Wins night. some entries to Box '” an MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN n-1--u ,.emgtIiopsaos. snhepraparsdforwarkionsof uguostatfsotaal nsoansos pre- .-7 ioharious r.l.l.I-OI. other hnnossida aiaoo pas anouin. lllsowiuso and lJ.I.A. 312.0090! annnna. iii The PeI's Pap V S" ' Coviirs Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Iiill Bf s CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1952 CONSID E REORGANIZING CANADAE RESERVE to Thea-e are those whose solaielalin exceptions to rules. .MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN' profiindity la the discovery of 16 PAGES 5. A. Demands U.iN. Drop Racial Discuyssion Truman-Eisenhower conference luv. 18 WASHINGTON. Nov. 12 -(AP) ..-me White House announced to- ny that President-elect Elsenhow- C er-'5 conference with President Tru- man will take place at the White House next Tuesday at -2 p. in. EST. Eisenhower agreed last week to mini with the President to famil- iarize himself with the present state of federal government af- fairs. At the same time Detroit banker Joseph Dodlze arrived here on a top-flight mission for the presi- dent-elect. Dodge will look over the shoulder of the Truman ad- ministration as it prepares next year's budget-but he will refrain from giving any advice. Dodge told reporters he will not try to mould the budget to the new regime's ideas. and will ac- cept no responsibility for the mulll-billion-dollar program Presi- dent Truman will present to Con- gress just before he leaves office. Britain Narrows import-Export Gap LONDON. Nov. 12 --(Reuters)-- Britain announced today it mar- rowed the gap between its imports and expo”-I to 3i01.640.000 in oct- sben-a sharp drop from previous monthly deficits this year. The gap was one of the factors which prompted Richard Butler, Chancel-llor of the Exchequer. to tell the House of 6' last 4-H c1ub.vvinners 4-H Club contest winners from Prince Ed ward Island en route t cipate in the Canadian Council 4-H Club national contest to be McIntyre, agricultural agent for the C. N. R. Left to right, MacPhee and Miss T. F. Willis, New Haven food club; Miss B. M. Robertson, East Baltic poultry club; Miss M. E. Smith, Victoria, and Miss L. I. Howatt, Tryon cloth- ing club; back row-G. J. MacDonald and J. L. Lacey, Tracadie Cross garden club; E. R. Ching, Souris poultry club; G. E. Murphy and N. H. Carruthers, Augustine Cove beef calf club. Others not included in photograph are Wilfrid Stewart, Dunstaff- nage. and George W. Wood, York. dairy calf club. En Route To Toronto --Photo by C.N.R. 0 Toronto to parti- held at the Royal Winter Fair, November 12-16, photographed while passing through Moncton .on the Ocean Limited of the Canadian National Railways. They were accompanied by J. E. front row-Miss J. G. night that Britain has reached the turning point towards full econ- omic recovery. PORT ARTHUR. Nov. 12-(CP) -Egot Vollbrnchh. 24. a German immigrant. bled to death yester- day in..Tundsr Bay district woods after being shot in a hunting ac- cident. Police said Vollbracht was shot in the leg by a companion. Paul Langerlch. as Langerich un- loaded his rifle near their car. HUNTING FATALITY YARMOUTH, N. 5.. Nov. 12-- (CP)--Yarmoulh County recorded its first hunting faialiiy ,todny when Raymond O. Muise, 40, Quinan. was found with a bullet in his chest about miles from his home. Details of the accident are not known. A coroner's jury was adjourned until Nov. 26. 1 iv 0 Heavy Program Before Legislature In Quebec QUEBEEC, Nov. 12--- (CP)-A heavy program of legislation, in- cluding a measure for provincial censorship of television programs. was laid today before the first Coming Events 4...: "Dance. Millview Hall niday. "Bingo in 'r'i-flftt Hall tonight. Dance after. OVOIT "Dance in St. George's School, rhursday, November 13th. "Baptist Annual Tea and Bazaar December 4th, 3.50 to 6 P. M. "Kinkora Hall. Friday night. See ”The Green Years." "Try our Purim Finance Plan, ior feeding your hogs and poultry. Dillon & spiilett. "Rummage sale, Holy Name H011. Friday. November 14th, 1.00 o'clock. "Farmers. ask about the L-lhu: lialn Fesd Finance Plan. For part- cuiars contact your local Iaed mill "Regular Dance, Winsloe station 31111. Thursday. Nov. lath. Char- lotteiomana orchestra. Canteen. "Dance. st. Charlts Hall. every Thufldly. 