\ OIL MERE MAN houses. - ‘ — ‘i- l MAXIM! - Afsfsallyhoie I the beltof "The; Guardian, Pounded 1m. clgsrloteotowa Gllllllll- hoCauI. Covers PrincegEdward Island Like the Dew (ZHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JANUARY 2s, 1941 Crashes Rises To 68 Attempt To Rob Bank ls Foiled . Pl-Ilb CAMPBELL, Ala, Jan. 27 --(AP)—-One _ma.n was shot. to death and another slightly wound- ed today after a. wild. six-hour taxicab ride which included an un- successful attempt to rob ths First State Bank here. Thomas ‘H. Taylor, 24. of Russell- ville, Alas died in hospital an hour after he was shot through the head as police sought to arrest him near hem. _ Wylie i1‘. Martin. nuance. Ala, taxi driver, was suffering from a head iniury- he told police had been in.'iicted by Taylor. Martin was quoted by county pol- ioe as saying Taylor rented his cab at florence and folrced him to drive to Phil Campbell. and to enter and leave the bank. Martin's story was that Taylor kept a pistol in his back, forcing him into t.he bank where cashier C. P. Ailman, managed to turn in the alarm before rluminc out of the buildir-g. Taylor then forced Martin to drive away, the taxi driver said, but the car broke down ' near Phil ranlpbell. and Taylor was shot fatally when police arrived. Tax Yield In i945 lllose To 700 Millions a OTTAWA. Jan. 27- (OFF-Cor- porate business taxes yielded close to $700,000,000 to the federal treas- ury in 1945, but the total was more than $50,000,000 short of the record yield in 1943. the country's peak production year. Tax yields were {686582813 in i945. $674,919,000 in 1944 and $787,- 404,866 in 1943. The rates for cor- porstion income taxes and excess profits taxes were the same for all lhrce years. Dr» McCann said that while (le- taiied figures on 194.6 would not be available for some months, it was indicated from current tax collec- tions that the 1846 corporation profits had not val-lad very much rronl lheQirevious year.- All provinces except Ontario and New Brunswick showed higher lax returns for 1045 than for the previous year. Collections in On- mlo dropped from $321,049.01» in "'44 w siilisssnels in 194s. New Brunswick collections slipped from ‘11041-000 to tllrlssmo. Quebec's climbed front $217,005,000 in i044 '9 _$24l-(Y10.755_and British Colum- blps from 150808.000 to $01,007,- a Coming Events "Auction Forty-Dives. Park- dale l-iall tonight at 8 o'clock. "lforse Races at Oyster Bed midis. Wednesday afternoon. »"See the Films at iiszelbrook “heel haul-only at mo. “Dance is K. of C. Hall, Souris, "will. January 10th. cut-zora Orchestra. "Dance at lertralavs Mills. Bonshaw. Wednesday. hay. I. Good floor and good music. "Hockey at New Glasgow rink lenient. North nustico vs. New willow. Game starts at I230. 1-nl~— "Dense in Credit Union l-isii. summerfleld, Wednesday. 89th. Good music and raft-sailboats. “Montague rink; Murray Har- bour vs. Montague, ‘iimraday. Jan. ma. n mo. ‘NIE-tgro ioloaod Wednesday and a or stock taking. Gullah {Dd 8am. c? "Attention. farmers of lstsrn Klan! We want a-auaatity at. 2:: ‘cattle. lantern Paekinrllo. l’ - "Unioidtq-‘lhlldly pal Wed- "Mu. are! coal: car shingles: mull"! pub. P. J. ifoya and cgwllbfisnwm ma: for ‘WHO fiifilh fiat-twill C. "fr! Plates, Vernon River. Avon- dli gm _ Lulu,‘ Illfllitlge Phflil Gordon >. would be, to (Iy Tbs Canadian Inna) The three-day death toll on be world's sky routes to pg Mm- day night after a. United States Army 3-20 bomber, carrying res- lfifltd equipment. crashed in flame; near Albuquerque. N.M., killing 11 -me.ucboar The fate qf ll rangers abouvll s lnluipc Chinese civilian airliner an route from Canton to Chung- king still was unknown. The Albuquerque crash was the first l-rlsjor disaster in the United States during the last three days although l0 persons lost their lives in eight smaller accidents in the colmtry dining the week-end. dish investigating commission con- sidered the possibility that an sir- port employee may inadvertently have caused Sunday's crash of a Royal Dutch Airlines plane in which American soprano Grace Moore. Swedish‘ Prince Gustaf Adolf and 20 other; perished. The commission announced that a steel wedge. of the type usually uled to lock elevator flaps when s. plane is on the ground, hag been fotmd some distance from the wrecked K-L-M DC-3. The D0dy of Mlsg Moore, former Tennessee choir ginger who gained success in the