e ' Maxims OF A. MERE MAN airi- but not always of philosophers. Truth is the object of philosophy. T J u-Chill I. I. I. 9.00. Othcsf Provinces ATTLEE DECIDES ottotown. Summeraidu 015.00 per annulus. lllllscwlscn andU.lA.tl2.00per annun. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1952 New Brigadier May Fleatl Replacements Pool Acheson Is Firm But Conciliatory In is Key Speech At U. N. TINil'I'ED NATIONS. N. Y. Oct. to --(GP)- State Secretary Dean Acheson of the United States said ioday the United Nations must fight as long as necessary to de- feat aggresison in Korea and' must not allow faint-heartedness or recklessness to defeat the U. N. cause of peace The aggressors must be convinc- ed that continued fighting in Korea will cost them more than they can gain. Acheson said in a major declaration of policy before the U. N. General Assembly. He urged every U. N. member to "look to its responsibility" to support the action in Korea which calls for ironing Ind commitment of troops and "food. clothing. materiel and money." Acheson's address on the first day of the asembly'a general de- bate was conidered conciliatory. With Foreign Minister Andrei Vi- Ihlnsky of Russia sitting in the first row of decks before him, Acheson said: Cigarels Slolen From CNR Siaiion Cigarettes estimated at a value of 31.000 were 'atolen from the Bonded Room of the Canadian National Railway here early Thur- sday morning. Entrance was made by a break of the main doors of the baggage room on Water street followed by smashing a lock on the bond room door. which is located. inside the main building. Railway Police are investigating the rob- bery. p . Coming Events 5,... ”Dance,-', W11 Hall, October loth. L .. "Dance, 47Mlllview I-fail every Friday. "Dance I-Iowa's Hall. Brackley Beach every Friday. v "Klnkora Hall, Friday night, see "Bad Bascomh." "Auction .and Dance. Vernon Hall, Wednesday. October 22nd. "Rummage sale, Kirk lower hall. Saturday, October lath. 2.30. "Masquerade Dance, Belfast Hall. Pt. Prim W. I. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for feeding your hogs and poultry Dillon and Spillett. "Pantry sale, Fennell and Chan- dler's Friday afternoon. Oct. 17. sponsored by l-Iazelbrook W. I. "Reserve Wednesday. October 29th for Hot Chicken Supper. Tracadle Hall. "I-Tot Chicken Supper, plum pudding. games, etc.. North Rustlco. Wednesday. October 20th. ' "Reserve Saturday. October 25th, Rummage Sale. Holy Name Hall, 2 P. M. St. Charles Auxiliary. "Dance every Friday night. south Ruatlco Hall. Music by the Char- lottotonians. . "Special meeting Abegwelt R. B. P. Kingston Friday, Oct. 17. Eleventh Degree. "Pantry sale at S, A. McDon- ald'l Saturday afternoon. Oct. 18th. Canoe Cove W. 1. "Last dance of lhn season at Sandy's, Friday, October -17th. Re- freshment. served as usualf Burke's .Orcheltra. "finance on Quaker Full-o-Pep feeds without charge for three months. Sac Poole J: Thompson. Ltd., Montague. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. Music by Roblchaud. Sponsored by trustees of st. Pat- rick's school. "Coming to Mt. etewart Theatre Saturday night, October lath, at 8 o'clock "Valentino". starring Inca- nor Parker and Anthony Dexter. Technicolor. "The Annual Meeting of the shareholders of the Queen's County Plowing Match Association. will be held in Pownal Hall, October list: 0 P. M. : "Old time fiddling. step dan- cing and ringing contest in 1(ln- do on hall M d Otbe nth. ...l. ...ll..'.”s...i”...'.... . Pwnier to idcnt, won last month from the ..M.A...gA...g....gMMg,, "Our differing ways of life may impel us to persue our objectives in various ways. .let us vie with one another not in the arts of war. but in the ways of peace." Vishinsky is expected to speak tomorrow or Saturday and dele- gates waited to hear whether he will be as conciliatory as Acheson. who has been reported influenced by Allies of the U. S. in taking a fairly soft. tonc. T iobsler Caich Smaller Bul Of Greaier Value Although the poundage was down this past season the landed value of the lobster catch was higher than a year ago. according to fig- ures received last night from Mr. J. J. Larabee. Federal Inspector of Fisheries. In 1951 the catch landed was 16.- 449 hundredweight, with a. market value of t3'l9.i40. This year the weight was only 16,842 hundred- weight, but the value to the fish- ermen was 5405.028. Iran Breaks llelaiions .Wiih Greai: Britain ,'I'El-IRAN, Oct. 16 - (AP) - ..M0, Named . Moassdeah. angrily cut a.n's ldiploniatlc ties with Britain over the oil stalemate today. chances for an eventual set- tlement were crippled. if not killed. . Britain's rejection of Mouadsgh'a demands - chiefly for 540,000.00!) in disputed royalties - and a leo- tur. from the Foreign Office on diplo'mMlc courtesy set the stage. Blames Britain For Mela I a. broadcast speech. 