MAXIMS 0'!-TA MERE MAN 5:-T: one crowded hour of ,' rlous l. mph as age without 5 name. life u-Jj mil: Founded I087. i'il':"i';'i'iiiraim. Three Gents. CHARLOTTETOWN. QANADA. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew MONDAY. NOVEMBER 20. 1950 16 To prmch long, loud end damn- ation. is the way to he cried lip. MAXIMSA OFA MERE MAN. Subscription: Delivered 86.00; Mall 35.003 other Province: 0 U. 8. 87.00. U S. TANK COLUMN SPEEDING AHEAD IN I3 Escape War With China May Hinge On American Decisions In China Hy JOHN iii. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON. Nov. 19 - (AP) .. Communist China's intervention in the Korean war raises the most grltiral strategic questions with which the United States has been mnlrcnled since the end of the Second World war. Because world pace or a great rm ivar may hang on the answers. u s. leaders are conducting a prob- mg (ljxtliflilnll aimed at uncovering iithaf the Chinese are up to Gen. Dciigiis MarArthur's cautious for- ward thrust. on the Korean front and President Truman's reassur- ivnces of peaceful intent toward Red China are part of the pattern. The great strategic questions pl'0bfTbll' will have to be answered ill the next three or four weeks - iinlm ;. scitlenicnt can he negot- iated nivlmtlmo with the Chinese. Chinese Skeptical Tlllllillll told a press conference Tlluisfltiy that l.he. U. S. has no in- tention of invading Manchurla and every intention of protecting Red China's interests along the North Korean border. The Chinese said Friday night in a broadcast from Pclpiiig that they do not believe Tl'llfilllll'A mixture of "honeyed iiords and threats." Herc are the critical queries which coniinued on page 5. Col. 6 Coming Events "Mail your Films to Guhhllln Photo Studio. Charlottetown. 1 "Biiyiiig Timothy seed daily. McGuixan and Boyle. "Cleaning and buying Timottw seed diully. John Leard, Crspaud. "Show Morell Community Hall. every Tuesday, Friday, Saturday. Show starts 8 o'clock. "Reserve Saturday. December 2nd. Bean supper and Bazaar. Vic- ififlll Hail. Auspicas Victoria W. I. "st Thomas Acquinas Rummage sale. Holy Redeemer Hall. this afternoon from 2 to 6. "Come to the regular Dance at the Bonshaw Inn Tuesday night. l-lacNclll's Orchestra. "Rt.-serve November 29th for Christian Church Tea. Pantry Sale and Bazaar at Mrs. George Ander- son's home. Bradalbsne. "A Matting of all interested in Whealley River Hall will be held on Wednesday, November 22nd. at 8.3". "Tlia National Film Board will show pictures in Graham's Road Hall Wednesday evening. Nov. 22nd. Sale of randy. "Chicken Iu-pper. New Glas- low hall Tuesday. Nov. 21. Sup- Der served from 5.30 to 10. Pro- cei-ds in aid of new school. ”lliinimage sale. Trinity Heart: llall imscmcnt. Tuesday, Novem- ber '22. 8.00 pm. Sponsored by Grouii ll Junior w.a. "Buying llvc poultry. chickens "Ni Canons Tuesday 8 am. till noon. liiglicsr market prices. R. in Dirkicson. New Glasgow. "Resular Dance at skyline. New London every Tuesday night. Danc- ing from 9 till 1. Good music and canteen service. "Collecting Hogs by truck for Canada Packers every Thursday beginning November 16 Phone 21- 131 Hunter River Exchange. D. L Macbowell. ...... "Hear W. R. Shaw. lecture in Cornwall Hall. November 20th. Proceeds Cenotaph Fund. Admis- aion 35c and 20c. Lunches y "A rnoetln. of the Liberal elec- hilrs oi .Pownal West Poll will in 8919 u Pownal nail. Monday. 20th. "We are buying dressed fowl Ind chicken dauy. Live Poultry on 08dIyI. It will ply you to finish fill” Poultry and get our prices Piore selling. We pay a com- znlsslon on live poultry delivered rn:iur warehouse on Tuesdays. V'em:'n'IlIlvplied.. E. J. Mcbougall. "Poultry - Buyin live ouitry T031! for American: and gonad- " ilsrketr. Poultry weighed and "W for on farm. Contact Urban " "lift Central Egg and Poul- htym it Grafton smut. Char- "! before selling elsewhere. Premier leaves On Suppori Mission Premier J. Walter Jones, and Messrs. E. D.' Reid. manager of the Provincial Potato Marketing Board and D. A. MacDonald, Glenfinnari. chairman of the same board left by plane yesterday for Ottawa where they will seek support for this year's potato