movies. opera and musical comedy. Wag still not fin- llly identified Monday night. The Moore family announced 1n,Chllt- tanooga. ‘Dem-t, that funeral serv- ices would be held there, with bur- lsl in the family plot. Prince Gustaf Adolfs body was identified fhrolgh bracelets. It was announced in Stockholm that the Prince will be buried beside his mother near the loyal family's res- idence outside Stockholm. The Swedish warship Oscar ll has teen ordered to bring the prince's body to Malmoe. Danish authorities, meanwhile. ruled that the maximum weight of DC-il planer, leaving Danish fields must not in the future exceed 25.243 pounds. Esklldsen said that the ill-fated plane had been loaded to a. weight of 20,872 pounds '- 1.629 more than the new limit. In Britain, where 12 persons were killed Saturday in the take-off from Croydon airport of another DC-3, civil aviation minister 10rd Nathan said the air safety board would look into the whole matter of plane loads, possibly Tuesday. The serious week-end accidents was brought to the floor of the House of Commons Monday. GS. Lindgxen. parliamentary secretary to the civil avialtloin- ministry. stat- od no accident has occurred with British-operated DC-3 aircraft which could be attributed to over- loading. FOOD SELECTION What we eat. ls more important than how much we consume. accord- ing to nutrition authorities. An export at Ottawa declares that "enough is better than a. feast." Foods must b; selected for returns in body-building and sustaining value, not just as so much filling, or palate pleasing. l 004. Tax collections in other prov- inces, with tho 1944 figures in brackets: Prince Edward Island, 01.833578 ($1,127.000); Nova Scotia. 814.053.- ooz ‘($l3,'799.000); Manitoba. 808.- ppgpoo (£7,001,000); Saskatchewan 85.772375 ($5.037.000); Alberta, Act To Be OITAWA. Jan. 37-(0?) —'rhe Chinese Immlpstlon Act. which drastically restricts the entry of Chinese into- Canada and loos has been protested by the Chinese Ow- ommmt, will-be rapoalad ot the Meanwhile g Dsnish-Dutch-Swe- ‘ (l. ll. R. President Stresses Problem 0f Transportation MB. 8.0. VAUGHAN. C-M-G. HALIFAX, Jan. all-A warning that the railway transportation industry in Canada is faced “urith problems of a complexity. per- piexlty and variety beyond mem- ory" and of the implications of the situation upon the national economy was voiced here last. night by R. C. Vaughan, C.M.G.. chairman and president of the Canadian National Railways, in an nddrcss before tho annual meeting of the Halifax Board of Trade. Because the changeover from war to pea-cc had altered the nature of thc commodities being handled and aflccfcd the urgency for handling them. the average tonnage loaded per freight car had decreased; the average length i___,_ ._.._._7___~ (continued on Page 5 Col. ti) Request Resignation 0f Ontario llydro Power llllairnlan _._~_. TORONTO, Jan. 27 -(CP)—Be- cause "problems were being created continually as a result. cf the fail- ure of the cllaimlan to communi- cate essential information to the government" Premier Drew of 0n- iurio tonight announced the Ontar- io govarnmcnt. has requested the resignation of Dr. Thomas l-l. Ilogg. chairman of the Ontario Hydro Power Commission. Dr. Hog-g Joined Hydro in 1913 as assistant hydraulic engineer. be- came chief hydraulic engineer in 1927 and chairman of the commis- sion ln 1937. "After all the earlier efforts to establish business-like methods the goverr-nent had no possible choice but to collie to the conclusion that a change 1n management of the Hydro-Electric Commission was an immediate necessity in the public interest." said Premier Drew in an address tordght over‘ an Ontario network of the Canadian Broad- casting Corporation. "That decision was communicated to Dr. l-logg last Tuesday by letter after I learned tlhat he had return- Qd to his office." Chinese Immigration Repealed gurded by the Chinese Govern- ment "as an exclusion act and m the nature of discrimination on grounds of race against a friendly and an allied people." A campaign for repeal of the sci. Ir. King said this action would bl taken thhlllh a bill t0 b8 in- troduced early la the session open- iag this ‘Thursday and would bring Ohlnaaruiuior the general provisions of till Immigration Act. The affect of the legislation also t the entry: into Camus of the wives and unmar- ried children of Canadian citizens of Chtaaao origin; They have been . from mains to Canada under the present legislation. If. King's statement gave an indication of government policy on immigration generally. 