MAXIMS ' OFA MERE MAN great deal of heart-break. Better n,Iiti.lO abiding than I The Guardian. Five cefnn. Morning Dally rounded leer. CHARLOTTETOWN. CAN ADA. , Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew SATURDAY, JANUARY 20. 1951 16 All through nature to eternity. MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN that live must die. pluing PAGES i subscriptions delivered 88.00; Mall 50.00 other Provinces Ind lJ.B.A. 80.00 . S. HOUSE U. N. Forces Continue To Probe Enemy Lines Railway Official Sees Prices Going Higher If No Controls Imposed OTTAWA. Jan. 19 -(OP) - prices are going still higher this year unless there are price and wage controls, a. railway official said todliy before the Board of Transport Commissioners. I Testifying in the rallways' new application for higher freight rates. H. P. Miller. manager of Acres for the Canadian Pacific Railway. predictedsharp increases in costs of materials because of intensified competitive bidding for fl diminishing supply of civilian goods. Mr. Miller was one of three wit- nesses who appeared for the C. P. R as am Board opened hearings on a railway 8i)P1iC9-I10" I" 3 ceneral five-per-cent rate in- crease. third general hoist since the war. The increase would add about 523,000,000 a year to the nat- ional frelght bill. spokesmen for seven Provincial Governments-all except Ontario. Quebec and British Columbia- were on hand today to oppose the increase. They presented I 811811113! SI"-11' fled lineup from the group U1” has been fighting the post-war series of rate cases that have re- sulted in increases of about 0140.- ooo.ooo 3, year. Newfoundland joined the opposition today while B. C.. represented in all earlier ones, did not appear. C. N. R. Case Later All today's evidence was given by c. P. R. witnesses. Those for the Canadian National Railways are to be heard later. From the C. P. R. witnesses, the commiss- (continucd. on Pumio Ooh?) -"Mali your Films to Garnhuln Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Hunter River Rink. Iklitinlt tonight. "Annual Meeting Hampton I-loll, January 23rd, 8 P. M. Trustees. -egg;-d n i-ty;un.d;pance, Vernon Riv ,uali.';lsnuadr.'22nd- ,. . . . --fie; social andf Dance. Keliyls Croaagil-Inll, Wednesday, January 24th. "Meeting of Cornwall Hall at llazen Howard's, Cornwall, Sat- urday. Jan. 20th at 8 DJ"- "Notice. No skating at North River'Rink Saturday afternoons until further notice. "Unloading Old Sydney coal, today and Monday at Milton. Vernon Gillespie. "Reserve January 20th for Rummage sale at st. Peter's School Room. 7 P. M. "Receiving Hogs at Ctlpiud 10' Canada" Packers Limited. until 12 noon each Tuesday. Robert Daw- son. "Social Evening at Leslie Paynteys. Monday, January 22nd. Bingo. games, contests. Clinton W. I. "I-tumlnagc Sale at the Legion Hall. Saturday, January 20th. It 2 P. M. P. W. C. Girl's Hockey Team. "Buying pigs Mandi! all Fredericton. Paying 524 I pllr for good pin over thirty pounds each, Wm also buy smaller ones. Knud Jorgensen. "Hockey North River rink lo- nisilt,! Saturday. January 30- southnort Ramblers vs. Ccvehend Red Wings. Gama time 8.30. Can- teen service. Skate after IMM- I " 'liectlng,,llo'gr by truck for Ca 1! man: a Paelrcrl Lid.-every Mon- .riay3until 200i P. N. If loads are I abi brill '!oiir l-foil '0 Kinkon esfationf Phorlr '1--1.1 Collect. I Alden r.'..it'..f?".l-t'.'l..iif.i.'g...lt?..'ii'.'.'.i”it..". the ,Iil:1saturd ',-iiannrv 2091:. It at - t meetin. us-nlyi , I t lg” i:&lh.:.7gf"'-ilihgddfuilg "9, lion -was still uncertain. New President Of Agricultural Council For P.E,l. - Mr. ER. Hurst, (abovcl. officer- ln-charge of the Plant, Pathology Laboratory. yesterday was elect. ed president of the F. E. I. Agrl- ' cultural Council which concluded its annual meeting last night after a four day session. M!'- Hurst. Vvlce president of the Council last year, look over um mm" 0' chhirman for this week's meeting in the absence. due to illness. of the president. Mr. Har- old W. Clay. Senior Livestock Fleldmen for the Dominion Dc- -Dariment of Agriculture. Mr. Hurst was warmly commended by the members for the calming man- ner in which he conducted the discussions. Mr. F. M. Nash. district man- altar of Poultry Products. was elected vice-president. New secre- inry is Mr. Arthur LeLzlcllcur' who succeeds Mr. S. C. Wright, 39CF9llirl' for the past three years. Executive members, are: Miss Mary Robin. Provlnclnl Director of Women's Institutes: Messrs. S. C. Wright. Senior Flcldman. Pro- vincial Department of Agricul- ture; 3. Frank Tinncy. Poultry Supervisor. Experimental Station: F. M. Cannon. officer-in-charge of the Entomological Laboratories; Henry MacLaren, acting Dlsirlci Inspector, Seed Potato Certifi- cation: and William Maclmod, lla- mlnlon Fruit and Vegetable In- spection Service. The committees reconvened ves- terday after two days of discuss- ion on various agricultural met- icrs. They presented reports and (Continued on Page l5 Col. 3) Expect Higher II.