'Mossa- d blamed Britain for the mess than has developed since he na- tionalized the Anglo-Iranian oil company's holdings in Iran last year. He charged that Britain. which wants compensation and damages for losses under a contract due to run until 1993. intended to waste time by continuing the -note ex- change and "prevent us from tak- ing mother economic path which would bring salvation and freedom to the Iranian people." Officials in London said Mossa- degh was solely to blame for the break. They called it "a futile move." It lessens chances of a set- tlement by removing a major ns of contact. may said. but Br taizn intends to go on seeking a settlement. : Sludenis Turn Down Russian Exchange Plan QUEBEC. Oct. 16-(CP)- The Cansdlan National Federation of University Students tonight turn- ed down in proposed Russian-Carr adian student exchange visit. Following lengthy debate, the proposed hange was defeated on a motion moved by the Uni- versity of Manitoba. The recorded vote was 11-8 In favor of the motion. ASHINGTON. Oct. 16 -(A Pl e Wage vstabillaation Board appeared to be locked in a quarrel over the soft coal case today as the number of idle miners climbed close to 100.000. Archibald Cox. chairman of- the board. suddenly and without ax- planatlon cancelled a press con- ference he had called for early af- tornocn. had .eceived a letter from econo- mic atablliur r Putnam on certain aspects o the case, which involves government approval. dia- I oval or modification of a Mo wags bike which John L. Lew Unltod ulnar Worksrl proa- Mrs. Sablnus Johnston, Kinkora, or Phone 0001. soft coal' industry. Failure of the wage increase so . tored across Canada and slated to Report Almost 100,000 Coal Miners In U. S. Idle It was reliably reported that Cox , Col. r. A.-Clill ls Appoinled To RanltofBrigadier OTTAWA. Oct. 16- (CP)-The army today announced appoint- ment of a new brlgadler who is likely to command a ew, single pool of reinforcements for Can- ada's overseas commitments. Col. F. A. (Freddie) Cliff, D.S.O., 44, formerly of Melfort, Sask., is being named a brlgadler to com- mand the 25th Canadian Infantry Brigade Replacement Group with headquarters at Wainwright, Alta., starting in December. This is the replacement or re- inforcement group for Korea. It currently consists of units-scab go to Korea in the spring. There is a separate replacement group in Canada for the 27th Brigade in Germany. Plans to form a single replace- ment group are reported in the wind in line with plans to wipe out tendencies to have one army' for Europe and another for Korea. Now attending the Imperial De- fence College In the United King- dom. Col. Cllft will complete his course there prior to his new ap- pointment. He succeeds Brig. J. E. C. Pangman, D.S.O.. 44, Tor- onto, whose appointment to com- mand the brigade in Germany was announced earlier. He attend- ed Melfort public schools, the Saskatoon Normal School and the University of Saskatchewan, Sask- atoon. He rose ot command the South Saskatchewan Regiment in Eng- land in 1942, succeeding Lt.-Col. C. C. I. Merritt, V.C., after the latter became a prisoner of war at Dieppc. In 1944. Col. Cliff. was promoted acting brlgadler while command- ing the 6th Brigade. He later re- linquished this rank as a result of prolonged hospitalization due to wounds. : ” .' Two New Industries To Open In mid. ST. JOI-llNlS, Nfld., Oct. 18 - (CP)-Newfoundland is to get two new industries, Hon. P. .1. Lewis. acting attorney general. announced here today. Two companies formed by Eur- opean. British and American in- terests will build a fur processing plant and a. plant for the manu- facture of rubber goods at Holy- rood. a small settlement about 35 miles west of St. John's. Mr. Lewis said it is expected the two plants will employ about 000 workers. Construction of the for process- ing plant will begln shortly. Will Discuss Lobsler Problems the lobster catch and methods of ' lfwghlmgdd nammar. Oct. 16 --(CP)- an Force search and Roscue officials said here United States Beachcraft plane is missing on a flight from New today a twin-engine York's ldlewlld Airport to Goose Bay Labrador. The aircraft and its three oc- cupants were last reported at 3:15 a. m. EST, over seven Islands Que. Earlier the pilot reported icing conditions and said he was dropp- ing to a lower altitude. U. S. Aircraft Missing On Flight To Goose Bay Will item-aid Bevan Disband Lefi-Wingpliroup