crop. They ucre slated to meet Pre- mlcr J. B. MacNalr of New Bruns- wick and his advisers at Moncton. The two-province delegation will meet the Federal authorities to- day. The island delegation took off from the local alnport at 12:30 in snowy weather. The flight was scheduled to leave at 11:30 but eight inches of s owfall on the Moncton runways made landing conditions impossible. Pre-flight plans called for the delegation to transfer to train at Moncton but M.C.A. officials here doubted if they caught the Ocean Limited which left Moncton for Montreal at 1:30. C. N. R. officials offered to hold the train a few minutes it was re- ported. but the M. C. A. plane did not. reach Moncton until 1:30. it was doubted that the men had time to travel from the airport to the train. it is believed the delegation will press for asu-pport prices program along the lines of the aid granted for the 1948-49 potato crop. That year the Dominion Government paid 69 cents per bushel for Canada Number 1-tablew stock in the farmers bin. In 1949 3540.000 was paid to is- land farmers under the terms of the Agricultural Prices Support Act which was drawn up in 1944. This act set aside two hundred million dollars for the use of farm- crs suffering from poor marketing conditions. A few weeks ago the Dominion Government forwarded a dollar for dollar scheme to the Provin- cial Government. by which the sup- port price expenditures would be equally shared by both Govern- ments. The proposal was given a dim view here with Provincial Gov- ernment men and potato officials claimin-g that the support should be forwarded from the two hun- drcd million dollars provided by the Agricultural Prices Support Act. New British llnii Beaches Korea TOKYO. Nov. 19-(AP)-A Bri- tish army spokesman said today the first bultallon of lhe Royal Norlhumberland Fusiliers is l.llS- embarklng in Korea to complete the arrival of the 29th Common- wealth Brigade. He said other elements of the 29th. the second Commonwealth Brigade to Join United Nations for- ces in Korea. already were mov- lng northward toward the battle- front. The 27th Commonwealth Erl- gade. in action ,sincc Aug. 28. com- prises llle Argyll iind Sutherland Highlanders. the Middlescx Regi- ment. nnd Australian units. Fog And-ll-elavy. Seas Bring Grief To Three Eliips HALIFAX. Nov. 19 ---(CP) - Thirteen crew members of the trawler Flatholrn rowed to shore safely Saturday as heavy seas and peasoup fog combined to bring grief to three ships off the At- lanitic coast. The Flatliolm's crew took to the lifeboat after their 145-foot craft. purchased recently by a Halifax flnm. crashed hard aground on rocks at the spout. in Bay of Bulls, 25 miles smith of St. John's, Nfld. Meanwhile. the 8.046-ton Brit- ish freighter City of Cape Town refloated herself after grounding on Brion Island, one of the Magdalen Islands group in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. She asked for a tow because of damage to her steering gear and propcllor. Asks Aid Also in the Gulf. the 100-foot Magdalen Islands coastal vessel 1-lavre Aubert asked for aid when her engines failed near the treacherous shoals off Deadman's Islands. Purchased recently by National Sea Products Ltd. of Halifax. the steel-hullcd I-"lat.holm was headed into st. John's to refuel when she met disaster late Friday, Search vessels were hampered by the dense -fog and heavy seas, the aftermath of an earlier storm. in their hunt for the distressed craft. But they found her shortly after the survivors landed near Bay of Bulls. They had been in the cramped lifeboat all night. standing offshore away from the pounding breakers. Five Canadians were aboard. Capt. Frank Tidman and Charles Dccoste were to be the Fiatholm's rkip er and chlefmep pg”-wgflcr tTfe””Pthip had been de vet-ed. Also aboard were cook Fred MacDonald of Forchu. N.S., J. M. Ritchie of Toronto and J. Forsyihe. a Nova Scolian. 