-S. I-lord Cool Prices TORONTO. Jan. 19 -(OP) - The Toronto Coal Exchange said today that. due to wage increases granted yesterday to U. 5. coal miners, the price of best-grade anthracite soon will go up 31.15 a ton here. Increases of so cents and up are expected in other types of coal. Further hikes are predicted aria result of recent frcight-rate boosts. lwou Sharp Pdllol Fighls Flare Al Many, Plicesi By ROBERT IJUNSON TOKYO. Jan. 20 - (Saturday)- (AP) -- United Nations fcrces stab- bedldeep inside Communist lines on three frozen sectors of the Kor- ean front today in the face of an expected third all-out Rod offen- sive. Three sizable Allied patrols. led by tanks. reoccupied Wonlu on the central front Friday without oppos- ition. The battered lrey rail and highway centre had been abandon.- ed by the U. S. 2nd Division Tues- day. About 10,000 Allied troops jump- ed off across the snowbound east- central front Friday near Yongwoi. 30 miles southeast of Worllu. and. with airp:wer help, killed an estim- ated 1.000 North Korean Reds. On the western front. where a marauding band of tank-supported doughbcys has been harassing Red lines all -week. brief skirmishes were reported near Osan, 20 miles south- east of Seoul. Small, sharp patrol fights flared at many points along the Korean no-man's-land. A U.N. division staff officer said the Reds will strike "when they are damn good and ready." Ready For Then He added: "We are ready for them. We stood off more than the attacks they'll be able to mount." The officer said it's hard to see what they are waiting for. "There are probably 100.000 of them C three Chinese armies mu 8. bunch of North Koreans-north of Suwon and south of the Han River. They have plenty of food. although they may need a little more heavy equipment." he .Idd- ed. Another staff officer expressed the opinion that "they'll hit us be- fore the first of the month." Unconfirmed reports that some Chinese were withdrawing were countered by recollections that odd lulls also preceded their earlier of- fenslves. i An army briefing officer in wash- ington said Friday that Chinese Communist troop strength in Korea appears unchanged from that or recent weeks. Dr. Bishop leaving For Lexington. Ky. Harness horsemen, horse cattle breeders, fox farmers and poultry ralsers will learn with deep regret that Dr. George C. Bishop, Provincial Pathologist here, intends leaving on or about Feb- ruary lst.. to take up new duties with the ma. l-lagyard of Lexington, Kentucky. ' and Ontario veterinary College, which is affiliated with the University of Toronto. and has specialized in surgery. pathology and bacter- iology. Prior to coming here he work'- ed with the Health of Animals Branch located at Toronto, Ham- ilton, Peterborough. Winnipeg, and Changes In Provincial Civil Service Announcedl The Doctor is a graduate of thel (Continued on Page 15 0:1. 5) Important Have Pouliry Marketing Plan For Approval "All the Bround work on the 001111?! marlrctinl plan has been laid and all that remains to be done is to gzlln approval from lire Provincial Marketing . Board," stated Mr. Lincoln Dewar, Secre- tory of the Federation of Agri- culture, yesterday. during the pre- sentation of the poultry report to the members of the Agricultural Conference. as he commented up- on the progress made towards gcillnz ihc scheme into oper- alien. A lenizltlve plan for the mar- He said the Pentagon still estim- ated Chinese strength ln tile Kor- ean battle acne at about 300.000. with 460.000 in reserve to the north. The fight at Yongwol was the bloodiest of the week for the entire front. iihristens U. l(.'s First Jet Bomber BIGGIN HILL. England, Jan. 19p -(Reuters)--Prilne Minister Rob- ert Menzies of Australia today crashed a bottle of champagne over the nose of Britain's first let bomber and named it "Canberra" afier his own capital city. After the