= Temple. I A ' Maximal ora ‘i MERE MAN Youth ever desires what I hand. gent, and despises that which is at gh- i‘ gharlottetown Guardian. Two Cont. Morning Guardian. Iolndell 1881a Covers Prince lildward Island Like theDew _ He h the wisest man to whom that which is required at once oc- curs. - MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN ' cnaanorijsrowu. cannon, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1941 U. K. Refuses Higher Bacon Prices To Danes Denmark iias Been Shipping Largo ilantities 0f Basel To Britain; iiutstripped Canada First Seven Months Gardiner Figures Supplies To Britain PRETWICK. Scotland. Sept. 15.40?) _. Agriculture Minister Gardiner oi Canada, beiore re- turning to the Dominion today by plane. told reporters the Dominion WOilld send Britain between Aug- us’. and December,~l94'i: rmpooooo bushels oi wheat; 90,000,000 shell eggs, and 363,000,000 pounds oi ham arid bacon. ' He said: "With a. population oi 12.000000 we'd rather reed Brit- ms in Canada than here and we‘ ire making an all-out eliort this pear to get as many British immi- grants as possible." Warehouses Burned lit Middietoii._|i. S. MIDDLETON, N.S., Sept. 16_ (CPI-AFiN caused unestimated damage today when it swept through two warehouses oi Cflllau- lan Canners destroying the sum- mer's pack oi peas, beans. plums and blueberries. Origin oi the tire was unknown. Bandits Rob Toronto Jewelry Store ‘IORDNTO. Sept. lt-Two mask- ed bandits tied up two persons in the third-iioor oiiice oi Gardner and Green, wholesale jewellers. on dmvntovim Richmond Street today and escaped with $20 in cash and a small amount oi jewelry. Coming Events "Concert and Dance. Millvlew Hall. Friday, September fith. "Talkies -- Eldon Friday. “Kiss and Tell", starring Shirley Temple. "W. I. Dance. Grand View l-iall, September 19th. Reireshmants. "Ice Cream in French River Hall. Wednesday, September 17th. "Dance in Watervale School, Friday night, September 19th. "Dancing. Thursday evening, Couniry Club, Traveller's Rest. "Regular Dance at Burlington.‘ Wednesday, Septembe 17th. Good music. "Rummage Sale. Holy Name iiflil. Saturday. September 20th. 2 l’. M, "Talkies — Moreli "Kiss and Tell" Thursday. starring Shirley "Talkies - st. Peter's‘ Bay, Thursday, Laurel and Hardy in "Flying Deuces." "Canadian Legion Dance. Mon- tisue Curling Rink. Wednesday, Int It. ' "Dance and Ice Cream Social, Ktlivk Cross School, Wednesday, Briitember 17th. "In stock, /ceoar and Asphalt giliiiislts . W. I. Bowman. Hunter Vef- "Regular Dance tonight, Sea 35cc? Pavaiion. Dancing irom 9 y "Hospital Dance. Montague Curl- ling Rink, Thursday. September 1B. 9°" Master's Orchestra. “Dance in Ibrelt Hill l-iall. Thursday. Pi-Ellibdi‘ 1am. Web- licrb Or Atra. t . "Chiclcn Supper in Cape Trev- em Hall. Wcdnesde . Bepteunber 171b- Proceedl in ad oi school. "Dance. ice cream, lunches. in Cowan Brae Cheese Factory. Fri- QIY. Septemberltth. Chalslim‘! Orchestra, an“ t“: Q] n lln "hi" School. Thursday evening 530- All Veterans plesu attend. .._... .. IO Kim Co l- latch Ind Hem hi???» ‘bu u. sent- "flber 24th. For prise list and in- Cf Year. By JAMES M0600! LONDON. Sept. l6 —- (OP) — Britain's increased independence on Canada ior the maintenance 0i her weekly two-ounce bacon ration — just haii the wartime issue — has been increased by a Fbod Mini» try decision not to pay Denmark higher prices ior smaller quant- ities. During the war. Canada supplied the bulk oi the British bacon ra- tion oi iour ounces a week, but Denmark returned strongly to the export market last year, signing a three-year contract with the Food Ministry. During the iirst seven months oi this year the Danes shipped 14,500,000 long hitndred- weight compared with Canada's 10,500:000 short hundredweight. The Danish contract provided ior a price review this rnontlh but the conierence has broken down. At a press conierence today Food Minister Strachey said the Danes had asked prices "iar in excess oi the prices the United Kingdom is paiying her major suppliers, espec- ially in the British commonwealth." The Danes asked that their price be increased irom 161 shillings ($82.30) to 236 shillings a long hundredwelght oi 112 pounds. This compared with the Canadian price oi 145 shillings ior a hundred- weight oi 100 pounds. Britain oiiered the Danes 172 shillings a long h-undredwcight but would go no higher. Strachey said Britain's econcsnlc position did not allow her to "pay ian-ey