be- ing built. up by the United States. with whom she had agreed to pool resources and skills. But it is a question of wthether the United States has enough to go round. Britain now wants to share in the us. stockpile and President Truman has agreed with Primr- Minister Attica that some of the U.S. stockpile should be made ai- WAS i exceeded U. S. lsii Canada Faces Critical Several Strategic War Materials Former K. 0f C. Head Passes GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Dec. ta - (AP) w Martin H. Carmody, former Grand Knight of ma Knights of Columbus. died Satur- day. He was 78. As supremo head of the order. he was active in war work during the First. World War. He was a corporation lawyer. ' New British Tank Falls Info Red Hands TOKYO. Dec. 10-(Reuters) - N British 52-ton Centurion tank many of whose details are still on the secret list. has fallen mini Communist hands in the Korea roir-mi. an authoritative soured sold ilf'rl: Saturday night. Thd crow set fire to the machine. dis- abled during withdrawal front Pmnuyang. But a military soured ,ailable to the United Kingdom if : possible. Chins Halts Exports gest problems. Canada imports about 35.000 tons a year. Tungsten is used decimated in 12 days and nights "?a"”V W Vmdme h'9h'Speed "'3" of running battle with an estim- ated 85.000 to 120.000 Reds. Still menaceti was American force of 6.000 to 8.000 members of the U. S. 17th Regi- ting tools. In its pure state. it is used in radio tubes. contact points ,m0t,h,.,- and other phases of electronics. Chins. o'hief producer. has hnltnrl exports to the Western World. us. ment Combat Team. For sec-urityi mines in South Korea. once a 182116 reasons, headquarters did not re- American outfit to reach the Man- churian border at llyesanjin. Its retreat route stretched more ihafliuggll Bang... (1,, enemy-domuv ' and Tasmania. 100 miles through ated territory. Also unreported were two south: .. Korean divisions-the Capital and; .'Il'd-somewhere hung. north of Ham- New Flanking Threat Oil the relatively quiet north- west from United Nations forces moved into ttdefcnslve positions." Gen. MacAl-thurls headquarters disclosed Sunday. A war summary did not pinpoint new posltlom. However, headquarters said 2.000 to 3.000 Communist troops in black and gray uniforms moved cost of Hacju-west coast Yellow Si,-aaport Just north of the 38th Continued on page 5. Col. 5 Canadais Stockpiles Of Dairy Products Reduced OTTAWA. Dec. 10 ICPI --- Canada faces the winter ,,w,l,th sharply-reduced stockpiles of dairy products. but officials believe there will be r-nonr.-.h to carry through un- til spring production starts. Reductions are nctcd all through the dairy industry. The Bureau of Statistics Satur- day estimated that creamery butter stocks on Dec. l were down H.000,- 000 pounds from a year ago. Cheese and evaporated whole milk holdings -wore down about 2l).000.00(l sent out it distress signal when their 24-foot craft ran into henv.i' miles off nmchal. They asked that two barrels of gasoline be rushed to them. Commertiiil Travellers Elecl Officers HALIFAX. bee. 9f- (CF) George Wilson. Dartmouth. N. S.. was re-elected president of the Maritime Commercial Travellers Association at the organisations annual meeting last night. other officers include: it. C. Kennedy. Charlottetown. Prince Edward Island vice-president; A. J. Moore, Halifax. Nova Scotin vlca-president and W. M. Lundy. Saint John. New Brunswick vice- president. Several speakers said there should be special tl-avcllers' rates for passage aboard the Canadian Pacific Stesmshlpr Princess Hoi- enc. travelling between Dighy, N. 8.. and Saint John. N. 3. Mr. Keller said there were no special rates for travellers on any ferry in Canada. President Wilson said the mat- ter would be taken up with the railways at the annual Dominion conference of Commercial Travel- lars' Associations of Canada to be pounds each. while skim milk pow- der was down allcut 6.000.000 Officials attrlblitml the do!-lines to lower prices for butter and cheese and more attractive prices for fl'.li':l milk. aided by greater Caiiaciinll demand. This meant that milk which might have gone into butter and cheese was channelled oil into the ;N.s. Child Safe 1Afi-or Night in Woods i i source of supply, were rendered un- of this only workable in the battle against the Reds. Buyers now have turned to Port- Beigian Congo A supply of tungsten lies unwork- (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) MCADAM, N.B.. Dec. 10 -- (OP) - An all night search for three- yaar-old Charles Yerxa ended auc- cessfully early Saturday. Found by the R.C.M.P. dog King from Moncton. the young son of Gordon Yerxa was cold but otherwise un- harmed by his night in the woods. scores of searchers scoured the area near McAdam after the child wandered away Friday afternoon. fluid milk trade. As a result. Canada's proluction of creamcry butter for the first ll months of i960 dipped to :'52.220.000 pounds, compared with 267,lO0.000 a year ago. November's output. totalled 1?..