9.30 to 1. ohsisson's or chestra. "Mlllvaie Driving Club will hold n meeting at Alvin Parson's. on mdty evening. November 14th. "Breadalbana 'United Church Chicken and Ham supper and 3-Mar. Wednesday, November 10th. 4 lo 0 P. M. "Reserve saturday, November 15th. for North Milton Women's institute Pantry sale, at Moore A McLeodll. 2 P. M. "Annual meeting of the Kingston much Canadian Legion will be field in the Legion Homo. Charlotte- Wwn. Thursday, Nov. is at a P.M. It door. g "Come to the Barn Dance in -i. Peter's Lake school. Friday wlshi. November 14th. Lunches. f?1lIePlwq'I iOl'ChIIivl'I.' sponsored by D:'Don't --f at too . rlddllns. use in the uminingiowm. 'x.&"o'i. iksii. Dmmbsr filth. If not line. the fol- meeilng of Quebec's 24th Legis- ialure. The iclcvlaion nlEH5lIFO was one of 20 bills presented to the Leg- islature soon after Lieutenant- Governor Gaspard Fnuicux open- ed the first Quebec session sincc provincial elections last July .10. The bills call for extension of rent control, confiscation of vehicles transporting mnrgnrlnc banned in Quebec since 1949 and extra funds for farm loans and for housing aid. There are provisions to inyrcasc the pay of Judges sitting in pro- vincial courts and to abolish Montreal's old circuit couri. Ono government hill will ex- empt power lines put up by Que- bec's co-operailvc electricity scr- vlces from Municipal taxation. Election of Alexandre Tnche (UN-Hull) as Speaker of Ihe Loa- lsialive Assembly preccricrl the reading of the 1,300-word Throne Speech by the Li0llCCni'lnl-GOV- ernor before a gathering of 400 including strife and church lead- era. The Legislative Assembly, pro- vlncinl lower housc. met hriofly laicr. Prcmicr Duplcssis, 62-year- old Union Naiionnic lcniier. paid tribute to two members who died since the election. There were wreaths At the desks where llcnri Groulx (Lib.- Montreal-Outremontl and Philippe Cassette (UN-Matapcdia) formerly Int. Seed Experts .,;.. OTTAWA. Nov. 12 -(CF) -Two Canadian seed experui have em- barked on a Latin-American tour ss another step in Canadals cam- paign to find an antidote to the virulent 15-B stem rust which threatened prairie wheat crops last spring. Dr. C. H. Goulden, Dominion cerealisi. and A. H. Parker of Oil- bert Plains. Man.. president of the Canadian seed cit-owers' Manitoba section, have started a six-weeks tour of co-operative seed-growing stations in six south American countries. They will examine hundreds of varieties of seed to Judge how to- sistant the are to the fungus growth. believed to have originat- ed in the south and carried by wind to the United states and Canada. However. they will do more than examine what other countries are doing. Canada has a new wheat . Ciuardi rifle- iiews ln&Briei NEW YORK, Nov. 12--(AP)- The Amcrican Cancer Society In- dny gave its 1952 riisiingulshcd service award to the late Howard W. Biakeslce. science 'cdilor of lhe Associated Press. The pre- sentation was made to Mrs. Roan- mond Bliikcslec, widow of the ed. lior. Blaiiesiec riled last May 20. SAN JOSE, Nov. 12-- (APl--Aclrcss Joan I-lontalne and movie producer Collier Young were married at nearby Snrntogn today. Miss Fonlziinc's former husbands were actor Brian Ahcrnc. and film producer Wil- lliam Dozier. Young was once married to actress Ida Lupino. LONDON, Nov. 12 --- (AP) -. Prlmc Minister Churchill todziy lliclpcd dedicate ll war memorial 'in historic Wcslminslcr Hnli over- looking the House of Parliament where he guided Britain to vic- tory in the Second World War. He joined with the Archbishop of Ciintcrbury in unveiling a slum- crl glass window in memory of ilic 62 pnrliameninrinns rind stuff mcmllcrs who gave tlicir livcs in the wnr. LEXNGTON, Ky.. Nov. 12 .. (APl--- A white crow which scien- tists any is ll bird in 5 million, is on display at ,the University of Kentucky's department of zoology. James savage. a farmer, shot the bird after trying to trap it. Prof. J. M. Edncy. acting head of the zoology department, said scientists believed "'only one al- bino crow would be found among perhaps as many, as 1.030.000 black crows." Hope New Wheat Immune To Rust to talk about and which research men are confident may prove im- pi-egnabie against the rust. so far only a few bushels of the variety has been developed. It is being tasted in Canada and at stations the experts will visit in Argentina, Brazil. Chile. Colombia. Peru and Ecuador. By the time the men return they may know how resistant the new variety is against 15-B as well as other forms of rust in the Latin countries. In the variety passes tests it will be grown in large quantities and the seed distributed to