prices ior iood irom any ex- ternal source." Under the contract, Danish ship- ments may be suspended Oct. i. unless a new price is negotiated. In that event Britain stands to lose bacon imports oi nearly 10,000,000 pounds in the ccming year. Canadian supplies to the United Kingdom now are rising but it is questioned ii they will be auiiicient to more than mantain the present ration, which the authorities had hoped to raise to three ounces weekly. Britain also refused a Danish. request ior an increase in the but- ter price oi irom 242 to 341 1-2 shillings a long hundredweight. Denmark provides less than haii the butter supplied annually by Britain's source, New Zealand. Also. the Danes asked ior an in- crease in their egg price oi irom 120 shillings to 1E6. which Britain answered by odiering to pay 122 i-2. All the prices Britain oiiered were accompanied by a guarantee they would hold ior the next two years. with the additional promise oi sup- pOrt prices ior a third year. Canada now is Britain's chief egg supplier. shipping nearly 30,000,000 dozen in seven months oi 1947 ior a price o4 £3,866,860. Cornholl Proves Costly To Four Youths (By The Canadian Press) KENTVILLE. N. 8., Sept. l6—A cornboil boniire which destroyed $500 worth oi timber when it got out oi control resulted in iour Kings County youths paying iinos today ranging irom tit to till. The iour pleaded guilty to un- lawfully leaving the bonfire they si,ooo Eaehqiin '1 Heads 0f Three l Escaped Convicts (By The Canadian Press) OTTAWA, Sept. ic-The Fed- eral Government today posted re- wards oi $1.000 apiece on the heads oi the three escaped Kings- ton convicts and warned that they probably are armed and in the possession oi a sub machkic-gun. The amounts, ior iniormation leading to their capture, are con- tained in an R.C.M.P. circular bearing photographs and descrip- tions oi the threc-Nioholas (Nick) Minille oi Ottawa, Uiysse Leuzon oi Windsor. Ont. and Donald (Mickey) McDonald oi Toronto. Issuance oi the circular coincid- ed with a report here that the three men iled to a hideout in the Laurentian Mountains near Calumet. Que. ioilowing their Aug. 18 escape irom Kingston Peniten- tiary and there plotted the de- tails oi tha $40,000 Windsor bank robbery which Lauzon and Mc- Donald engineered iour days later. The story oi the nest-escape hideaway came irom Rheal Dem- ers. released irom Kingston Peni- tentiary, who said he had heard oi the escape plans while in beni- tentiary but had not considered them seriously. _ I-Te said the three convicts and a. mysterious “Biili" irom Mont- real went to his home at Hawks- bury, Ont, the night oi Aug. 18 and demanded a. hideout. I-Ie then took them to a log cabin near Kilmar Mines. 10 miles north oi Calumet. Que. arid 18 miles northwest oi Grenville. Que. where Minille and "Bill" remain- ed while Lauzon and McDonald motored to Windsor ior the bank holdup. Demers then communic- ated with Ontario Provincial Po- lice. Police are known to ‘have sur- veveri thb mountain cabin. where Minille and the man “Biil" were said to be awaiting the retun oi Lauzon and McDonald. but_did not close in because they wanted to take all three. Lauzon and Mc- Donald diii not return. however. and Miniile and his companion iied the area. Critically ill NEW YORK, Sept. ll-Ior- mer Mayor 1i‘. B. La Ouardia collapsed at his home tonight and his physician, Dr. George Baehr. reported him to. be in critical condition. "The iormer mayor has been falling gradually ior the put week." Dr. Baehr said, “and tonight he sudden], collapsed and sank into a deep stupor.” Baehr laid La Guardla, who was Mayor oi New York ior 12 years. was too critically ill to be removed to hospital. 2,280 Bead, Missing In Japanese Typhoon By Russell Brlnea TOKYO, Sept. i6 -(AP) — A lyrically-named typhoon Kathleen. spread death and destruction over two-thirds oi Honshu Island and casualty figures tonight still were mounting. Kyodo News Agency. United States Army and unoiiiclal esti- mates rolled up these counts: Dead or missing. 2,280, including 100 dead in Tokyo. Two medium sized towns wiped out and numerous villages ilood- ed. Homes flooded or damaged. 