LONDON. Oct. iii -(Reuters) - Clement Attics and his supporters r' ” J at a meeting tonight to The aircraft was being ferried to Europe by Fieetlines of Burbank, Cal Islands area has prevented large-scale search but a U. S. B-17 from Goose Bay made a prelim- inary investigation today. Meanwhile, planes are standing by at the R C. A. F. base in Green- wood. N. S. and at Goose Bay and for Newfoundland bases waiting the weather to clear. Weather conditions in the seven Propose Many Changes In Transfer Of Lawyers Al Summerside OTTAWA, Oct. 16-(CP)-Few eral fisheries experts will begin a series of meetings next week with lobster fishermen and rep- resentatives of the Maritime fish- ing industry designed to improve canning it. The Fisheries Department said today the first meeting will be held in Moncton, N. B., Oct. 22 to deal with regulations govern- ing canning and packing of lob- sters and lobster meat. A second meeting will be held at Summer- side. P.E.I., Oct 24 to discuss lobster fishery regulations. Other meeting will take place at Antlgonlsh, N. 5., Oct. 27, at Shelbourne, N.S., Oct. 29. ,. The do is 1 said can lny for some time "with a.view to making amendments to bring about more effective inspection measures." The lobster fishery regulations also have been under scrutiny. The proposed discussions with the trade are designed. ,the depart- ment said, ”lo consider proposed changes which, it is hoped, will produce larger catches from Marltimes waters and still allow in sufficient escapcment to build up stocks for the future." PARIS, Oct. 16 - (Reuters) - A French navy commission of in- quiry reported today that the submarine Sibylle, lost with her 48 crew last month. probably met her doom trying to avoid collision with another warship passing over her. It was presumed that either the diving rudders or the ballast tanks failed to function properly. WASHINGTON. Oct. ld -(AP) The United states navy announc- ed tonight it has launched rockets from giant baloons, high above the north geomagnetic pole and sent them to altitudes of about 40 miles -literally above the top of the world. The instrument-laden baloons, tall as lo-story buildings were re- leased from the coast guard ice- breaker Eastwind in Baffin Bay, west of Northern Greenland. The soaring rockets radioed back cosmic radiation measure- ments at the one point on the globe where the earth's magnetic field has the least influence on in- coming cosmic ray particles. "This (40 miles) is the greatest height lmown to have been teach- ed in these latitudes," the navy said. 'I'h navy also sent photographic take affect. pending w.s.n. ap- proval, has already led to a work stoppage of 06.000 diggers. or about one-fourth of all Lewls' soft coal miners. These walkoutl. cantring in west Virginia, appeared certain to grow as long as the W.S.B. falls to reach a decision on whether thswage boost is allowable under its anti- inflatlon regulations. The new soft cos! contract boost- ed the basic minimum daily wags from 310.35 to 318.25. ionly slightly more than half this increase would appear to be automatically ap- provablc under coat of living wage regulations. Industry members of the wage board have said they will vote against approving the pact unless other wage regulations make it clearly approvabie. Rockets From Balloons Reach 40 Mile Altitude geomagnetic pole. last of August and early Septemb- er prevented navy hclicoptersfrom recovering the verslty of Chicago reward of 3100 for the return of hope that it may be rocoverd by the Greenlanders or Eskimos dur- ing the coming spring." ametsr from as to more than 1'00 feet.--were launched from a flight deck only so feet square. wind. waters, at the speed of the wind in order to create the no-wind con- dition essential for launching. geiger chamber to measure the cosmic radiation and "telemeter" the date back to the Eastwind for recording and analysis. V ncath the baloons and wire fired almost vertically after they had been lifted "up through most of the earth's atmosphere." mined by an analysis of the sur- face of the earth. The north goo- magnetic Greenland south of basin. at no degrees north lati- tude, cos degrees west longitude. north pole at no degree: latitude- the axis abou t which the earth rotates-and north magnetic pole. "nuclear emulsion" plates aboard the baloons to altitudes of about 90,000 feet or 17 miles. The valuable photographic plates and equipment from two of the ballons were seen to parachute safely to earth. one set landed on Ellesmere Island west of Green- land. and the other on the Green- land icecap within 10 miles of the "The snow storms during the