prairie farmers. But the experts emphas- in that it will take several years before there will be sufficient seed to meet demand. - That is one reason they are try- ing to keep development on the new variety as secret as possible. They ddh't want to be swdmped by demands for seed-demands which probably will not be met until about South Korea Denounces Truce Efforts And Insists Whole Counttry Be iUii"1t:.e”1Ei'' 1” Hy Stanley Johnson UNITED NATIONS. N. Y., Nov. 12 -IAP)- South Korea iuciay bitterly denounced U. N. efforts for a military truce with the Reds and proposed that the U. N. arm and train 2.000.000 non-communist Koreans to fight on with their allles. , 'i'he south Korean delegation in- sisted that all Korea-the Repub- lic in the south and the Red- ruled north-must be united by force if necessary. I "We are eager to expand our forces". the South Koreans de- claed." . . .tremendous expan- sion and improvement of our R; O. K. (Republic of Korea) armed forces have already occurred. But the goals can be set much higher substitution of ever-increas- his numbers of Korean troops for those U. N. soldiers now in the front lines can be achieved at a lower total cost than the conduct at the war now demands. And in the greatest cost of all., the cost of human suffering and lives. we do not shrink from accepting the inevitable burden" Came As Surprise. Tile hitter sinfemciiis. made in a 46'-page booklet distributed to the U. N.'s 60 member nations, came as it surprise to diplomats who have been concentrating on the deadlocked prisoner-of-wan issue. All Western speakers here have assumed-and said in their speeches-that everyone wanted a truce.' The new south Korean booklet called the truce negotiations "dis- heartening and degrading" on said the long months of "fruitless negotiation can well give rise to a re-evaluation of the effects of such a truce." Korea is not actually is U. N. member. having been barred by Soviet vetoes, but the Republic is sponsored hy the U. N. The South Korean statement said a truss now. without U. N. military control of both north and south, would have these effects: 1. Leave millions of Koreans north.of the 38th parallel at the mercy of Communism. 2. Give legal status to the illegal division of ,Korea'into north and south. 3. Make probable the Commun- ist conquest of south Korea in "ii mere matter of time." 4. Deny the .U. N.'s announced goal of Korean unification. Korea. the booklet said, thus would be "far worse off than be- fore .the war started.” WASHINGTON. Nov. --The United States Agriculture Department today estimated this years corn crop at 3,302.8'l5.0Q0 bushels. This would be the sec- ond largest crop on record. The 12--(AP) 9” GB. C. By-eieciions Fear lssiie Could Result in Wrecking U.N. By Norman Altstedter UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. Nov. 12- (GP) - South African today demanded the United Nations rule itself not competent to deal with racial tensions in south Africa which India described as an "threatening tide of conflict." 3 Opening -of debate on this ex-i plosive issue in the Assembly'a' special political committee saw; Mme Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit ofl India voicing the Asian-Arab de- mands for U. N. action and G.l P. Joosie of Soutll Africa calling the question an interference in, his couritryls domestic affairs. i as one of the major conflicts grouped under the heading of "col- onial" problems which some Wesl- ern delegates have viewed as a reef on which the U. N. could founder unless there is some re- conciliation of opposing view points. South Africa has in the past threatened to withdraw from the, U. N. if the world orgnnizntionl cohtinucri ”interfel';ng" in its dom-l estic affairs. Joosie made no threat but left his position open, when a vote is taken on his no pected Arab-Asian resolution call- ing for a group of distinguished social scientists to investigate conditions in South Afrca. The South African resolution appeared to have little chance of. success since the Assembly voted Oct. 17 to take up the racial issue. The vote then was 45 to 6 with eight countries, including Canada abstaining. . Joosle termed "preposterous" the Arab-Asian charge that racial can .lOiA--l3--rS0u5h-vAiliiCli threat e' world peace. "rhe U. N charter, he added, gives no auth- ority for the U. N. to concern it- self in any way with domestic af- fairs of member states. LONDON - (CF) .. An airplane which took off from London Air- port for