ceremony, the sleek twin-Jet bomber screamed into the air and rolled through its super- spced tricks for the gathered dignitaries. The Canberra. Still on the secret list, is the first bomber built in Britain to have all jet power. It is said to manoeuvre like a fight- 4er and be capable of speed of more than 600 miles In hour. British plants already are roll- ing Canberra: off their assembly lines and soon it will be built in Australia. Truman Fires He... Of A Economic High Command By ROGER. D. GREENE WASHINGTON. Jan. 10 -- (AP) -President Truman 'todIy' fired Alan Vnlentlne II the United StIiel' economic stabilization chief Ifior I beh' d-the-scenes row in which Valentine opposed an immediate price-wage freeze. Truman immediately named trio , Johnston. former president of.the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, as his successor. Johnston now is head of the Motion Picture Association of America. , - Truman's shakeup of his econ- omic high command was interpret- ed on Capitol Hill and elsewhere as heralding I speed-up in the anti-inflation fight and l.hL.-ifl'l- b flea of lwceplng price-wad! tine himself laid Truman drastic Ictlcn should be immediately. ' the exact time of such ae- Cllnrlea defence mobilization .- Wilson. told - Johr.eion'I appointment would tend to hasten I decision on the long- debated question of controls. some high-level oificlIls have Jlcied that I country-wide "freeze" on prices and wages will be announced before Feb. 1. and this seemed to be borne out in Valentine's letter of roaigbation. Valentine wrote Trumail that only yesterday he gave Wilson I detailed plan for "over-Ill manda- tory price and wage stabilisation effective about Fob. i." Valentine said he wanted about two more weeks to muster an Ide- quaie staff before clamping down controls. and he told Truman: "I am sorry it (the plan) in not acceptable.” , Valentine took over the nobili- ution job just three months ago. Hi: resignation - submitted at Truman's request - ca I rid- ing stain of eritioinn Inclin- bcra of Congleu who complained that Valentine's cautious attitude in COMDILLIQL inflation was Jeo- keting of poultry was agreed 'at a meeting of "producers '-(Continued on Page 15 C01. 7) U. N. Aclion On lied China Bogs Down LAKE SUCCESS, N.Y., Jan. iii -(AP) - United Nations action on Communist China bogged down today in a wclter of behind-the scones conferences on the next moves. Sponsors of a plan to brand the Communist Chinese as aggresors delayed presenting a formal re- solution to the U. N. political coin- niiitce to give some delegations more time to consult their Gov- ernments on dcialls of the pro- posal. A U. S. spokesman reported that the American delegation found "quite solid” support for the de- nunciatory resolution in confer- ences with British Commonwealth countries iilld France. But he said they were unable to draft a prc-possl for presentation to ihc committee today, as was expected. Still Another Plan The Middle Eastern and Asian countries met and were reported to have agreed on proposing I new appeal to Red China, based on I cease-fire in Korea in e chnnge for a seven-power conference. This psrley would not be held in China, L! J minded by the Peiplllg regime. but in a place in be pick- ed by the United Nations. Under the reporled plan. the Chinese de- mand for I U.N. seat would be de- cided It the conference. and not beforehand Is the Peiping Govern- ment asked. some of the sponsors were re- porled to have little hope for lie chances of accepilnce by the Red Chinese. but" wanted to make the appeal anyway for the record be- fore lining up behind the U. S. demand for the aggressor tag. Others of the group were reported Adamant in their opposition lo any d-enunciaiion of Red 'Chln'a.' IIAIII-DRESSER SENTENCE!) lo and OHATHAM. ONT., JIn. l0-(CP)- Leslie Wood. 50, o hair-dresser. today was sentenced to two months .for indecent Ieeault on a woman cilatolner. She testified that wood let her alone in his shop, clamped the hood of I pcrrlianenbwaving machine down on her head and 'F'l'!lll"'”'”l'9'.":"!”Ft3-2-.-1 mod to liiuaer. Meetings Next Week I Important changes in the Pro- vincial civil service setup were In- nounoed yesterday by Premier J. Walter Jones following a meeting of the Executive Council. Mr. Horace Wright, ehairlnall of the hV0l'lfIII('.n'l Compensation Board, how seriously ill in the Prince Edward Island Hospital, has been granted six months' leave of absence and Brig. W. W. Reid. D.S.0., has been appointed net- lnp: chairman in his place. Brig. Reid will continue to discharge his duties as director of Physical Fitness. 