equipment," navy announcement said. "Dr. Marcel schein of the Uni- has offered a the this equipment and there is some Fourteen baioons ranging in di- The Eutwlnd had to race down- through iceberg-strewn Each rocket carried either a counter on an ionization The rockets were suspended be- Oeomagnetlc poles are deter- .l!l Western ill! Kane pole is It is about midway between the the non-satlonary and 'under scllfg" and the administration of lobster traps destroyed, 'meir value TORONTO. Oct. another. nouncecl the. graduates schools anywhere in Canada years of the Osgoode School course. school receive these onio Law School. prove these proposals: 1. Abolition of the special call fee required when a mem- ber of the bar of one province wishu to practise in another ni:oiIlocc,..'I'1iis--feels ashigh as 31,500 in some provinces. 2. That a lawyer wishing to plead a casein another province may do so without paying a call fee. In this connection D. Park Jamieson of Sarnla. Ont., chairman of the law society's committee on - uniform stand- ards of admission to the bar. cited the recent case of John Diefenbaker, Progressive Con- servative member of Parlia- ment, who was required to pay a call fee of 51,500 in British Columbia to plead a case there. 3. That a lawyer. having practised for three years or more in one province. should be admitted to the bar in any other province provided he passes an examination in stat- utes and court procedure in that province and pays a, fee of :25!) plus the normal call fee charged graduating stu- dents. Previously graduates of law schools outside Ontario had to be called to the bar in their home provinces before they could be called to the Ontario Bar. New tlgls requirement has been abolish- e . The society also announced that an applicant to the four-year course of the Osgoode Hall Law School must have a. university de- gree before entering the course. Pl”eVi0U5iY Students completing high school had been admitted providing they had had two years' apprenticeship in a. law office. Ollawa-Gives Assistance To N. S. lobsler Fishermen HALIFAX. Oct. 10 - (OP) L. The federal cabinet has joined with the Nova Scotia governmci.-. in pro- viding loans to help rehabilitate Nova Scotla. lobster fishermen who suffered severe storm dam last winter. The interest-free loans will be made on a 50-50 basis and will provide fishermen with 100 traps or 80 per cent of the loss-whichever is the lesser. The loans will be payable over Q three-year period without interest the scheme will be carried out by the Nova. Bcotla government. The provincial government said 1,118 fishermen had reported 77.620 was placed at 0346.275. Announcement. of the Federal Government's decision to share the joint plan was made by Fisheries Minister Mayhew - one of his last acts as fisheries minister. LONDON. Oct. ld--(Rcuton)- The government said today the Queen has approved appoint t of Sir Robert Duncan Harris Arun- doll as governor of Barbados. He succeeds Blr Alfred Savage. who will be governor of British Guiana. Arundell now is governor of the Windward Tslandl. i 16 -(CP) - The Law Society of Upper Canada today proposed sweeping changes in the regulations governing trans- fer of lawyers from one province to At the same time the society an- of law will be called to the Bar in Ontario af- ter completing the third and fourth Hall Law This move was taken at the re- quest of Dean Horace Read of Dal- housie Law School at Halifax, who suggested graduates of'the Halifax privileges. which are the same as those given graduates of the University of Tor- The Ontario body urged the law societies of other Canadian Prov- inces to meet immediately to ap- slackencd at nightfall force a showdown with Aneurln Bevan for control of Britain's Lab- or Party. Bevan. fiery Welsh leader of a group of about 30 left-wing Labor members of parliament. has been at odds for more than a year with the moderate wing of the party represented by most of Labor's 296 members in the Commons. The Attlee supporters decided to- day to submit an ultimatum to a caucus of Labor members of the Commons demanding that Bevan disband what Attlee has called a "party within it party.” And that Bevan supporters cease attacking the leadership of the party through the left-wing socialist weekly, The Tribune. A bitter fight is certain at next week's caucus. A compromise will be suggested by a middle-of-the- road group now trying to keep the Labor Party together, but the party's leadership now has com- mitted itself to stand or fall on the ultimatum it will place before the meeting. Today's decision apparently re- jected peace overtures made