ssvraMBER . ,. Mp MERE Man a .-_.-_--B To sleep seven hounds enough for either a young man or old one. 19. g 1947 ' 49*. 1 .. Y L casrlottotown Guardian. Two Canto Iornlna Caardian. Founded i087. 0hr”? "its iintral Guardian ’l column ls reserved for news c l interest, but advertising o nature may be insert ‘e word strict“ i J.‘ if MN 'ihef'Pe's Paper ._’/, 4 -.4 s '"" I a ,. or uu ill e \\.‘7\ ‘\)>‘\\ 1*" ReadbyEverybody _ Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew X _ Ci-IARIHPTETOWN, CANADA. FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1947 . , f i j I ’ 5 g‘ ~» z ‘x ‘g, r-ie The mind always fears the more it ia unknown. MAXIMS 01A MERE MAN“ an evil 14 PAGES Subscription Delivered 86.00. MAI! $5.00. other Provinces b U. I. A. $1.00 VISHINSKY CALLS AMERICANS “WAR MONGERS” s.__._* Dominion Promises To Consider Qivic Problems Suggests II. S. Offer Loan To Canada NEW YORK, Sept. 1&—The Wall Street Journal. noting reports lhst Canada was considering a devaluation oi the dollar, said editorially today that the United States “could well afford" to offer a loan to Canada. After making such a. loan, the newspaper said. “we could afford to lower tariff barriers which pre- vent Canadian products coming into this country; then Canada could repay the loan." 500 Gaps Bretoners Boming To P.E.i. _ SYDNEY, N. S., Sept. l8 (C?) — A Broup oi 500 Cane Bret- oners will leave for Prince Ed- ward Island to help harvest the potato crop, T. L. Connolly, Na- tional Employment Service mana- ger. said hare today. . Last season 700 pickers from the industrial towns went to the Is- land and Mr. Connolly said the farmers were so‘ pleased that they put in another order this year. iisw Pastor For Truro Presbyterian ilhuroh TRURJO. NS. Sept. l8 -- (CPL- Appdintment of a pastor for the 9t. James Presbyterian Church hers to fiiL-the vacancy. created when Rev. Perry Rocirwood ‘re- signed rather than submit to dis- ciplinary action by the Church last spring was announced today. Rev. W.C. Nicholson oi Blue Mountain. N5 . will be inducted into the pastoral marge ‘tomorrow in s service conducted by Rev Prank Lawson, m0CiCffliCl' oi the Hallfax-Lunenburg Presbytery. Mr. Nicholson erlterr-d the min'st.y in Elngland. Mr. Rockwood rcsigncd from the church after (he Presbytery found him guilty of tliying to spill the Presbyterian faith. He later fvund- ed the People's Church hcrc. Coming Events. “No more Custom Work until further notice, Crosby's Mills. "Canadian Legion Dance. Mon- tague Curling Rink, Wednesday, Sept. 24. "Special Show. Wood Islands. Monday. "Bandit oi Sherwood Forest" in Technicolor. "Cake Sale at Maritime Electric this Saturday. Souihport Women's Institute. "Talkies - Bridgetown Satur-V day. “Kiss and Tell". Starring Shir- ley Temple. "In stock. Cedar and Asphalt Shingles , W. I. Bowman, Hunter River. "Regular Hospital Dance. Mon- hgue Curling Rink every Saturday ailht. Webster's Orchestra. "Special Show: "Sturgeon", Tuesday. "Bandit of Sherwood libreet." in Technicolor. "Melville L. 0. B. A. Pantry Sale st B. C, Wood's store. Crap- llidpleptember 20th. at 730 P. M. "Glloken supper at Tracadie Iall. Wednesday, Sept. 24. from I to 10 pan. Dance after. "Unloading car bulk wheat today and tomorrow. Bring bags. Dillon lml Spillett. ' "Kings County mowing Match- and Horas Show at Dundas. Sepi- easbar Nth. l-‘or pribe list and in- formation apply to Albert Adorn, Prknrose. __._-_ I "Reserve Wednesday. September 90th for Cape Traverse Church of Scotland Chicken Supper in Cape ikavsrse Hall. " "Dancing till I. Winaloe Station Bali. many. September 10th. Ad- ‘ln cents. Bei-eslrmen‘ laid. . Don Messers Orchestra. “ log Pigs this afternoon at Freda ma. boars and siags as well. Pay. ad $12.0). pair for I004 Pill M" lbs. aaeh. Other pigs according to quality. Will not be buying alon- dlh Knoll Jorssnasn. A . ._-__ OTTAWA. Sept. l8 — (Q) - Tine Canadian Federation o! Mayors and Municipalities today brought to direct Federal attention aseries of civic and municipal problems T8081"! from financing to old age pensions and immigration policy and gained a Dominion promise oi "considered attention." In a three-hour conference with Health Minister Martin and repre- sentatives of the finance Depart- ment. a delegation of the C.F.M.M., presented resolutions containing proposals and recommendations laid down at the Federation's an- nual convention in Winnipeg last Juiy. The delegation, headed by Fed- eration president