Montreal returned to land after dumping nearly 2000 gallons of gasoline over Del-bysliire. The This U. N. fight was regardetuold competence resolution, and an ex-1 Fox Judging Yesterday; Start Made On Excellent Mink Classes C.P.il. Outlines Need For Huge : Expenditure , I O'I'I'AWA, Nov. 12 (CF) -- Funds must be provided for mod-j emizing and enlarging railway fac-- ilitles if transportation costs arey to be held down. the Canadian Pac-i ific Railway today told the Board of Transport Commissioners. N.R. Crump, vice-president of the C. P. R., declared that the coni- iilimy W111 hBV9 V-0 Spend 5475-000-09” tnaxi any other type of silvers. It over the next five years to replace equipment and provide llew facilities to meet demands for ser-1 vice and keep pace with the growth; of Canada. 5 "we nave in my opinion been losing ground in this respect in re-ivisltiiig here as Princess last year. icent years," he said, testifying in Tllcy isupport of a railimv application to with a banding of darker "have the board change the long-land when made up life CXH"8mE1.l' standing basis of settillg ii-eight! rates, 3 The railway application asks that the C. F. R. be allowed to earn vi, set annual return on its net rail-I way investment. with a view to sta-ll bilizlnlz its finances and invsroving its borrowing credit. At present, ithe board uses the CPR. as the rate "yardstick" hut fixes rates on the basis of current financial re-. quiremenis of the company from' time to time. The company asks to be allowed earnings of iiI,A per cent on a "rate base" of about 31.146.000.000 - or s74.ooo,ooo a year - which it coll- tends would shore up its credit. Mr. Crump said today increased capital expenditure is needed by the C.P.R. because there is ai "pi'essinlz" necessity for ,enla.rair,ia its facilities. 12----(Reutersla LONDON. Nov. British scientists disclosed today they are working on new type of parachutes designed to bring stratospheric guided . mlsslbles safely to earth. The 'chules' open at speeds fnslcr than sound and at heights miles above the earth. ihc wockly news letter of the Society of British Aircraft Coil- plane had developed engine trouble. structors said. TORONTO. Nov. l2 -(CF) Police will step into the investigat- ion of the .',”-250,000 cheque swindle of the Bank of Nova Scotla "only if it should be deemed in the inter- est of justice that they do so." At- torney-Oenerai Porter of Ontario said today. He made the statement after a private inquiry into why police had not been called into the case. He said the police feel it La if: the best interests of all concerned that they do not enter the inquiry at this phase. I-Earlier he said he would ask why police have not been called into the case. Reports from llonireai say A five-innii gang suspected of the swindle has left that city and may be headed for Toronto or the Unit- ed states. The swindle is said to have! started as far back as last January, Si7NbiiiiniiFIH”” VANCOUVER, Nov. 12 -(CPV - Six candidates filed nomination papers today for British Columbia's two Nov. 24 by-elections which will renew the struggle between the C. C. F. and Social Credit for political power in the province. Social Credit won 19 seats and the C. C. F. 18 in the 4!-seat Leg- islature at the June 12 provincial general election when alternative voting was used for the first time in B. C. Social Credit members in Colum- bia and Simllkameen resigned their seats to open the way for the two ministers to try for election. Attorney-General Robert Bonner is being opposed in Columbia rid- ing by the C. C. F.'s Chris Madson and Liberal George Keenieyside. Mr. Madson was defeated in the summer election. Finance Minister Einar Gunder-E son is seeking election in Slmllka- meen riding. llis opponents are if. S. Kenyon. C. C. F. and Joseph Klein. Farmer-Labor. Present standing in the Legislat- ure ls: C. C. F. 13. Social Credit 1'1. Liberal six, Progressive Conservat- ive three .Labor one. vacant three. The third vacancy was caused re- cently by the death of Ernest Car- son. Progressive Conservative house variety that experts are reluctant 1004 or later. estimate compares with last year's crop of 2.ii4i,4z1.000 and the 10-year (1941-00) average of 3,011,652,000. leader and member for Llllooet. Reveal Police Not Called In Huge Cheque Swindle Prince Charles Appears . To Favor Canadian Toys with certified cheques being cashed on banks in Toronto and Mont.