7 British crew members aboard the Flatholm were: Copt. ,R. A. Winn, Hull: Chief Officer J. Anderson. Glasgow; sec- ond engineer G. V. Andrews. Grimsby; Thomas Giles. Notting- ham: William John Evans. Ches- ltr: Albert Kane. Grimshy; John Harper. Doncaster. and Phillip Gallant. Glasgow. Capt. Wliin said his ship ran onto the rocks after going off course during the dense fog. Surveyors boarded the stranded vessel and probed the possibilities of salvage. The ocean-going salvage Foundation Josephine North Sydney. N. 5. early to assist the City of Cape and Havrc Auibcrt. she planned to pick up the smaller coastal vessel first. tow her into the Magdalens. and then continue to the side of the freight- er. ' o Registered in London, England, the City of cape Town left Mont- tug cleared today Town real Blday in ballast for New York. Reports on Found In Manitoba WINNIPEG. Nov. 19- (CP)- Resourccs Minister J. S. McDlar- mld announced today that oil has been found in Manitoba. He said the oil. not yet In com- mereial quantity. was discovered at the Sourls Valley Oil Co's Downey no. 1 well. 17 miles south of Mellta, in.-Southwestern Manitoba. Kingls Physician Backs Boycott Threat In U.K. LONDON. Nov. 19 - (Reuters) .- A group of influential doctors. headed by Lord Horder. the King's physician. Saturday pledged full 5 t to, thousands of general practitioners In a plan to boycott the state-run medical service. Threats of general withdrawal from the Health service have come from the British Medical Guild. which is polling all general practitioners asking them to quit if they do not get a pay rise by next March. Lord Horder'a Fellowship for Freedom in Medicine, which he founded to resist any form of state monopoly in medicine, said Satur- day it will back this move to the hilt. Doctors in three big cities have already approved the Medical (3ulld'a plans. They include 32 of the as doctors in Blackpool. 700 in Manchester and many in beads. The British Medical Association said. "We are not holding a pistol at the head of the Ministry; but we are loading the pistcl." Physicians in the health scheme on paid so much for sum mister- ed patient. The basic rate is equiv- alent to 19.50 a year. increased by allowances. Aneurin Bevan. fiery Health Min- lstsr. now is surveying the whole field of payments. He is expected to announce his decisions at the end of the year. . Meantime. a few cases of outright opposition to Health Service decis- ions have been reported lately. An area hospital board near Lon- don trlad this month to close its general hospital service and do spe- cialist work only. Medical staff re- fused to recognize the decision and continued accepting new patients. Negotiations to solve the dispute are going on. About no doctors in Durham County are defying the socialist- dominaiad council's ruling that all its employees - and that includes doctors - should be members of trade unions. In the Isle of Man. off England's glsts have refused to work for the health service. Oltilens have to col? lect their medicine from local npllce stations, . Marie Star. Cb. When . Halifax Trawler Grounds (By Harold Morrison) OTTAWA. Nov. 19 -- (CP) Francis J Sullivan. husky. 52-year- old Toronto lawyer. was found bludgeoned to death early Satur- day in a swank Chateau Louricr Hotel tower suite and his socially- prominent widow, the former Mar- ion Gough. has been taken into custody on a charge of murder. lnspcclor Borden Hobbs of the Ottawa Police Department. head- ing an eight-man investigation in- to the bizarre case. said a whisky bottle. part of which was found in Mrs. Sullivan's luggage. may have been the murder weapon. Wife In Jail The 50-year-old, wife of the red-haired Ontario Government solicitor. wearing a mink jacket and "well-studded with jewelry." was placed in the county jail for the night. She will be arraigned in court tomorrow but the hear- ing likely will be remanded for a week. Whatever motive there may have been in the slaying was' not dis- closed. The body was found naked in the suite. located in a compar- atively rcmoize section of the big downtown hotel, about 3 am. EST Saturday. Police were not called into the case until noon Saturday- a delay of eight hours. Inspec- ior Hobbs said police could not understand reason for the delay and are preparing a re- port for consideration of higher police authorities. Although the slaying was not made public until late Saturday