by Bevan in the Tribune yesterday. He maintained there was nothing sinister about meetings of his fol- lowers and invited all Labor mem- bers of parliament to attend the meetings. However, he said he and his supporters would not give up their rights to spread lsociallst education" throughout Britain. If the Labor caucus approves the Attlec ultimatum. Bevan will have to toe the line or quit. But if the Attlee utlimatum is rejected, the party leader and his closest sup- porters would have to resign their party posts. I Aitlee commands majority sup- port in the parliamentary group. and is unlikely to be defeated. But, if his victory is narrow. his prest- V lge might be damaged alrngsij. be- yond repair. The clash is the biggest within Labor ranks since 1031. That year party leader Ramsay MacDonald and several other rlghtists quit to join the Conservatives in a coalit- ion government to cope with the depression. FAVERSI-IAM. England--(CPi-- Farmers in this Kent County dis- trict opposed a plan for a new highway by-pass, saying such an artery would kill hundreds of acres of the best agricultural land in Kent. REGINA. Oct.' 16-(CF)-Mrs. Fred Drake of Regina today was elected national president of the Catholic Women's League of Can- ada, succeeding Miss Ishbell Hut- ton of Ottawa, who had held the office for two years. Mrs. James Freeman of River- side, 0nl., was elected first vice- president at concluding sessions of the league's 32nd annual con- vcnlion. Members of the national execu- tive elected wore: Second vice- presidcnl. Mrs. F. A. 'Bussiercs. Sillery. Que, third vice-president, Mrs. llcrman Stevens. Calgary; fourth vice-president Miss .7. Madeline Clay, Victoria; fourth vice-president Miss Grace Coug- lin, Woodstock, N.B.; sixth vice- presldcnt Miss M. M. Burns, Hail- fax; secretary Miss Anna Tierney, Ottawa; and ireasurer, Catherine Toal, London, Ont. Family Life Pretty Bail REGINA. Oct. 16-(CF)----A Un- ited States welfare expert and last night hint "our modern fam- ily life is pretty hnd.'.' Rev. Edgar Srhmlerlv-lrr We make more enemiu by what we say than friends by what we do. MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN n 16 PAGES . Morning Dally Founded 1881. The Guardian, Five Cents. 0N SHOWDOWN FOR PARTY CONTROL A Solicitor General ' Hon. Ralph Campney, M.P. for Vancouver Centre, who has been appointed Solicitor General of Canada. ' Tax llirector Transferred To 0-ntario Office Mr. J. Wellington Dixon. Direc- tor of Taxation in the Federal In- oorne Tax Office here. has been -transferred to Fort William, On- tario, in at similar capacity. Mr. Dixon is a native of Brook- field. P. E. 1.: where he was born in 1903. a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. George Dixon. He received his education at West Kent school. Prince of Wales. College and the University of Manitoba before en- tering thc firm of P. 8. Ross and Son. Winnipeg, where he took his course as a. chartered accountant. Mr. Dixon expects to leave here the first week in November to take up his new duties. TIVICE AS MANY LONDON - (OP) - A report to the National Safety Congress said that 10,000 boys had been killed in highway accidents since 1939, com- pared with 5,000 girls. The report said this "ratio remains constant. Regina Woman Named National C.W.L. President Washington, DC, director of the Family Life Bureau of the Na- tional Catholic Welfare Confer- ence, made the statement in an address to the annual convention of the Canadian Catholic Women's League. , Reasons for the situation, he said, are revolution: in industry, in ideas. and ideals and in re- ligion. ' The industrial revolution had substituted "for the simple rural and village life of the past our mighty and mobile modern cities." "Our housing situation and the slums of our cities, the inade- quacy of income in many cases. the exliorbitant prices of the times and the presence of large numbers of mothers in industry are evils that harm the family. The ideological revolution. Fa- ther Schmcideler said has result- rd in a suhstituilon of pagan principles for Christian ones. Tn remody the situation, Father Sclimiorlelcr suggested concerted and concentrated promotion of social and recreational interests within the family circle as a means of comhattlng the trend all away from family life in large r-iiics. Allies Stop Two New Attacks By Chinese Reds By George McArthur SFIOUL. qct. 17-(Friday)-(AP) -Chinese Communist troops, their ranks bled by at least 3,000 casualt- ies, launched weakening attacks Thursday at two Alllled-conquered heights in Central Korea. U. S. and South Koreans on Bloody Triangle Hill and