080W! to lay that a cabinet committee has been living “careful study" to the matter with a view to the ivi- troduction of amendments to the immigration act at this avslioa of Pafllalnalit. Otllsr than that, the statement dealt solely with the Cilinne Act, which ‘Ir. ling eald had been ra- _ t ' eat. k ‘ a peak last night when Prtmo'iliallter Mackenzie King public meetings were. held in announced today. Halifax. Toronto. London, Ont. and Ottawa urging that the meas- ure be rescinded or revised The act, passed in ms allows only Wm classes of Chinese into Canada-- bone fido students and accredited import and export merchants. While Mr. King gave no details of immigration policy generally, it has been reported authoritatively that the Government wu consid- eri the possibility of eventually alto ishlng lmmlgratiop quotas similar to than usvd by the Ull- Issue Ultimatunal To Jewish Leaders (By Carter L DQVIIIIOII) JERUSALEM. Jan. 27 —(AP)- British officials issued an uiti. matum to Jewish leaders tonight that military control would be inl- posed on portions of Palestine un- leu kidnappers released two prom- inent E-itisl-t subjects abducted within l8 hours of each other. British authorities also announ- ced an 11-hour reprieve for Dov Bela Groner, 38, alleged under- ground member sentenced to hang tomorrow for an attack on a Pales- tine police station. Offlchls said ‘the stay was granted to permit an‘ appeal to the Privy Council, Bri- tain's supreme court. Police had attributed the kid- napping to Gronera schedulu! hanging. Authorities expressed the opinion that Irgun Zvai Leumi, underground organization, was holding the two Britons as host- ages. to head off the execution. Troops and police. meanwhile, combed the troubled Holy Land for two groups of kidnappers, whg snatched s bewlgged judge from Founder 0f Rotary Club Passes (By The Aloclated Press) GHIOAG-O. Jan. Th-Paul P. Harris. 78. Chicago lawyer and founder in i910 of the National Association of Rotary Clubs, which bccnmc Rotary International in 1922. died today st his home. _ Ho was. lilo first president of both Rotary organizational As ‘ Rotary Internationals first presi- dent emeritus he travelled exten- sively in addressing Rbtary Clubs around tile world. While practising as a lawyer he conceived the idea of grouping one representative of every busi- ness and profession in the com- munlty into a single‘ club to pro- motc business co-operatlon. fair dealing. and the gospel of service. Within five years of the first Rotary Club's inauguration. there were several similar organizations in the United States, and n nat- ional organization was formed with Harris as founder and presi- dent. In 1912, the International Association of’ Rotary Clubs auc- cecded the national group. and Rotary International followed l0 years later. The organization claims 200.000 members in 4,000 clubs in 75 countries. Big Shipping Year Predicted 0n Great Lakes (By The Canadian Prell) FOR/I‘ WILLIAM, Jan. 27—~Pre- diction that the 1947 shipping season would be one of the bus- iest ever known on the Great Lakes was made here today by Senator Norman M. Paterson. president of Paterson Steamships Lllrfited. Commitments already made promised a banner year in Great Lakes shipping. with a heavy demand for tonnage in 10W ovi- dent, he laid. O. C. Read. Winnipeg manager of the line, said Canadian railway cars now are stratdled out be- “$.01! tween the Atlantic and Pacific but it was hoped that by nud- March there would be a suffic- icnt concentration of rolling stock to carry the country's grain to the lnkehead. llarrilnsn Nomination ls_ Approved WASHINGTON, Jan. fl — (AP) -—'i‘he United sum Senate con- firmed today tho nomination of W. Avorell Harrimul to be commerce secretary. He has been serving un- der a nous appointment. other nominations approved in- eluded: William Chapman hater of New York to be Under-laundry of itad States but. probably ion atrlaslnt. however. the lovorament was o". not seasons to reach r anal a- ciaion in time to Introduce iegis- b, lotion at the coming session. Ono reason given for the dcisv wu that the committee studying the over-ail immigration picture vm not expected to make it! r!