afternoon. death notices were pub- lished Saturday afternoon in the Toronto Star and the Sault Ste. Sullivantsuvdaatfw was reported about 3 AM. Saturday after his wife telephoned 'the.hol.cl desk for assistance "in getting my husband into be ." Edward Siockfish. hoifse de- Toronto Lawyer Murdered In Hotel Room; Wife Held iecfive for the hotel (Chateau Lau- rier). answered the call and. on realizing the man was dead. called the house physician. The physician called the coroner and the body was removed to hospital for an autopsy. . Meantime Mrs. Sullivan arranged with an undertaking firm to have her husband's body shipped to To- ronto for burial. She then left by car for Toronto with her son. 21- yc.-ir-old Frank Sullivan, and Mrs. J. J. Hency. a friend of the family. Ontario Provincial Police stop- ped the car at lnnesvllle. Ont.. and brought Mrs. Sullivan back to Oi- iaiva. A police search of the hotel room turned up an Wznipiy quart size whisky bottle. and the bro- ken-off neck of another bottle. Blood was spaiiered albout the carpei beside the bed. Police said they found in Mrs. Sullivan's luggage the miaing por- tion of the broken bottle. Numerous Cuts, Bruises Dr. M. O. Kluiz, pathologist. said after the autopsy tha-t Sulli- van's body bore numerous cuts and bruises on the chest, face and head. Death was caused. he said. by a brain haemorrhage resulting from a heavy blow near the base of the skull. inflicted with a "blunt instrument." After seven hours questioning. Mrs. Sullivan gave a signed slate- ment to police. but the contents were not disclosed. in an early verbal account. Mrs. Sullivan said shd awoke some time after mid- night to discover her husband lying on the floor beside the bed. She said she worked on him for "perhaps two hours” in an attempt to revive him. believing he had in cl ' ' eqi,)i' . h I - i5iii:i'i--.'3”-”ir....i5&.i.d ”'3 f' I . phoned lhe night clerk Mrs. Sullivan is a daughter of the late Richard Gough. a partner in the firm of Sellers-Gough. To- ronto fur merchants. LOUISIANA. Mo.. Nov. 19 -(AP) - First production of. gasoline from coal "in practical quantities" in the United states was disclosed Satur- day by the Government's Bureau of Mines. More 'than 125,000 gallons already have been produced here at the Bureau's 325,000,000 "coal-to-oil demonstration plant" on the Miss- issippi River about 100 miles north of St. Louis. The "proving ground" was estab- llshcd to test the feasibility of es- tabllshlng a synthetic oil industry in the U.S.. operated 'by private industry, to meet the challenge of lessening reserves of natural pet- roleum. Bureau scientists said. The Bureau says that if that feasibility is established. the Un- fted States could achieve independ- ence of foreign sources of petroleum in the event of war and would be able to meet the country's normal needs for oil for centuries to come. Production of gasoline in the Government's test plant has been proceeding at rates up to 9.000 Kal- lons a day for the last month since the initial batch was drawn. the Associated Press learned. It is not planned to maintain daily produc- tion, becauso technical and econ- omic appraisal of the process Ls the objective of the tests - not huge production. While Bureau scientists are con- centrating on gasoline at. present. they say the plant can also pro- duce diesel oil. jet fuel and various other chemicals with applications in such materials as anti-freeze prod- ucts. paint solvents, wood preserva- tlves and even nylon stockings. U. S. Telephone Sirilie Sellled. NEW YORK. Nov. 19 --(AP) - Fiederal mediators announced to- day settlement of the strike of C. I, 0. Equipment Workers against the vast Bell Telephorre system. The walkout began Nov. 9. Under terms of the accord an- nounced in New York. 17.000 West- ern Eleclrlc nzulpment workers- members of the' Cclnmunlcations Workers Union (C. I. O.)-will re- celve wage increases ranging from nine l0 14 cents an hour. They had demanded is cents over the old basic scale of 31.55 and 31.62. The new contract also would run to Feb. 15. 1952. e agreement. must be ratified b union memberuiip northwest coast. all but seven drug- 5,. Dec . 