- 2G0.00fl pounds. compared with 16.- 176000 in l949. The drop in butter production also showed in cheese. Cheese, in the first 11 months of 1050. drcppr-d to 92.498000 pounds. compared with 111,128,000 a year ago. Stocks on Dec. l declined to 25,565,000 pounds. from 475300.000 in 1940. Mon went down. output of margar- inc increased. The ll-month pro- duction total was estimated at 87.- 42.51.000 pounds. up from o'l.000.000 last year. Bucks on Dec. 1 totalled 2.660.000. compared with 1.960.000 on Nov. 1. Canada Places Embargo On Goods To Red China OTTAWA. Dec. l0 - lCPl Trade Minister Howe has ordered an embargo on all goods destined for Red China. The order, announced Saturday. applies in Korea. l-long Kong. Manchuria and Macao-all of them in or near the area where a third world war threatens. Officials said the main point of the order is to ban all goods from shipment to the Chinese Commun- ists. Hong Kong. a British posses- sion. is a trans-shipment point for goods going in the Chinese main- land. Mr. Howe said in a statement all export permits granted will be recalled "for revalldation." The embargo is. in a way. a re- versal of Government policy. For. though Canada has had restric- hsid here last. Jun tions on the export of strategic goods in Communist countries. the policy was to allow normal civil- ian trade to function. Thus. Canada earlier this year sold China several thousand bush- els of flour and even some alum- inum -- considered strategic--but destined for manufacture into foil for tea packaging. The new order brings to an end an export trade that already has been on the decline. In the first six months of 1050 Canada sold China only 81.500900 worth of goods compared with 3.000.000 in the corresponding period last year. Exports to l-loot Kong in the first half of 1050 declined to I3.- 700.000 from 34,100,000. l-fowaver. shipments to Korea were on the increase: !l.l00.i)00 in the first While butter and clieesa prorioevv ,snid it was "highly doubtful” whether Communist experts ha-'l lit:-rn prevented from germ-rlnq K much information from the wreck. l of th. ' in i. is: tungsten eproxilrdeisuon:cac::et.hisnebig-i Ngw For ichlldren To Open 1 'F0.RaONTO. Dec. 20-(OP) .Tc-:onto's new 512000.000 hospita for sick children is almost flnishe and will open early in the no year, it was announced Saturda Nurses already are attending lvr. tures in some class rooms. Th hospital has 632 beds, rescavrc laboratories and television lines t enable observation of operatic from other parts of the buildin You'Ri: No? 20' Sting OF 9 TORONTO. Dec. 10 -(GP) -4 Minimum temperatures observed between 7:90 p. m. and 7:30 a. m. EST; maximum temps between '.':4 30 o. m. and 7:30 p. m.'. Victoria 47 40; Edmbnton 10 421 Calgary 19 50; Regina 13 36: Win- nipeg 3 16; Toronto 22 30: Ottaw 26 33: Montreal 27 3.2: Quebec 2 - ; Monctors 46 52; Halifax 4.2 52: Charlottetown 41 49: Sydney 39 45:1 Ynrmouih 48 50; St. John's 21 40. HALIFAX. Dec. 10 --(CF)-Of-. iiclal forecasts issued by the Dem- inlon Public Weather office here and valid until midnight tomm-.. roir ' Syllopsis: Extremely mild weather can- iinuas over the Maritirnos llilu evening. Readings in the sun. which are near record highs for this date were reported from cun- muniilea in all three Maritime Provinces today. A developing storm of! the vir- ginia mast will reach the Mari- times Monday accompanied by rain in the southern regions and rain and snow in tha northwest- ern regions. ciearlnrwaathar and .'N1.llDnni7lO temperatures follow this storm. Forecasts: Prince Edward Island-Overcast. intermittent rain baglnniru Mon- day afternoon. lxtraneiy mild winds southeast 1.5 increasing to so gusts to 40 Monday afternoon Low and high Monday at char- lotietown 48 and 50. High tide tool! It 12.40 P. M. and 11.41 12. M. , sun rises at 7.41 A. M. and sot! at 4.8-i P. M. aumrnaraida tide eighteen min- utes ister than Charlottetown. BOND!-IN - CAP! TOEMINTINI half of 1950 compared with ll0.000 in .199 0 V ' . Leave Borden Loan 0 T. 0.10 LII. I'll LN. 1.00 EM. 1.40 Pill LIO BM. - --- 7.10 EM. SUNDAY Lasvo noroaa Loan (1 I 9.10 AM. III! A-I. 0.4! LII.