Mayor Ray '1‘. Forbes of’ Fredericton, N.B., agreed the meeting had been "very prcf- itable." Mr. Martin said after the meet- "18 U“! “no commitments" had been made but he had promised imbring the various questions to the attention‘ of appropriate gov. ernment heads for “considered at- tention." Inter the delegation will meet Reconstruction Minister Howe 0n the top question of its trip — hous- ing. Mr. Howe will be presented "-1941 I btlfihon Canada's acute housing problem and vlfiat the C.F.M.M., thinks should s, as... about it. This brief has not yet been f9- leased but at its Winnipeg con. vention the Federation Vsucd a housing statement urging immeg. late drafting of a nation-wide sccieme for a low-rental housing llmlram for Canada. Tcontinued on Page {TCSFST Strike Ties lip- ‘ Pitprop Steamers NEWCASTLE, N, 13.. Sept, 18- iCP)—'Ilhe strike of 600 members of the local Longshoremens Union (CCL) and Truck Owners’ and Drlvebs‘ Union continued tonight while seven vessels remained idle awai-ting loading of pilprops. Negotiation attempts to reach a settlement were discussed today. One report said the vessels might be forced to leave without cargoes tomorrow if work was not resumed than. ' The longshoremen are demand- ing a wage l-ncrease oi 22 cents to $1.12 an hour. with_the truck own- ers seeking $2.25 per hour for an eight-hour day in place of $1.85 an hour for a nine-hour day. Overdue Ship Reported Safe NASSAU, (CPU-Three days overdue in hur- ricane weather and unheard from during that time. the Canadian National Bteamshlps cargo-pas- senger liner Canadian Observer notified port authorities here late today she had told-n shelter 70 mil- es north at Great Isaac Rock and would arrive here in the mornl-ng. Carrying a crew of 40 but no passengers, um- 43100 ton vessel was unscathed by the tropical hur- flcgmg which did its heaviest dam- age 50 miles north on Grand Bahama Island. a The observer left Halifax Sept. U and was due lo arrive here Mon- day but had altered course when storm warnings were sent 0111- Sh? Bahamas. Sept. 18_— - iiliminegash" Man Sent To g Supreme Court Merritt Leslie Hustler. 1B_ of Mlmlnegash, was committed for trial at the next session of the Supreme Court at the conclusion of a preliminary hearing on a charge of causing grevious bodily harm, held before Magistrate R8. Hinton in Bummerside yesterday. The hearing arose out of 8il"ii‘l- cident which occurred on the evo- nlng of September 3rd. at Mhnlne- gash Run when Elmer Costaln of that place received a bullet in the leg. Costain, who was allowed out of the hospital to testify, was one of the ten witnesses heard. He recalled September 3rd and told o‘! attending a picnic at Mimi- nigash in company with his son Emmerscn, and Charles and Ar- thur-Cannon. They left the grounds and went for a drive and returned about five or six o'clock, he said. They met Chester Hustler. a broth- er ol the accused and the witness asked him to come over and talk to him alone. Chester Hustler ask- ed for a drink instead and started to follow them. Arthur Cannon told him to wait a few minutes and he would see him again. Wit- ness said they got into a little "chewing" and he coaxed Arthur and his son to come away. When they got part way to the gate an- on the shoulder and said he would get Chester to fight him. Witness said they waited a few minutes and when he didn't show up they went down to the road. Henry Hustler again came along and told Ar- thur Cannon to wait and he would get Chester as he came by. They waited again and then the four of them. the witness, his son. Em- merscn. and Charles and Arthur Cannon pot in a car and drove down to ilfiminegash to have _ lunch at. his home. They stopped near the home of Thomas Wedge and witness got out of the car. Henry Hustler again came along and told them not to be in a. nurry and he would get Chester this time. Witness continued, "I walked over to the little restaurant to see if it was open and it was closed. Hustlers live about 30 feet from the Wedge place. On my way hack to the car I heard a_ gun dude. being fired and it struck me m the hip, 1 didn't see who fired the gun." Witness said he had not been talking to Leslie Hustler SZHCG the morning. _ cross jammed by Mr. Wilfred Tanton ttorney for the dmense. he said'he saw Leslie at the picnic but had not talked to him. He looked like a man that was drirk~ lng. l-Ie said it was about dark when they reached the shore. Wit- 11953 said he met no