160,- 000, including 15,000 in Tokyo. Acres inundated 150.000. CAKE-EATING BEAR GREENWOOD, B0. - (C?) — Mrs. Bert Frank, newly wed. baked and lavishly iced a cake ior her husband. leit it on the table and returned to iind a, big black bear downing the last morsel. She sum- moned a neighbor who shot the bruin. Yanks Seek Canada's Adverse Trade Balance Atlill-time high By George Kitchen I OTTAWA, Sept. i6 -—(OP) Canada's adverse trade balance with the United so... swept cs4,- B00.000 higher during July to reach $572,800,000 ior the first seven months oi this year— an ali- time high—and thus emphasized growing oiiicial concern over the country's diminishing reserves oi U. S. dollars. At $572,800,000, the trading defi- cit alroady was 176.100.0011 over the total ior the whole oi 1946 and lent coniirmation to predictions that the disparity will top tho $000,000,000 mark by the year-end. The adverse balance is the amount Canada has to pay out in Ameri- can iunds to cover the diiierenca had made. (Continued on Page s on. a) I By 056001) CABRUTIIIBS TRJIBTE. Sept. 1C--(AP)‘-A warning burst oi tire irom United States machine-guns at-a tense moment today in the birth oi the iree territory oi Trieste kept Yugoslav troops irom crossing in- to the area. I uu-oen. -r. a. my. British commander in ‘Ii-lasts. said cool- headed action by a doacn Ameri- cans at a border outpost prevent- ed an incident with 8d Yugoslav: which "might have led to blood- shed." Con. Alrey declared that Yugo- slav entry into Trieste would have been "a breach oi the peace tratv which i would have reaimd to the last.‘ . lie added that to permit YuIo- glav troops to enter would cer- tainly have relultad in bloodshed. due to bitter reeling amonl the predominantly Italian population. The death toll ior Italian-lie formation apply to Alhlrt acorn. v rioting in~ mm mounted to Yank Gunfire Keeps Yugoslavs At Home three with the death oi a 1'1- ycar-old Italian student wounded Monday by a hand grenade. An- other man and a 11-year-old girl were killed previously. Under the terms oi the treaty the tree state oi ‘Priests will be administered by a governor to bl appointed-Russia has objected to 1s nominees-the British-Amari- can Military Governments will rula in the north and the city oiv Trieste and the Yugoslavs in the south. y . Airey said the Yugoslav troops would have to go around the iree state border area to enisr the territory under their control. Soldiers along the southern sec- tor oi the iree territory told cor- respondents that Yugoslav units in three instances issued “ultim- atums" to the Americans to with- drew or thsyweuid advance with- in a stated time. m each case there wanna attempt by the To Place Blame For High Prices By Marvin L. Arrowamith WASHINGTON. Sept. 16- (AP) —Scnator Claude Pepper (Demo- Fia.) said today there is no hope ior any eiiort to check rising liv- ing costs and "the American people might just as well get ready tor g another recession." He told reporters the Republican- controlled Congress is to blame. But Senator Owen Brewster ' (Rep. Me.) said that so iar as food prices are concerned. they are high because the Truman administrat- ion is shipping too much iood to Europe and other areas. Pepper scoiied at this, saying: "We've got to help those people more, not less. Ii we want to step Communism, we've got to make the capitalism oi Europe work.” Senator Homer Capehart (Rep.- Ind.) said he ‘thinks high prices are linked to the American iorelgn aid program but the basic answer to rising living costs is increased production and "we ought to be working 46 lhoura a week instead oi 40." Pepper contended that the ne- publicans led the light which brought about removal oi price controls last year, 1t is "too much to hope" that they would "reverse themselves‘ and do anything to haul down prices. The Republican reply to this arg- ument is that Congress only relax- ed price controls and that the ad- ministration. which claimed the new set-up was unworkable. re- moved them. "Save iood to save that would be my slogan." eter declared. He preferred putting it that way rather than saying "eat less and (Continued on Page B 001- ll I America- Brew- ‘(TEA Yuloaiavs to advance at the time limit. Canada Heading For Worst Meat Shortage "La (iuardia ls‘ (By The Canadian Press) An appeal by the Alberta “der- ation 0i Aflicuiture ior recogni- tion oi the meatpackers’ strike as a national emergency, emphasized the growing iear that only Dom- inion-wide conciliation can avert the worst meat shortage bi Can- adian history. The Federation asked the Can- adian Federation oi Agriculture at Ottawa to request the Dominion Government to re-open and take over operation oi all strikebound meat-processing