- port in time fog- gcliosl at this us- slon. ' melee; Adrian l. Fisher of Tennessee to Commerce Department sollc-_ itor; Clarence M. Young of California. mentor of the oivihawomuties mine r. Mitchell of non. lo be an interstate eotnrnerco com- IIHIQII. his courtroom in ‘Ilel Avlv today and gbductnd a banker from hla home in, osrusalem Sunday. No trace was found of he vic- tims, Judge Ralph Wlridham, 42. and H. A. I. Collins, 48. British authorities imposed a dawn-to-dusk curfew on the Jew- lali quarters of Jerusalem and Half‘. and on all 200.000 residents of Tel Avlv. Borne 90,000 Jews in Jerusalem were placed under house arrest. Traffic after dark was ban- ned on all Holy Land highways. Judge Windham was hearing a routine inheritance case when the well-dressed gunmen slipped quiet- ly into his courtroom and order- ed the small group of persons pre- sent to face the wail, _ The judge, wearing his wig and judicial robes, was whisked away in an automobile. The kidnap car later was found abandoned in Rsmat Gan. suburb of Tel Aviv. Windham, president of the Tel Avlv court, is heir to the ancient Bcwyer-Smyth baronetcy. Ho has been in the colonial service i5 years. January Sale 0f Silver Foxes MONTREAL, Jan. 27-(Spccial to The Guardianb-The January sale oi’ silver foxes and mutations was commenced this morning by the Canadian Fur Auction Sales Com- pany. Ltd. Following lue the per- centages and prices of the mutation pelts sold today: Platlnums were 48 per cent sold at an average of $34.63; pearl platiilums were 90 pcr cent sold at all average of $35.14; white marked were oz per penltxsoldat an average of $21.28. r Many Jobless As Industrial Plants llloso By JOIIN-‘DAUPHINEE . (Canadian Press Staff Writer) LONDON. Jan. 27 - (OP) Thousands of workers today were temporarily unemployed as indust- rial plants in the ltii-tllailds and elsewhere--paralyzcd by govern- ment-order coal cuts - failed to reopen after s, iveek-end shut- dOWH. Steel workers. cotton mills and breweries were among the. worst af- fected by the new system of fuel allocation. scheduled to 185T- 1M0 March. Gas and electricity plants- and food industries get unlimited supplies and other industries take a oo-per-cent cut with some ad- ditional slupplles for firms of "na- tional importance." Domestic supplies in l-he United Kingdom are lmeffectcd but the elimination of exports to Eire brought the crisis there with the fuel famine already causing much hardship. Some Sheffield steel firms are setting back delivery dates and are refusing new orders, faccd with the prospect of working only four days this week because of the coal short- age. _ Many textile firms in Yorkshire's west riding will not re-open until Wednesday. One of the largest clothing firms in Leeds, employing 1.000 men and women. was among the plants closed today. Borne Deeds brewery firms plan start on alternate week-on. system. Through the country it is expected that beer production will be cut between 25 and 50 per cent since brewing — placed under the heading of essen- tisl food supplies during the war-- now has been removed from the priority list for fuel. Four thousand are temporarily jobless in Nelson. Lanes" n. town with a population of 40,000 where l7 textils mills have been shut down for some days. A small proportion of train ser- vices in England, Scotland and Wales have been cancelled to pro- vide extra. locomotives for hauling coal but in Eire. services have been cut to the. 1042 wartime schedule and still more cancellation are ex- pected. Loss of much of e 1040 pest harvest because of bad wea- ther is largely responsible for the Eire s. to DU! IIIVIOIG DENIED SIRATHPEIEW. Scotland (CP>— Plans to develop this lions- shlrs village as I tourist centre- base for tours of beauty spots in the vlcirlity- got a setback when the Scottish ‘lhfflc Commissions-e- fused s licence for bus services from Glasgow and Itiinburi Four Killed In Train llerailment WALTON. hilt, Jan. 21 —(AP)-. Four persons were lrlued alnd u. "m" B "We illlllred when a. Penn sylvania railroad passenger train from Clnclnna ' tn Chicago was de- railed here tonight. 