women there. He explained that Leslie Hustler lives with his father. James ilust- ler Sr. and Chester and Henry Hustler have homes oi their Own- He said he did not hear or see any *¢*""__ (Continued on Page 18 COL 3) iiiaoiiiooi To Speak lltilmhorst ilaeting Amman. N. 8.. Bwt- 18 — (C?) - John R. MacNicol, Pro- gressive Conservative member of Parliament for Toronto. who has often taken up Maritime archival in the Commons. will address a special session oi the Amherst Board of Trade upt- 19- 1'- W." "l" nounced tonight. Mr. Maciflcfll will speak on Maritime rehabilita- was built in Quebec in 1945 and her port oi registry is Montreal. tion. Many Persons Flee MOBILE. Alta, Sept. i8 —(AP) -A tropical storm churned north- westward across the Gulf of Maxi- co tonight. driving before it a stream of panicky refugees from coastal danger spots. Greenvills. Ala.. alone reported hundreds of vehicles. streaming in- land and msidenta of posed areas further west were heading north along other routes. 1n greatest danger was the s utheastem coast of Iouisiana - t e bayou areas of the Evangeline Country —_and frantic residents were boarding up homes and com- mercial buildings all the way from Panama Oity, no. to Morgan City, ton. All aisles shuitl. fat U At least iour persons were killed yesterday in Florida. when tbs At- lantic storm ripped across the poll- insula. and six others were’ still miasinl tonight. - Hurricane Weather forecaster W. R. 5 - vans reported "definite danger of 7b-rnile hurricane winds in New Orleans, and pounding up to 100 rnilss an lsour was expected where the main blow strikes. _ At e p. m. the Weather Bureau placed the storm roughly N0 miles south of Panama city. Ila. 1M continuing its movement weat- northwest. Ihe storm gaahod a wide belt of destruction yesterday from Miami- Paim Beach on the east coast of - Florida to Fort Myers on the wast, and while casualties wars low tbs damage soared to m millions of dollars. - i. The storm veered ~- arts i! aftos-‘moving lntn the uif. threatening northwest Florida and. than coastal areas further west. ‘Dwight hurricane ‘warnings new aioas‘ a loo-mils stgsteh oi Gui!‘ Will. other brother, Henry Hustler. came ,v along and tapped Arthur Cannon new w... or Dollar Rumors OTTAWA. Sepl- 18 — (C?) — Canada's dwindling reserves oi United States dollars was thrust into prominence again today by a new flood of runners - none of them confirmed - about what the government would do to bolster the dollar fund; The rumors indipded the ro- aurrent reports that the Canad- ian dollar would be devalued in its relation to U.S. funds, that Canada would float a loan in New York and that plans were W1"! (Fifi-ed to cut down im- ports from the U.S. All were labelled “nothing but the purest speculation" by high sources in a. position to know what the government has in mind and it was stressed that no step was likciy to be taken until Finance Minister Abbott returns from inte- ational fin- ancial meetings now in progress in London. Fisheries Support Board To Meet MCNCTON. N.B.. Sept. l8 - (CP) - The initial meeting oi tile Canadian Fisheries Prices Support Board and the East Coast Advis- ory Committee will be held here tomorrow with Stewart Bates, Dep- uty Minister oi Fisheries, presid- ‘WAN’! m-éflizx" will ‘belted: our series across Canada" ‘between ~ the‘ recently formed Fisheries Support Board and the regional committees sct up in Eastern Canada, Cvntsal Provinces and the West Coast. The meeting will discuss iihe cur- rent eronrrni; situation and gen- Hfll outlook for East Coast fisher- mcn, it was announced tonight bv a Dcpsrimcnt c-f Fisheries spclzzs- man. Members of the Fisheries Sup;:ort Board attending the meeting are Stewart Dntcrt, acting chairman of the Bzard, W. Stanley Lee of Hal- ifax. vice-chairman and Louis“ Be- rube. St. Anne do 1e Pcbatlere. Qre. Advisory committee members arc J.l-i. MaeKkllan of Halifax, u'.:a'r- man. Louis '1‘. Blais. Tlgnlsh. PE l . Capt Ben Mzclicnzic. Halifrx, m1 Richardson. Decr Island. llr. A. Ffiiiiller honored At iiinner (By The Canadian Press) ~ KENTVILLE, N. S., Sept. IB-A sketch o! a bronze plaque bearing his likeness was presented at a testimonial dinner tonight to Dr. A. F. Miller, Canadian authority on tuberculosis who is retiring af- ter 3B years as superintendent oi the Nova Scotla Sanatorium, first provincial sanatorlum in Canada. The plaque, which is being cast at the Mint in Ottawa, is being presented on behalf of his past and present associates and will hang in the lobby oi the institut- 'ion‘s new inflrmary. Dr. Miller, in a reply. urged that batter facilities be provided at the sanatorium for thoracic surgery, a form of treatment in which he specialised. . 