4. Wfrlie Equipment Workers' strike -embittered by flurrles of violence and charges of lockout-affected telephone workers in 48 states.” g Gasoline From Coal Project Makes Headway Hwns Flooded In California BAKERSFIELD. Calif.. Nov. 19 - (AP) - Flood waters of the storm- fed Kern River swirled four feet deep in the mining towns of Kern- ville and Isabella today, forcing 1,000 residents to flee. The roaring torrent. carrying trees. fences and debris. was 30 feet deep - thrice normal - at the ccmmunities. some 50 miles north- east of here in the sierra Nevada foothills. life was reported. Gunman Now lln Hunger Strike WOODBURY. N. J-. Nov. 19 - (AP)-The 26-year-old appliance salesman who slaughtered five relatives of his wife and wounded her and three others critically in a wild shooting spree Friday went on a hunger strike t ay. Warden William Mo lneaux said Ernest liigemto has refused food since his arrest early Saturday. Ingenito is in Jail on five charges of murder. "He refuses to eat." Mollneaux said. "He drinks coffee and chain smokes cigarels. but he won't eat." lngcrrltn's estranged wife. Ter- ass. 21. talked to reporters from a hospital bed today. After relating how her estranged husband burst into the home of her mother and father Friday night. she said: "I hope he gets ilie electric chair." lngenlto is being held without ball. "I did it," Ingcnllo told auth- orities. "I did it because my wife wouldn't let me see my kids." Womenn-Escapes When Car Goes Into River EAST l"l.ORENCEVIT.LE. N. B.. Nov. 19 - (CP) - Mrs. Halley Crabbe escaped with a few slight in-juirias Saturday afternoon after her car skidded near l-Iasl Flor- encevllle. turned over several times while rolling down an embank- ment and came to rest in 13 feel of St. John River water. 15 feet from shore. The lone occupant. unable to swim. escaped through a rear window. stood on top of the car. jumped toward the shore and reached it safely. u.-g Sheriff's deputies said no loss of Capture To-psan. . Push within 13. 1 Miles Of Manchuria SEOUL. Nov. 20 -(Monday) - (AP)-A U. S. tank column, speed- ing over glistening snow under clear blue skies. captured the wall- ed city of Kapsan Sunday and pushed nine miles beyond to with- in la air miles of the Manchurian border on the Northeast Korean front. The advance came after a bloody 30-minute skirmish at the entrance to Kapsan, where Korean Communists lay in an ambush around a bluff. some Red troops liolicd at the sight of U. S. Sherman tar.-ks. ex- posing the intended trap. reported AP correspondent Tom Stone. Dozens of the enemy were crushed to death beneath the treads of the tanks that bulldozed over their positloiis. The tan-k coluirnn. pacing the 17th Regimental combat. team of the 7th Division. placed American troops closer to the Mant-hurlnn border than ever before in the Korean war. Last month 1'. 24th Division troops pushed willi- in 15 air miles of the border on the northwest from before willi- drawing some 50 miles. A deadly game of "hide and seek" meantime was under way on the Chongchon River front in the northwest. field dispatches said. There U. S. British and South Korean patrols found strong Chin- ese and Korean Communist forces continuing a general pullback three to five miles ahead of Unit- ed Nationstroopsonc Britisli pat- rol of the 77111 Comnionwealili Brigade wiped out a lfi-man en- emy patrcl 15 miles north of Pak- chon. At one point on the North Cent- ral front. Communist camp fires were still warni. The Red depart- ure apparently had been nllly 11. few hours or less in advnr.-cc of the advancing Allies. In the air. fighter-bombers con- tinued. close front-v-line 5unu'foria.spTetfered 300 tons , incendiary bombs on six second-I ary towns used by the Reds forl supply and staging. They met. no anti-aircraft fire nor enemy fight- ers. "We have them on the run and we. won't. give lhcm a chance to dig in." one officer icportcd to Mai.