- real. A Toronto bank teller is reported to have uncovered the operation last month when he inquired into a cheque drawn on an account of a wealthy depositor. A spokesman for the investigat- ors said a countprfeit cheque- certlfying-stamp machine was used. ”lt was a copy of the genuine. None of the bank's stamps -are missing-st least, not now. It is quite easy to make a duplicate." About half the cheques, ranging from 3700 to 34.000 were reported cashed in Montreal banks, not all at branches of the Bank of Nova scotia, while the rest were passed linre. Completed Yesicrdny was it big one at the Fox Show pavilion at the Exhibi- tion Grounds. From 9 a.m. until 4.30 judging was continuously carried on with the fox classes completed slicrtly after noon and then the mink classes were tabled i ll was a most intcrdsting dayi with the groups standard silvers first disposed of, top honors in these going to Ernest T. Mil.', Ken.-ington and second placlngs to S. U. Messenger. of Nova Beo- In the progeny of dam, with six: curries, Gordon Maclvlillan, Corn- wall, was top with S. U. Messen- ger ill second place. The stiiildiird pearl pi'obabi5' created more plaiiliums interest 15 the llEW('Sl, only coming into prominence the past few years and it was a jacket made ironl these furs giouii on Prince Edward is- land iiiut was presented to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth while are a grcy-bluish silver hairs beautiful and although the fox in- du'.';i'y is at the present in a very depressed state, yet pearl platin- ums are in demand and the pre- sent production can be easily absorbed. Lowell Hancock. Summcrsidc. who has been specializing in pearls for several years carried off the most awards for adults. pups, both male and female in the medium class. In the light class the L. K. Lockerby and the estate of J. R. Lockerby topped the Hancock pearls in two of the four sections. And in the extra lights honors were shared between L. W. Han- cock, L. K. Lockerby and G. F. Cameron. Tllc championship for adults pearl platinum was won by L. K. Lockerby with Estate of J R. Lockcrby reserve. G. F. Cam- eroil won the championship for, pearl platinum pups with L. W Hancock reserve and the grand championship s t a n d a r d pearl platinums was won by a pup own- ed by G. F. Cameron of Summer- sidc, with L. K. Lockerby reserve. The Lockerby fox that was reserie Huri Reds From Three Peaks Sl"JOl'i.. Nov. 13--(Tilursrlayl- (AP)---South Koreans hurled the Chincsc Communists from three peaks on the ccnirai front in a heroic charge Wednesday, then crushed two night counier-blows in the glzirg of big Allied search- lighls. ' The .'ilst day of battle for the Kumliiva ririgcs found the Kor- cons once more in control of all ground lost in heavy Cliincsc attacks Tuesrlay. including Pin- point Hill on Sniper Ridge. South Kocran inf.-inlry stormed Pinpoint while simultaneously rockinx hack the Chinese from two peaks on the flanks. SPRINGFIELD, Ill., Nov. 12-- (APi-- Governor Stevenson look off by plane today for a five-day rest. on ii ranch near Sasahe, Ariz. The riofcaicd I)!-rinacraiic prcsiiicnlinl nominoc was accom- panied by an aide, Carl Mc. Gownn. and .'llcGnwan's wife. By Miirlel Narraway LONDON. Nov. 12 -(CF)-, Prince Charles is four years old Friday and his birthday celebrat- ions seem sure to have a strongi Canadian flavor. i The sturdy, active young licir to the throne has been "lHikil1lZ" Canada ever since his parents re- turned from last years royal tour. His favorite toy is n rndlo-conii-oi- led automobile set presented by Windsor. Ont. Charles gets such a kick out of this, officials at Buckingham Pal- ace said that it's unlikely any birthday gift will mist it from favor, He has a "real boys" love of mechanical gadglls. The fair-haired Prince knows as mucll about Canada as if he'd been there in person. His know- ledge comes from showings of films taken by the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh, plus stories told to illustrate still photographs. one of his favorite tales is Prince Philip's account of how he, and "mummy" drove it Canadian train. when the royal couple returned from Canada a year ago, they distributed some of the Canadian presents immediately and kept a few others for last Christmas. Among the Christmas gifts were twin cowboy and Indian outfits for Charles and his two-year-old sister. Princess Anne. A visitor to l Prilhce-in nail Ge.