8e is a native of Prince lid- ward Island and received his early education at Prince of Wales Ool- lege. Charlottetown. ‘ MOB! PROTEIN FOOD OA-PETOWIV- (OP) — A motor ilahblg boat from tlda clW 5°"! will operate on Lake Tansanvlh in efforts to provide more PWWA" food for natives in Northern Rhodesia. Tihe prevalence oi the tsetse fly makes it imlwlimll 9° keqflcattlo mere. ossu B (‘AN/‘WJA FLOUR Well Known Dutch Engineer Visits P.E.l. Professor P. Philip Jansen. of the School of Engineering. University of Delft, Holland. arrived in the City last night after having spent the past three weeks inspecting mrge areas of marshland in the Provinces of Ontario, New Bruns- wick. and Nova Scotia. He was met at Borden yesterday evening by Premier J. Walter Jones. Today, accompanied bypthe Premier, Professor Jansen will look over some of the marsh areas in the Province including the East River area near Pisquld. Professor Jansen came to Can- ada at the invitation of Brigadier- General T. L. Kennedy. Minister g of Agriculture for the Province of Ontario, who, while in Hrlland inst July, had the opportunity of seeing the reclamation work clone by Pro- fessor Jansen at the Zuyder Sea. While in Ontario, t‘.'.e Dutch ex- pert gavc the Governnxent his ad- vice on the hest means of drain- ing the Holland Marsh located near lake Simcoe. After leaving On- tario, Professor Jansen came to New Brunswick at the invitation 0f its Minister of Agriculture, the HDTLQA- C. Taylor, and to Nova Scotia. at the invitation of the Hon. J. D. MacKenzie. In both Pro- vinces, Professor Jansen inspected large areas of low land and offered suggestions to Government officials for the reclamation of the areas. In his interview with a Guard- ian representative last night. Pro- fessor Jansen said he had assisted in the reclamation of the Zuycler Sea at the request of the Dutch Government. Today, there was no longer a Zuyder Sea. A mighty dyke, approximately 300 feet wide ,___;__ (Continued on Page 5 Col. 6F By-Eiéction Sept. 2s LONDON. SCpt. 18 -(CP>—A by- olcctlon campaign for the only vacant scat in the House of Ccm- mons is providing North London with a political lhTQC-fing circus as. a trio of candldatcs woo the voters of West Islington. T-he seat is regarded as safe for the Labor Party whii-il is seekZ-ng lo retain it through Albert Evans, but Tom Howard, Conservative, and ET. Malindlne. Liberal. are putting up a strenuous fight. The voting i-s set for Sept. 25. Garson Suggests Strike Settlement By The Canadian Press A new outline of possible Dom- lnlon-scale conciliation in the pack- lnghouse workers‘ strike came from Premier Carson of Manitoba as the complete tie-up of all major Canadian meat plants went into its sixth day. He said yesterday in Winnipeg that a "number of provincial gov- ernments are prepared to agree to the appointment of a common con- clliator or conciliation board" pro- viding the governments concerned received "firm assurance that the men will resume work pending the outcome of the conciliation pro- ceedings." At strike headquarters of the United Packingrlouse Workers o! America (C.I.O.) in Toronto. a Union spokesman declined com- ment. ' nipeg and Kitchener. Ont... film! new reports of the strikers reject- ing an Ontario Government set- tlement suggestion. It calls for the 12.000 workers to return to their jobs pending conciliation or ar- bitration. "They are employees of the in- dustry's “big three" —SWifi 0lfl~ adian O0mpany_ Cpnada Packer! Limited and Burns and Company -arld seek a basic ware o! 98 cents an hour, which would rs- quira an average increase of 1'! cents. The companies have offered from three to five cents. "Qiiiiigfjfilif-iitiiifiiiili» - -’~‘-~" bfoanwhiie, from Calgary, Win- T urns_ilown A Marshall's ii. ii._Pian NEW YORK. 8917i. 1B - (AP) —- Andrel Y. Vishlnsky, Russian dep- uty iorelgn minister. cried “war- monger" today at leading Ameri- cans and turned down the new Marshall plan for remodelling the United Nations. In a speech lasting one hour and 33 minutes. the chief Russian del- egate pssailed the entire range of U.S. foreign policy. He told a packed and expectant U.N. Assembly hall that the Mar- shall plan is an “ill-conceived scheme