'I'hc duties of Mr. George Fraser, public relations officer, will now be those of acting director. Tour- ist and Information Branch, De- partment of the Provincial secret-. ary. while Mr. B. Graham RogerI.j' director of transportation. will be ucting supervisor of the Travel Bureau which will also form part of the Tourist and Information Branch under the Provincial Sec- retary, Hon. J. Wilfrid Arsennult. The changes. it is understood. take Place lnlmcdlately. Cabinet OTTAWA. Jan. 19 - (CF! -The Government. faced with approach. ing and critical decisions to be taken in the national and inter- naiimnl spheres. is calling key Ministers to the capital for 'l'l'!pm-t,. ant Cabinet meetings next week. The council sessions will deal primarily with the Government's legislative rims:-rim for the Parlia- mml-3PY,595310h opening Jan. 30 but. because of Canada's increasing commitments abroad. that program will be lntematicnal as well us na- tional in scope and ramification. CIII Ministers Home Tile call. from Prime Minister st, Laurent, has gone out to two Min- isters who are away, Finance Min- ister Abbott and Resources Minister winters. Others already in the cap. ital have been asked to remain av. ailable for next week's meetings. Trade Minister Howe, top mm in the country's defence productloli schemes. is in Washington for gen- eral oconomlc talks with United States industrial mobilization chiefs. However. he will be back before the council sessions start. A Cabinet meeting has been scheduled for Tuesday, Jan, 23, mg others are expected to follow a.-. Mr. St. Laurent and his Ministers move deeper into the shaping of their program. This program, which will be em- bodied in the Speech from the Throne to be read at the'opening of the now session, undoubtedly will be one cf the most important since the ending of the Second world War. It. and the legislative pro- gram that will stem from it, may change the pattern of Canadian life for months, perhaps years. Far-Readillng Program For one thing, the program will tell Parliament - and the coun- try -- what the Government iii- tends to do further to build up the country's defences. to assist Can- ada's Allies abroad and to contnin the inflationary pressures and oth- er economic ills that inevitably fol- low a defence program. ' Action 0n Case It also will provide the basis -- alid probably the core - of Gov- ernment policy in the months ahead and serve as the structure for the Government's preparedness steps. Just what those steps will be no one cutside of cabinet circles will know until the Governor-General reads the Throne speech. But there have been hints and speculation about the trend of Governmental thinking. It is taken for granted, for ex- ample. that higher taxes are in store. thcugh their extent will not be known until the 1061-52 budget is brought down in the spring. and that allotment of arms to Can- ada's North Atlantic partners will be increased. Increased appropria- tions for the armed forces are ex- pected. Gunmen Ger 57.000 Payroll In Ontario AURORA. 0nt.. Jan. 19 --(OP)- Two gunmen grabbed a 57.000 Piv- roll today from One secretary- treaaurer of Sisman Shoe Com- pany and escaped in an automo- bile. W. H. stoddurd said two men. both armed. accented him II he was shout to enter the company plant in this town 20 miles no th of 'Nl-onto. He said he not the e- ence n1Ilnbu' of the car. g ' Urges U.-N: To Take Immediate WASHINGTON, Jan. 19 - (AP) -An aroused House of Representa- tives shouted approval today of a resolution urging the United Na- tions to brand Red China In ag- gressor in Korea. In a terse 28 words, the resolu- tion declared: ”Resolved. that ii is the sense of the House of Re- presentatives that the United Na- i-ions should immediately act and declare the Chinese Communist authorities an aggressor in Korea." Only a few "no" votes were audible as the members approved the policy statement by I voice vote. in the brief pre-vole debate. however, some Republicans con- tended the resolution was tanta- LD BRAND CHINA AGGRESSOR IN KOREA Found Guillyi Of Manslaughter mount lo a declaration of war on the Chinese Communists. However. Representative Joe l Martin of Massachusetts. the Re i puiblican leader, said it was