-pbu n-Ed o with war whoop! by an indlan chicf, followed by a tiny. blonde souaiv, rather unsteady on her foot. squnrc dancing is another nur- scry legacy of ihe Canadian tour. Sinrc he first watched his parents doing this dance at private pari- les in Buckingham Palace, the Prince has developed a pretty fair imitation. The Queen and the Duke still reserve as much time as possible for nllrscry visits. When Charlcs enters the break- fast room at the palace Friday, his first thought may be the tricycle and monkey that are among his birthday requests. Ever since he saw the chimpanzees at London's Regent's Park zoo. Charles has been coaxing his parents to set up a cage for a "funny monkey" in his own special sandpit in the palace gardens. Queen Mary's gift is expected to be A "talkiiuz" box picturing ani- mals. birds and trees with a text recorded on gramsphone discs. Although his schooling will not start until he is live. he now rec- ognizes letters of the alphabet, counts up to 10 and can spell his own and his sister's names. It is notknown whether Charles will take part in the coronation ceremony at Westminster Abbey next. June 2. He may be deemed the royal nurseries in Buckingham too young. Morning Daily Founded I831. The Guardian. Five Cents. Legion Ala-rmed Al Dangerous Weaknesses OTTAWA, Nov. 12 -(CF) - A reorganization of Canada's weak and undermanned reserve army 11 under consideration by Lt.-Gen Guy simonds. chief of the genera. staff. V This was learned today in the wake of another blast by the Can- adiali'Legion to the cabinet about the "dangerous weaknesses and in- adequacies" of the reserve force and a new Legion call for examin- ation by a commission of inquiry. The air force and navy, too, are reported ready to take steps if. build up their reserves. The R. C A. F. is likely to post more regular force airmen to reserve fighter squadrons to bolster them. The navy is forming a special branch to look afler the reserves and it preparing to work more in 1953 in building up the part-time force. in Preliminary stage Gen. simonds' army plan has not reached a stage where it can be placed before cabinet yet and is likely to be discussed with other senior army officers here early ir the new year. summer training may be streamlined to concentrate more on officers and non-com- missioned officers rather than on units which often go to camp with a minor fraction of the men they are supposed to have. There may be other changes. too Al-my circles admit that the re- serve army is a feeble and in- adequate force. It also is frankly admitted that a logical first step in reorganization wov"i be to elimin- ate a large fraction of the units. But there logic collides with tradition and sentiment: Virtually every unit has its glories of the past and it would probably do more harm than good to under- take a wholesale destruction..of them. - Gen. sii-nonds is reported to have some degree of elimination of units in mind but it is not likely to touch any of the ones war has,made famous-the Hastings and Prince Edward Regiment, the Carleton and Yorks, the Loyal Edmontons and many more . I Only Paper Strength The reserve army has roughly 50,000 men but that is paper strength. Many units turn out for parade with only a small fraction of their paper strength. On paper, too, it is a force of six divisions but that is pretty well a phantom army. The Legion went before the cabinet with a brief which ham- mered ou the weakness of the re- serve army and -urged the ap- pointment of an independent com- mission to study the situation and make recommendations. its main point, however. was the "extreme hardship" under which "a great many" aged and needy overseas veterans and widows are living because of the "inadequacy" (Continued on Page 5 cafe? You C Ah'T PRESERVE rizaci-'. IN i-'AMll-Y, HALIFAX, Nov. 12 - (CPl - Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Thursday. Synopsis: Over the eastern part of the Maritimes skies were overcast and there were scattered rain show- era and snowflurries tonight. in the western part of the district it was mostly cloudy. The intent! storm centred near Newfoundland is moving off to the east and will no longer affect this district. The weather will be clearing late Thursday. Regional forecasts: - Prince Edward Island - kcloudv. clearing about sunset. Oold. North- west winds is becoming lisht in the afternoon. Low and high Thursday at Charlottetown 28 and as. High tide today at Charlottetown at no A. M. and 1.39 P. M. High tide on the North shore in 2.38 A. M. and 2.55 P. M. sun rises today at 7.01 A. M. and sets at 4.47 P, M