plants pending settlement oi the wage dispute be- tween the United Packinghouse Workers oi America (C.I.O.) and the "Big Three" oi the industry. Twenty-one plants operated by the “big three" — Swiit Canadian Company, Canada Packers Limited and Burns and Company - now are strikebound. The Union seeks a basic wage oi 92 cents an hour. which would mean an average in- crease oi 1'7 cents. Swift has oifer- ed three cents. the other two com- panies iive cents. Alberta yesterday became the fourth privince among the eight aiiected by the strike to accept in principle the idea oi conciliation on a national scale. Premier Manning sad his government is agreeable "to nomination oi (an) acceptable concillatcr jointly with other prov- inces." Saskatchewan, British Columbia and Manitoba previously agreed to the same type oi proposal. In Quebec, where the provincial (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) Strange New Heavy Metal l ls Discovered p. By Alton L. Blakeslee NEW YORK. Sept. 16 -—(AP)—A strange new metal that seethes and bubbles and emits a soil glow was described ior the il-rst time today to the American Chemical Society. This metal is curium, element 96, the heaviest-known element. It is man-made, it no longer exists in nature, and is the most violently radioactive solid ever isolated. Proi. Isadore Perlman oi the University oi Caliiovmia announc- ed that a tiny amount oi curluim. smaller than a grain oi sand.. had been produced ior the first time in pure ion-n. There is just enough to see it with the naked eye. And this sand-grain amount now repre- sents the total world supply. Curium is one oi iour man-made metals discovered during the atom bomb project. The others are plutonium. the super-explosive ior atom bombs; Ameirlciuim and neptunium. All iour probably existed natural- ly on earth millions oi years ago when the planet was younger, and much hotter, but because oi their redioactlvl-iy they broke down or decayed into other elements. This tiny bit oi pure curium has a. slight yellowish cast. Dr. Periman said. It is kept in a solution, and it, tears apart the hydrogen and oxygen in_the water. making these gases bubble oii. Ii enough oi the~curium was con- centrated, it would probably melt by itseli. It would be warm to touch. But touching it imlght be iatal. Even id an extremely tiny mount entered the body, it would cause eventual death due to its extreme radioactivity. No uses are yet foreseen ior curlum. partly because oi the ter- riiic diiiiculty oi making it in any quantity. - The sand-grain piece oi curium is dying rapidly, in 57 days haii ci it ‘iaappearn. then in another 5’! days haii that remainder is gone. 1n one minute's time, one millionth oi a gram oi curiian emits 70.000.- 000.000 alpha particles, nr elect- rically charged helium ioois. The curium breaks down or de- cays into piutoniunh. Ail these rad- io-ective materials decay to ele- ments oi lower atmiie weight. and anus - Infill eventually into lead George C. Kenney “potential enemies" oi the United States have aircrait which can "known weapons oi mass destruction more deadly and iar cheaper than the Winds i; To 160 Miles Per iiour Reported (By The Associated Press) and expanding moved toward the rich and popu lcus Palm Beach resort area to night and property. unprecedented velocity oi 16 miles an hour were slowly but re lentlessly bearing down on th winter playground area Florida's swank lower east coast. Latest Weather Bureau advice days ago was expected to cros oi ‘Palm Beach. The hurricane warnings were or tiered displayed southward to in clude the Greater Miami area. blew lake waters communities Sebrinz in Central Florida. virtually boarded up. down and waited ior the big blow that “winds are nesday." Miami chobee were displayed elsewhere to Jacksonville. from Morrison Field handling reg- istrations. evacuate islands in Lake Okee- chobee. Schools in Palm Beach County were ordered closed to- morrow. Scheduled airline flights irom northern points were cut short at Jacksonville. a iew miles south oi the Georgia State line. The storm raged most oi the day over Abaco. a small island in the Bahamas, where winds of 160 miles an hour were recorded. Nassau. capital oi’ the Bahamas. gxpected winds up to 'I0 miles an our. Trans-Canada Cycle iiide is Completed CALGARY, sept, The cross-Canada cycle ride by Montreal's Romeo Morin, complet- ed at Vancouver over the week-end. was quite a feat but it came a year too late to claim the record as the first Canadian coast-to-coast pedal ride. Honor oi making the iirst all- Canada bwycle ride from ocean to ocean belongs to 42-yearold Fired Anderson oi Calgary who also made it in considerably iaster time than Morin. Morin laii l-Ialiiax July 1, wound up in Vancouver Sept. ld-a total elapsed time oi 76 days. Anderson took the west to east route. He’ leit Vancouver 8.. July 1-3o days later. 