mere- ; ly an expression among ihe House members. it came at a critical time representatives of the munist world were jockeying nerv- ously at the United Nations head- quarters at Lake Success, N.Y. over a resolution to brand the Chinese Reds as aggressors. House Dcmocratic leader John W. McCorlnack of Massachusetts intro- duced the resolution and was join- cd in the action by Martin. McCormack said its overwhelm- ing approval by the House would show the rest of the world that the United Slates is truly united. Martin said his only regret was that the action wasn't taken sev- when l eral weeks ago," to head off whatl he called the recent "appease- mcni" vote in the U.N. on I Korean cease-fire proposal. Claxmlams More Melilleeded In Armed Forces SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Jan. 10 - (CP) -- Hon. Brooke Claxion, Min- lsier of National Defence. sound- ed a note of warning here today when he said that men were bad- ly needed in both aoiive and re- serve forces "and these men will be obtained one way or another.” He did not elaborate. Mr. Claxton was addressing I luncheon meeting of the Board of Trade. reserve force officers and interested citizens. He urged citizens to appreciate what men of the reserve forces are doing. He noted that they were doing double duty "working day and night to further the Canadian way of life." Truman Uses Blunt Words In. Comments On Stalin WASHINGTON. Jan. 19 - (AP) e. President Truman tonight blunt- ly linked Russian Premier Stalin with all dictators who sought "en- slnvement of the common people." He predicted the free world will -will the struggle against "the mat- erialist forces" arrayed against them. Truman said "there isn't any difference" between Hitler. Musso- lini. Charles l of England. Louis XIV and other dictators. and the Russian loader. - "They are all siust alike," he told a business mobilization dinner of the society of Business Magazine Editors. "Alexander the First of Russia was just as much I dictator all any of sentiment , . ' But 1 , non-Conl- .1 " l "Not guilty of murder. but guilt)" of manslaughter" was the verciictg brought in by the petit jury yes-- terday aftcrnoon in the Supremel Court as the trial of Willlaml Weeks. Charlottetown. (above- charged with the murder of James, Mullins. also of Ohnrlottetownn concluded in its fifth day. . The court room and corridors ofj the Courthouse were crowded wiihl people who waited tensely for Harry Crane. Mount Stewart, foreman of the jury, to'anncriince the verdict. Mrs. Weeks. wife of the accused. was not present in the court room when the verdict was announced, but other relatives of the prisoner gathered around him as he sat in the prisoners box following the decision of the jury. Mr. Justice George J. Tweedy thanked the jury for their efforts, alld after they were dismissed an-i nounced the sentence would be given at 10:30 a.m. on 'I'liursdny. January 25. Attorney General WJE. Darby K.C., and Deputy Attorney Gen- eral J.0. C. Campbell, K.C.. rep- resenting the Crown, had asked that the prisoner he sentenced on Monday morning, January 22. Mr. R..R. Bell, K.C.. attorney for the defence, had objected to the short. lapse of time nnd His Lordship stated it would be on Tllursday. In his charge to the Jury, speak- ing for approximately seventy-five minutes. Justice Tweedy thanked them for their patience and stated it was a very necessary service they (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3! nther that ever existed; They he- lieved in the enslavemcnt of ihe common people." The President continued: "There is no difference between dictators, if you study your history. There has nct been any difference iii any police state that ever exist- ed ill the history of the world. Tllcy are all alike. They a.re all for the cnslavoment of the individual for the benefit of the slate. i "We believe that the state cxistsl for the benefit of the people, and that is lvllnt we are fighting, f'(ll'..' While Mr. Truman has repeated- lv denounced Soviet Russia and Communist imperialism. tonightls comment was one cf the rare oc- caslons in which he has taken Stalin personally to task in public. Flu Deaths In England Indicate Upward Tren.d LONDON. Jan. iii -- (CPV - Reporicd influenza deaths in Eng- land and Wales Ihot up to 800 last week. Ilmou double those of the previous week. the Registrar-Gem eral's Office said today. The reports cover the 120 great