-Gen. David G. Barr. com- manding ilic 7th. Barr said the 7th tlnue as fast as it could to- ward the Manchurian border. Their objective is the border town of I-fyesanjin, is rail and highway terminus. ,7 would con- SHOWS PROMISE RIEGINA - (GP) - Alan Murray became a. cover artist at the age of 10. His painting. "The Big Fire." is on the cover of a teachers' man- ual entitled "Fire Prevention Edu- cation." But Alan actually made the picture as a seven-year-old in grade two, three years ago. GRENOBLE. France. Nov. 19 -- (Reuters) - More than 10,000 per- sons watched in silence and grief Saturday as 65 victims of the crashed Canadian holy year ,pil- grimage plane were carried to a temporary resting place in a small chapel outside Grenoble. The dead will. it is believed, re- main in Saint-Roch chapel until their removal to Canada next week. Fourteen military trucks carrying the coffins headed a procession three-quarters of a mile long from Notre Dame Cathedral. where Most. Rev. Maurice Roy. Archbishop of Quebec. had conducted I. burial ser- vice. Men silently removed their hats and women-many of them in tears -- crossed themselves as the procession wound through the 0fI'I'AWA. Nov. 18 Micro .--Rt. Hon. Louis st. Laurent. refreshed by a brief holiday in New York. returns to the capital Monday to mibark on his third year as Prime Minister of Canada. The second anlversary of his tenure in the prime minlstershlp passed quietly and almost unnotic- ed last Wednesday. He was in New York with Mrs. SI, Laurent. taking in the sights. Mr. St. Laurent became Prime Minister Nov. 15. 1948. succeeding the late William Lyon Mackenzie King. He will come back to a fairly heavy desk and with a consider- able amount of work facing hiiin NORTH KOREA Russian. Says No Peace Until U. N. Adopts List Of Russian Proposals Reviews Plans For Training Of Reserve Army The re-establishment, at Halifax. of Royal and Provisional schools this winter for training Reserve Army personnel. N.G.O.'s -and of- ficers. was among the proposed plans of Headquarters Eastern Command. Lt.-Col. J. M. Dela- nicrc. MBE. ED, GSOI. announced Saturday night. The occasion was the annual Regimental dinner of the Commanding Officer, Lt.-Col. A. W. Rogers. and officers of the Prince Edward island Regiment tl7i'h Reece). Col. Dc-lamerc also spoke on the -proposed plans for summer train- ine, ncxt year and reiterated that all units excepting Artillery would train at Maritime points. The schedule called for the P. E. l. Regiment (17th Reece) to train, as a unit. at Sussex and Tracadic. N.B.. along with the Halifax Rifles. while the 5th Signals Regiment al- icndcd camp at Aldcrshot, N.S. The 28th L.A.A. would again go to Ontario points. In his opening remarks. Col. Dclamere expressed his pleasure at being present at the annual dinner cf the Regiment and was "happy to see so many officer ca- dcls present." He referred to the Active. Army as "custodians" and the great traditions that the jun- ior officers in the Reserve Force had in live up to. He urged them continued on page 5. Col. 0 Wiirsiggestsl Margarine ' . Be Banned In ll.S. l'ARiMOU'l'l-IT-NT.TS.. Nov. 19 - (CP) - President Albert Whit- taker of the Nova Scoiia Farmers . Association said here today that the high cost of feed "does not al- low competition" with margarine . manufacturers. "There is is serious situation de- vcloping because of the margarine - competition." he said. "Practical- ly no cream at all is being pro- duccd in Yarmouth County. My personal opinion is that we should enact similar icgisiation to Que- bec and Prince Edward Island. which allows no sale of margarine at all." An Association delegation will - meet Provincial Government of- ficials Tuesday to present their views of the situation. Pilgrim Dead Moved To Temporary Resting Place streets of the quiet, mourning town. Citizens crowded the cathedral and overflowed to the steps when Archbishop Roy. tired and pale af- ter two days working to identify the victims, recited the burial ser- vice. Magr. Alexandre Calllot. 