sniper Ridge mowed dawn the Chinese as the Reds charged up the slopes. Front reports said fighting Thursday and south Koreans began mopping up on Pinpoint Hill, the dominating height which they hold on Sniper I-tidge.' - They scaled up eaves where Chinese soldiers refused to surrend- er with deafening charges of high explosives. Allied casualty figures put Red losses on the two peaks at more K than a,o0o,kllled and wounded since the U. N. assaults began Tuesday. More than 300 Chinese bodies were strewn over sniper Ridge. The fighting on sniper Ridge and Triangle Hill was by far the heaviest across the Korean 155- mile battlefront during the day. Allied planes. circled overhead in a continuous ring. pouring bombs. rockets and searing napalm on the Chinese. Once the Chinese drove the Kor- eans from Pinpoint Hill but they could not hold. The U. S. seventh Division held all Triangle I-fill ex- cept "Pike's Peak." a. knob on the northwest part of the hul mass. on Sniper Ridge, the Reds held only one knob on the north and. Fifth Air llprce war pianos hit Eisenhower Reviews Russian lions To Destroy Free World NEW YORK. Oct. 16 - (AP) -- Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower pre- sented a detaued analysis tonight of the Russian master plan to de- stroy the free world, and then, having set forth a formula for meeting it. he said: The free peoples can face any new Soviet tactics without panic." Eisenhower discussed at length the recent 10-day meeting in Mos- cow of the 19th Communist Party Congress. He put a spotlight on a. number of key quotations from the 25,000-word statement by Prime 'Minlster Joseph Stalin and warn- ed: T "This is a deadly challenge to the free world in this critical aut- umn of 1952. It is tihls challenge that we must answer if we are to survive in freedom." And he asserted several times that the Western Nations have the resources for meeting the Com- munist threat. The General delivered the prin- cipal speech at the Alfred E. smith Memorial Foundation dinner at- tended by many persons prominent in bofzh major political parties. Smith, one-time governor of New York, was unsuooesmful as line Dem- ocratlc presidential nominee run- ning against Herbert Hoover in 1928. Although he said he was not speaking as the Republican candid- ate for president in tonight's add- ress, Eisenhower did say in his pre- pared address: "Our economy is insecure and vulnerable in many ways. But all our people have come to know that it is the primary task of any pres- ident and any government to in- sure that our country never again suffers a depression." The reference was made in con- nection with hls statement that find Russians are using economic war- fare as well as political and milit- ary in the world struggle. Tracing the development of Rus- sian expansion. he said: "The Russian frontier has moved westward until it includes Berlin vision of an empl;re spanning two continents from Aachen to Vlad- ivostock has come closer to fact) than fantasy." Eisenhower called fails a "sensa- tional story." In the military field, Eisenhower said. Soviet generals have been building an army of l.000,00(l men in the satellite nations, given them common military tactics. common. weapons, a common training pro- gram. and a common military or- ganization. The result. he said, has been "perhaps the most thorough- ly intemationallzed army in his- tory.'' TWO YEARS FOR BIGAMY QUEBEC, Oct. 18 - (GP) -Ade- lard Gsgne, 31, of St. Romuald, was sentenced today to two years in. penitentiary for blgamy. Gague admitted he married I. second time last August. although his first wife, whom he married in Edmundston. N. B. in 1046, still was living with their three chil- dren. its REMARKABLE lion Muci-i TROUBLE is turf IN the wool Wu so MANY Both? .l'WNTiHCs HALIFAX. Oct. 18 --(QA)--- Ol- ficlal forecasts issued tonight I?! the Dominion Public Weather of- fioe here, and valid until midnight Friday. . synopsis: Cooler air will spread slowly over the forecast district on Friday. Considerable cloud is ex- pected to develop in the afternoon in most localities and a few snow flurries and rain showers are fore- cast for Northern New Brunswick and Eastern Quebec. Princo Edward Island-Clear, with a few cloudy intervals. Cool- er. West winds 16. Low and high many at Charlotlotown so and 56- gggggg... . High tide today at Charlottetown at 0.48 A. M. and 9.51 P- M- High tide on the North shore M 4.40 A. M. and 4.51 P. M. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 6.31 A. M. and supply points as far as 200 miles into North Korea dluncdag. utncusigag. within its limits. The old Russian .