lawns. including London. in Eng- land and Wales. The 500 deaths of iallt week compared with 458 in the previous week. and 102 for the week ended Dec. 30. "E'igli-ly-five per cent of the peo- ple who died from influenza dur- ing the second week of the year were over 55 years of age." I Health Ministry official said. He added: "The steep rise in the number of deaths from lnfleunu con- tinues. Analysis shows that egaln most of these occurred in the Tynealde area of the northeast and on Merseyalde in ihe north- woo" (ill the Pverpocl area). "An increase in the intensity and A spread of epidemic ln-flu- enza cannot be discounted." he said. Dedllh figures for Scotland and Northern Ireland are not yet available. the Ministry said. and reports on this week Ire not all in yet from England and Wales. "Generally spellkih." the Health Ministry said, "young peo- ple are not vitally affecir.-'8'." Fearing an outbreak of epidemic. proportions, Northern Ireland health authorities had by today closed 130 schools, mostly in coun-' try areas where attendanc... had already been heavily reduced. Reporia of the sickness con- tinued to come today from Bir- mingham. Wales. Plymoudi and soutliarnpton - widely-acaliered points. , in London itaeli factories and offices reported heavy aboeniee- .l0I'n.' 1. lTop U. S. Army, Air Force Chiefs Believe Allies Can. Hold On In Korea WASHINGTON. Jan. 19 - (AP) -- Tap Army and Air Force chiefs just back from a flying trip to Korea were reported by a senator today to have express conviction that United Nations forc s can hold on there. The two military leaders. Gen- erals J. Lawton Collins of the Arm.V and Hoyt Vandeliberg of the Air Force met with a Senate sub-cnm- mlttee for an hour-long secret re- port on what they found. A Senator who would hot per- rnit use of hLs nlme told a reporter both Generals said the U. N. forces can hold on. This Senator said there was no talk about a complete withdrawal or evacuation. Alberld Oil Production Up CALGARY, Jan. 10 - (CPI - Oil production from Alberta wells in November, i950, was the greal- est in the Provin-eels history. the Petroleum and Natural Gas Con- I scrvatlon Board reported today. Oul.put totalled 3,022,494 barrels compared with 2.834.507 barrels in October, the previous record month. The flow wu almost double that of November, 1049. . it was obtained from 1.663 wells. Wells capable of operation total- led L924. Biggest producer was the Red- waier field which gave 1,517,204 barrels from 590 operating wells. PRISCNERS MURDERED EAST CENTRAL FRONT. korea Jan. 10-(AP)-The,bodies of it American soldiers-nine of them apparently murdered by their North Korean captors-were found today by a United Nations patrol. One of the us. soldiers apparently had died of his battle wounds. All of the murdered men were shot in the head. fill: GEM it-i , (HE Low SOCKS is USUALLY Loco AT in: onion can TORONTO. Jan. 19 - (CF) -- Mlnimilm temperatures observed between 7.30 p.m. and 7.30 a.m. EST: maximum temperatures be- tween 7.30 a.m. and 7.30 p.m. -- Vlcioria 34-45: Edmonton 27B-13B; Calgary 143-3: Regina 12B-GB; Winnipeg 17B-9B: Toronto 33-48: Oiiawa 19-39; Montreal 26438: Que- bcc 13-34; Saint John 21-'42: Mone- ion 14-24; Halifax 30-46: Charlotte- iown 23-38; Sydney 23-42: Ya;-- mouth 30-40; Si. John's, Nfld. 25-33. HALIFAX. Jan. 19 ---(GP) -Oi'- ficial forecasisissucd bytlla Dom- inion Public Weather office at Halifax. Synopsis: A disturbance centred north or the Gulf of st. Lawrence caused snow in that part of the forecast district. tonight. Farther south skies wcrc variable. Colder air. which covers On- tario. will spread southeast across ihc Mariiimes Saturday. causing temperatures to return to more seasonable levels. I A disturbance Over the Central United States ls moving outward- and gives indications of snow and rain over the Southern Maritime.- Sundalt ' Regional fnrecasin. valid until! until mil-lnlghi. Saturday. with an outlook for Sunday. Prince Edward lsland- Cloudy and colder. Light winds. Low and high saturday at Charlottetown '17 and 35. A outlook for SlindIy-Snow. um. tide today at an A. M. and 7.00 P. M. sun riua today at me A. M. unl- seu at 5.00 P. It. sulllmcrltla tide eighteen gniinl. .. I utes later than Oharlottntoimi aolnmc .. clln. T0lIlli'I'lilI ruse. elrsvlols ,' have Borden have Il'.'l'h no lua. 2.0.-.l-.lI. corms unvlcrb nave linden Al-ll P-Mn ,, i.eave.C. I " p-an ........e .-. -