12 PAGES FLORlDA’S Fiiii BEACH PREPARES (FOR HU MIAMI. F'la.. Sept. iii-A raging tropical storm carrying s threat to liie Destructive winds oi an almost along said the centre oi the storm which blew up in the Atlantic several the coast near or slightly south Miami. the metropolis south oi Palm Beach. also was menaced. Likewise included was the Lake Okeechobee region where a storm over iarming 19 years ago today and drowned nearly 1,500 persons. The Florida east coast and sea- board airline railroads sent cars to Lake Harbor and South Bay, in the western section oi Palm Beach County. to evacuate 5,000 residents. They will be taken to As the storm lay 160 miles east oi Palm Beach at 9:45 p.m. EDT. adloinins West Palm Beach was Residents remained calm as they battened The hurricane was moving west- ward at about eight miles an hour and the Weather Bureau told oi its Expansion in a. terse statement now increasing slowly and will reach- hurricane iorce in the area oi hurricane dis- play late tonight or early wed- The hurricane warnings were on display irom ‘Iitusville to and in the Lake Okee. region. Storm warnings along the Florida coast irom Key Largo Emergency shelters were opened at West Palm Beach with soldiers Plans were mapped to 16 —(CP)—- June i,‘ 1946, and checked i-n at Sydney, N. Subscription Delivered seoo. mu: oseo. other Provinces a u. |. s. mi RRICANE A very largely attended annual meeting oi the Prince Edward Is- land Temperance Federation yes- terday passed by a standing vote a resolution authorizing the Fed- eration's executive to request the - Provincial Government to repeal ‘ the Prohibition amendment legal- izing six-months scripts and to re- store the Prohibition Act as it was prior to the passing c1’ the Cullen 0 amendment. ' Though the resolution, moved by 9 Rev. W.I. Green, Stanley Bridge, and seconded by Rev. ES. Weeks. Bedeque, was passed with such a 5 large majority as to cause the chairman. Mr. J.H. MncFarlarie, to state that a count was unnecessary, 5 it did encounter opposition. Rev. S.J. Davies, Milton. said he believed that in the lest-approach- ing show-down between the Pro- vincial Government and the peo- ' ple o! the Province, it was vital ior ' the Federation to maintain the ever-increasing number oi sup- porters which were rallying behind it in its tight ior temperance. He was oi the opinion that the pass- ing oi such a resolution might alienate the support oi many peo- ple who had a genuine interest in the Federation's work. There would be nothing gained bvy speakers getting to their ieet and wasting the valuable time oi the meeting by giving a re-hash oi the sins oi any Government, Mr. Davies maintained. Neither was there any use in the Federation "butting its head against a. stone wall." A Prohibition Act amend. merit had been passed by the - Government which was mining the lives oi hundreds oi the Island's greatest assets, its young men and women, but that amendment, unhe- ihsr lcsal or illegal. was the law oi the Province and would continue to be the law until organization and education had changed the (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) l-‘reighters Collide 0ft Cape Race, llfld. (By The Canadian Press) HALIFAX. Sept. 16—-Tlie Hali- iax salvage tug Foundation Jose- phine and the United States Coast Guard cutter MacCu1lough tonight were speeding to the assistance oi two ireighters which collided 50 miles oi! Cape Race. Nild. today although neither merchant vessel was reported to be in immediate danger. C.C.F. Candidate Protests increased Cost 0f Living FREDER-KTON. Sept. l6 —(CP) --Protest against the ..increasecl cost oi living was made today by Murray Young, 0.0.1“. candidate in the York-Sunbury by-election, as he opened his campaign at Wiillamsburg. "The Liberal Government oi Ca- nada has just about completed handing all control over prices back to the great monopolies. with disastrous eiiects upon the pur- chasing power oi every one oi us." he said. The Liberal candidate, Hon. Mil- ton F. Gregg, who has resigned as president oi the University o1 New Brunswick issued a brlei statement today when asked by a represen- tative oi Mr. Young to comment on the iact that the latter is a student at the same University. Dr. Gregg said he held a "very hig regard" ior the C. C. l" can ldate "as a student and es a man." o; u. s." (By The Associated Press) (DLUMBUS. 