33- year-old Bishop of Grenoble, pro- nounced the blessing of the dead. The great. cathedral bell tolled a knell as the coffins arrived in the town. They had come in trucks from the mountain village of crolx De La Pigne, village nearest to Mont L' Obiou where the plane crashed Monday. Although 58 persons weiv. aboard the pilgrim plane. only so bodies have been recovered. Forty-t-we of these have been identified. Search parties will try to find the missing bodies when the weather improves. Prime Minister Returning Today From U.S. Holiday sometime in January or February. There also will be preparations for the Federal-Provincial confer- ence to be held here in December. This will be a continuation of con- ferences held earlier this year in Quebec and Ottawa with a view to bringing to Canada the full power to amend the Canadian constitution. It is considered possible that Mr. st. Laurent may decide to shuffle his cabinet in ihc not-loo-distant. future. perhaps before the opening of Parliament. Some new faces may appear in the Cabinet lineup. Along with that might come some appointments to the senate. where several vacancies exist. On top of all this is the ever- NEW YORK. Nov. 19-- VA!”- Russia's Andrei Y. Vishinsky 5'1 clared Saturday there. can be no lastlnil world peace until the U"- iied Nations admits the Chinese Communists and adopts .1 ions 15'- of other Russian sproposals. Sen. John Sparknizin tDcni. Ala.). United States delegate. nccuwd Russia of trying to bulldoze ihr U.N. and said the free WOFM could nor accept such R ”barlerlnx of peace." 1-lc said Vishinsky h'ad.madr- it clear that Russia would accrlll Ni program for world peace which did not comply entirely with So- viet demands. For the UN. to bow to such dcniands would leave it iii- capablo of acting except with Sm"- iei permission. The Soviet Foreign Minister. :n a slashing one hour and 10 min- uie speech to the U.N. General As- sembly. laid clown ii series of pre- liminary conditions which he said must be accepted before Russia would even consider a 10-point. 20- year pcace. plan suhmillcd by Scr- relary-Gencral Trygve Lie. Embodied in a Soviet resolution now before the Assembly, they are: 1, A pledge not to try to continued on page 5. Col. 6 Contracts Let For Sheds Ar Halifax OTTAWA. Nov. 19 ----(('IP) ---The Transport Department armounceri today that contracts have been let for the construction I of two steel transit sheds at Halifax. The contracts have been awarded in the E. G. M. Cape company of Montreal. The sheds. to be built sl pier three in Halifax harbor. will cost S1.1i0.000. lf'S East 1'0 Finn Reasons Wei ioiiiciz Folks SHOULD BE ' PAfii:nr ." 1 Nov. 19 -(GP) temperatures observed between 7:30 p. m. and 7:30 a. m. EST: maximum temperatures ob- served between 7:30 a. m. and 7:30 TORONTO. M. . . m.: Victoria 35 42: Edmonton 11b 2:1 1 :1 Raging ya 5; Winnipeg zero Toronto 42 54: Ottawa Montreal Halifax 39 30: Charlottetown .36 37; Sydney 43 47; Yaimouth 36 44; St. John's 37 40. a , HALIFAX. Nov. 19--(CP)-Offh clal forecasts issued by the Do- minion Public Vllcather Office at Halifax. Synopsis - The storm which caused rain and snow in the Mari- tlmes Saturday night and Sund--:' moved east of Cape Breton. and the weather over the district improved. Skies were clear to- night. in all except, this pump . most. regions. and lemperatur . were below freezing in most of the district. . very mild air was flowing in. wards the district from the south- west. and will spread into most of. the regions tomorrow. It is accom- panied by increasing cloudiness at: first. and then ralnshowers. Regional forecasts. valid until midnight Monday: Prince Edward Island: Clear and much milder. becoming dandy: in the evening. Light winds in- creasing Monday afternoon mi south 15. Low'and high Monthly" at Charlottetown 26 and 48. High tTde today at 7.31 A. MJ and 7.59 P. M. ' Sun rises at 7.16 A. M. and sei.1 at 4.40 P. M. aonocn -. cars -roniin:nrr.via.l FERRY SERVICE 1 Leave Borden Leave 0. 'l'.' 9.10 A.M. 10.85 A M. 1.00 l'.M. 2.00 3' M. l 1.30 T'.M. 'i 30 l' M. 4 Sunday 1 leave Borden Lens (7. T. 9.10 AM. 10.35 LM. ' 8.65 l'.M. 3.00 !'.M. WOOD iSl.ANTiS-CARIBUU DAILY FERRY before the Christmas season. There are. for example. plans in he made for the nv-vi session oi Arm-usment, expected to open tonal situation. which always has I No 1 spot on any Prime Ministers. A ' mgplh-M.1LA.VM.L1?.M.Il,.I5.,' agenda, prcscnt problem of the inlei-nat- - have Wood Islands 8 A.M. ii A.M. 1 PM. 8 l'.M. Leave Caribou . .n-.-urea;