5010a Mlico and a. F. lilclsltyre, general superintendent of the nil- road‘; indianapolls division, at. trlbuted the derailment to an ob- struction on the track. (safe police said a roll of balhg wire was found beneath the pilot of thg wrecked locomotive. and this was confirmed by McIntyre. Three of bhoae killed were pas- Svnsers and the fourth was the locomotive fireman, (LA. Wisler of Richmond, Ind. Six of ti“ eight coaches were do- ratled, scattering wrec from end to end of this Indiana town of One set of wheels apparently jumped the track and caused the locomotive to overturn and somer- sault. Six following cars left (the rails. k ’ freight cars on a siding and crashed info the side of a grain elevator. Fred A. lfiatnklin, reporter for the Logansport Press. gave this dw crlptlon of the scene: “This is a terrible accident. and wreckage is scattered from one end of \Valton to the othfli‘. “it appears that one sct of trucks got off the tracks as the train was comill, into town. Ties were cut for half a mile and then the whole train went off the track and plied up-except the last two coaches. “I can sec a dead man and a woman in the smashed day coach and 1 can see the fireman lying dead under the locomotive. There must be omens, . _ “The locomotive . . . is lyi-r-Z 11D- side down. Ella baggage car behind it is smashed flat as any pancake. “Tiliere were l0 or 11 cars in the train, Ill addition to the two still 0n the track. two other; are standing upright beside the roadbed. Five others are ciiss-crossed down the line." Blubilunt Bags Gar Thief? PORT COLBORNE, Ont... Jan. 27 -—tCP) - Port Colbcyrne rod and gun club staged a wolf-snd-fox hun-t Saturday afternoon. bagged none of their intended prey but returned home with a wily sus- pected car thief in tow. During the course of'tho hunt, Sgt. James Stevenson of the Port Coibornc police force. one of the expedition! organizers, spotted a ditched car resembling one describ- ed as stolen. The hunters were de- ploycd over the marsh area. and came up with - the aiieged thief, an unidentified 22-year-old youth. Fatally lniured DIG-BY. N.S.. Jan‘. 2'7 -- (C?) — begerc B. Doucet. 50, Weymouth, N.S. garage worker. was fatally in- jured tcday when he became en- tangled in the drive shaft of a moving truck while riding on the frame. He died in the Digby hos- pital. ' (By Alan Randal. Canadian Preal Staff Writer) HAMILTON, Jan. 2‘l-—(CP)-—Tba we o; M“, Evelyn Dick. her fa- ther and her former boy friend. all charged with the March, 1046. torso killing of her husband. Juhfl Dick, goes now to the highest court in the land-the Supreme Court of Canada. That was the ruling of Mr. Jus- tice Kolller Mackay in Wcntworth County Court today when he ord- ered the trial of the three accus- ed delayed to allow the Crown to get an opinion in the case from the Supreme Court. The. Crown. as Mrs. Dick, her father Donald Macilean and Wil- llam Bohorzuk listened from the prisoners’ bench, asked for the de- lay ond the counsel for the accus- cd men made vigorous protest against it on the ground the men had already been in jail nearly a ycar awaiting trial and that fall- ing immediate trial they should be released for want of a case against them. The next move now is that of ‘the Crown, s. motion asking the Supreme Court for leave to sppcal to it from the judgment of the On- tario Court of Appeal which grant- 1o PAGES It begets those who are happy I home to remain there. MAXIMS ‘ OIL MERE MAN Appointments To Senate Announced OTTAWA, Jan. 27 - (CP) — Prime Minister Mackenzie King tonight announced the ‘ f- ment of James Gray Turgeon and Stanley S. McKeen, O.B.E., both of Vancouver, to fill two of three British Columbia vacancies in the Senate. This brings the standing in the Bil-seat upper chamber to 68- ‘There are 23 Progressive Conservative members and five seats remain va- cant, including one for British Col- umbia, two for Ontario and two for Nova Scotla. Mr. Turgeon, 68. is a former Lib- eral member of parliament for Cariboo. A native of Bsthurst, N.S., he was the son of the late Hon. Oncsiphore Turgcon who was a member of the House of Com- mons from i000 to 1923 and later was appointed to the Senate. Mr. Turgeon moved to Alberta in 1907 and began his political career ‘there gaining election to the legislature in i913 and being rc-electcd in 1917. In 1033 he ran unsuccessfully for the mitts). col- umbia lflzlslature but was elected l0 the House of Commons two years later and remained a mem. ber until 1945, Retirement Announced (By libs Culsdlul Press) MONTREAL. Jan. 27"17he Can- adian Pulp and Paper Association announced today the retirement oi’ A. E. Caclman as general man- 08911 Mf- 0801mm. who has served the Association for the last I years in various positions, will continue. for a time. to serve the Association in some specific phases of its activities. The Association also announced that F. L. Mitchell, deputy cc- ol-dlinator of the pulp and paper administrations of the prices board. has been appointed man- ager of the Association. Mr. Mit- chell will continue his duties with the prices board until wartime controls imposed on the industry are wound up. lloarlng Opens HALIFAX. Jan. 27 - (GP) - Preliminaly hearing opened in county magistrate’: court hero to- day into the case 0i! Arthur Kluhn. 