0.. Sept. 16-Gei\ carry to this continent atomic bomb." Command declared, to knock us out in a iew days." Air Iiorce Association. native oi Yarmouth. "The rate oi technica ., said: Says Potential Enemies said today Ii there is another ‘war. the head oi the United States Strategic Air "we will be lucky to have eight hours warn- ing oi a blitlkreig blow designed 1n a speech prepared ior the first national convention oi the nney. a develop- oi weapons oi wsriaaa is Well Armed new so rapid and the eiiect oi ‘changes in technique so iar reach- ing that it has become iatai to the national security to lag be- hind in development or in thought. "Only ii we maintain the tech- nical lead in aviation can we have the number one air iorce. 1i we didn't have the number one air iorce we might just as wail have none." xenney said American combat aviation which "we would have to rely on in case oi trouble" is "in pretty iair shape." But "the iew airplanes we have today are rapidly becoming oblo- iete and will have to be replaced during ifie next iew years ii we are‘ to rcmain on top in the avi- Asks For Repeal Oi Present Liquor Law Thunderstorm Knocks Cut Wire Services MONCTON. N. B.. Sept. 16 -4 (CPl-A violent local thunden storm which swept the eastern section oi’ Westmorland County early tonight knocked out Canad- ian National 'i‘clegiraph lines be- tween Sackville and Cape Tormen- tine, disrupting the ilow oi new! and commercial traiir to Princl Edward Island ior thr hours. Nearly an inch of rain iell during the three hours but there tvere no reports of damage to other than the telegraph lines. C.N.T. oiiiclall said they restored service by using alternative circuits. Very heavy rain was also report- ed irom some sections in the west- ern part oi Prince Edward Island- The rain was accompanied by an electrical stomi in theSummei-si-da district. No damage was reported- I-Ieavy showers appeared to have been ialrly general throughout the Island. Charges Government iias Wheat Monopoly 5-13 LOUIS. Sept. _16-—(AP)-— Stanley N. Jones, president oi the Winnipeg Grain Exchange, charg- ed today that a. Government when mqngpoly had been estab- lished in Canada “undcrfiie B11159 oi assistance to Britain- Jones told the Grain and Feed Dealers’ National Association that government policy in Canada had deprived the Dominions iarmers oi receiving a iair Drive i" m9“ grains durins the 111st two crop years. i PREHXSTORIC ARCH YORKTON, Sask. _ (C?) — A mammoth, 6 I-Z-ioot-long borne -— believed to have been the rib oi some prehistoric monster — is flied as an archway by WE. Yorkion. He says it was given to him live years ago by a man who iound it in a refuse dump- EVEBY (have (ins A Pilbtitlii AQEMT NOW A0196 TORONTO, Sept. l6 —- (CP) —- Minlmurri arid maximum tempera- turw: Vancouver 53. 01; Regina. 42. 50; Winnipeg 3d. 58; Toronto 5.2, g9; Qtmwg 50', 67; Montreal 5B, 56; Quebec 59, ‘i0; Saint John 58, 66; Moncto-n 62, 74; Halifax 65. 74; Charlottetown 60, --; Sydney 0'7, 88; Yarmouth 58. 70. HALIFAX, Sept. l6 —- (CF) - Weather synopsis and oiiicial in- land ierecasts issued by the D0- minion Public Weather Office at Haliiax at midnight Tuesday. Synopsis: ' A iew shower: are occurring in Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island. Somewhat cooler and drier air is spreading across New Brun- swick and has already brought clearing skies to that Province. This air is iorccast to spread across the rest oi the Maritimes during the night so that by morning the clear weather should be general thrc-ugh- out the district. The hurricane is now centred over the Northern Bahamas Islands and it is movim slowly toward the coast oi Florida. Forecasts valid until midnight Wednesday: Prince Edward Island: Cloudy, clearing during the night. Clear and cooler Wednesday. Light winds. High at Charlottetown 09. High tide this aitemoon at 12M and tonight at 12.39. Sun sets this evening at 61B and rises tomorrow morning at 541. Pint quarter oi moon September 22nd. 12.42 A. ll. Smnmeraide tide eighteen min- ation race." utes later than Charlottetown,