4'7, charged with manslaughter in the highway death Jan. l7 of Miss Susan Burke, 60. Magistrate R12. Inglis adjourned the hearing‘to Feb. 6 after seven witnesses were heard. Miss Burke was killed at nearby Dartmouth when struck a our. said to have been driven by Kuhn, which failed to stop. Dick. Case To Go To Can. Supreme Court ed Mrs. Dick a second trial steer she had been convicted last Oct- obcr and declared that statements she gave police were not admiss- ible as evidence. The Crown, concerned particu- larly with the question of admin- ibility of the statements, indicated it. motion would be given the high court promptly and John Sullivan, counsel for the accused wbman. said the defence would oppose it. And if the appeal mo- tion were granted, he said, the de- fence would then mskg further argument before the Supreme Court when the case comes up. Today's developments indicated the torso murder trial would not now he disposed of until the spring assizer, due to open here March i7. For the time being the judge's decision ended proceedings in Hamilton. Quietly. flanked by her matron and g police officer. Mrs. Dick Mae and left the courtroom boos as she picked her way through a slender crowd outside. Bohozuk and her father, Donald unclean. handcuffed together walked out slowly with their guards and gradually the curious about the courthouse melted away. Subscription Delivered $6.00. Iflll 85M. other Provinces b, U. l. A. IMO ABBOTT REVIEWS TA x AGREEMENT AlllllilliENEs n°athir°u In planed Hints Th; Failure rWoulsl Hit The Poorer Provinces Adversely TORONTO. Jan. 27—(CP)—l"in— ancc Minister Abbott said tcnigllfl that the Dominion's first concern in seeking taxation agreements! with the Provinces was to try tq prevent the “hopeless confusion" which existed in tax fields prion to the war. “Previous experience would ln< dictate that much of the financial difficulty before 1930 was due, td a large extent, to the overlapping, HON. D. C. ABBOTT ills uncertainty, and the unfuiv incidence of the multiplicity of in-' come and 'cdrpora.!i6tl'fb‘it'é§i" salt] Mr. Abbott; in a speech prepared for delivery before the Torontd Board of Trade. He reviewed the efforts wilicll have been made to obtain sgreu merits with the Provinces and oute- llned his latest proposals, submit: ted to the provincial premleii during the last two weeks and made public Friday. The new proposals would assuM the Provinces of $206,000,000 in ans nual revenue, 835,000,000 mos‘ than previously offered as pay- ment for virtually exclusive feds eral use o-f the personal income. corporation and inheritance to! fields. ' Cites Disadvantages Mr. Abbott made these pointsz-s __‘ (Continued on Page 5 Col. 7) Sometimes tilts: Cure WHO ‘St-n Nofliltl‘ All’ $Aw w...» ’ NEVER HAvc MY wool: 4o Show f TORONTO, J-all. 27 - (OP) Minimum and maximum tempo"- tires: Vancouver 30, 99; Edmon. ton 1 below, 2 below; Regina ti be- low. B; Winnipeg i0. l2; Toronto 32, 48; Ottawa 24, 3B; Montreal 34. 40; Quebec 81, 40; Saint John —, 35}, Moncton 20, 50; Halifax 31. 38; O aroltatown 24, 33; s dngy 20 32; Yarmouth 33, 37. y I (By The Canadhn Preps) HALIFAX, Jan. 27 - Weather synopsis and official inland fore- casts lssuecl by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax at 11.15 p.m.. A,S.T., Monday. Forecasts valid until Tuesday midnight: Prince Edward Island: occasionally snow tonight. Inter- mittent drizzle Tuesday. Not much change in temperature. 5.61m: winds. High Charlottetown Rain, in... tide this afternoon at 2nd and tonight at 3.07. Sun sets this afternoon at 5. and rlsu tomorrow morning 7.24. First quertc moon January Nth Slwrmreraid tide eighteen‘ min utcs later than Charlottetown. CAI: IIIIY I "PIINCI IDWAID IILAND‘. Daliy except Slmday. Leave Borden at 9.00 AM. leave Torment-inc at 3 PM. to be met by a, chorus of feminine 7m p M