to substitute and by-paas the Security Council." Vishinsky also delivered a per- sonal assault on a member of the United States delegation, John Foster Dulles. This is the first tme personalities have entered a. U.N. debate at this session. He called Dulles and other Am- ericans "war-mongers." Canada's chief delegate, Louis St. Laurent, earlier in the day de- clared that peace-loving member countries of the U.N. might form separate organizations for collect- ive sec-urity rather than accept in- definitely a Security Council "fro- zen in futility and divided by dis- sension." Visliinsky made these other con- tentions: i. The Truman doctrine laid down last March was the first break by the United States from the unanimity of the great powers in the U.N. 2. The Marshall economic plan for Europe was merely an ex- tension of the Truman doctrine to cover all Europe. 3. The United states and B lt- alnare responsible»: liflJ-l! . sin setting up? atomie-zenergyi controls. '_ . _, 1 ‘ 4. Russia will stand firmly against any attempts to disrupt the unanimity o: the great powers — the veto right. 5. Official and private circles in the United Stateg are hurl- ing unfounded charges of war preparations against Russia. Vishinskys long pronouncnnent cracked solidly against every key facet of American foreign poli:v.. It was the first break in a steady parade today of statements gm- erally endorsing the Marshall plan for the U.N., with one or two res- servatlons. Vishlnsky declared that Dulles i-n a. speech in Chicago on Feb. i0. 1947. urged a “tough foreign policy against- the Soviet Union." Dulles issued the following state- ment after vishinsky spoke; “I did nit make the statement which Mr. Visfllnsky attributed to me. l have repeatedly said and I say again that another war need not be and must not be: and I have dedicated myself to that end." The Assembly animal-nod at 5:05 P.M. (EDT) until 11 A.M. tomor- row. when it will continue the gen- 1 Vishins 0anada’s Grain Crop Below Last Year's By The Canadian Prcss Canada's g-rain harvest this year will be somsutaai less Allan last year's and far shtrt of the bumpcr crop forecast earlier in the season, 8- Cinadian Press survey shoued today. The golden grain fields, matur- ing under the hot Prairie sun. held the hopes oi hungry Europe for replzrlished food stocks for ilze coming wmier. as well us expectat- ions of a season of wheatlond pmF- ‘ Dflrlty and cf some reduction oil iocci prices. Price decontrols which caused sharp increases in food pric- I es. coupled wit-h the unexpcctcd, drop in crop yields. dashed lhoi latter hope. l Bu-mper fruit crops in Nova Scotla and British Columbia pro- vided a. brighter outlook for can- adlans_ in the Annapolis Valley, where picking has just started, the apple crop is reported large. A rec- ord peach crop was noted in British Columbia this year and apple pro- ductlon was up over 1946. Prices however, were not expected to he reduced as labor and operation costs increased considerably in the last ycar. But the vweather on which the farmer lakes a. gamble each year was not kind. Seeding was laie in many sections froma wet spring. Then the sun burned down and ripened graI-n hoods before‘ matur- ity. Flocds. hail and rainstorms Played their hindering part in the picture. - _ warrant? Ana... Here is how the production pic- ture looked today: New Brunswick, 16,000,000 bush- els of potatoes, about same as 194.6; Nova scotla, 1.150.000 barrels of apples, less than last year; Saskatchewan. 21.000000 bushels of grain in i943. 14,000,000 bushels es- timated for i007: British Columbia 1,300,000 boxes of peaches, nearly 300,000 more than a year ago; Manitoba 44.000000 bushels of wheat as against 61.000000 hush- els in 1946. Ontario crops generally were down this year compared with 1946. A drought during August in Que- bec cut the yield there. Prince Edward Island was the only province to report a goon grain crop. while its famed potato crop was less than in other years. Italy Reports Need For Large Loan WASHINGTON. Sept. 18 —- (AP) cral statements. OTTAWA, Sept.‘ 1B—Domlnion Government deposits increased S9,- 589000 to 5155535000 during the week ended Sept. 1'1, the Bank of Canada reported today in its weekly statement. Chartered bank deposits de- creased $7,709,000 to $471,158,000 and notes in circulation increased $3,467,000 to 01.172.733.000. (By The Canadian Press) Customers stayed away from bakeries yesterday, as increased bread prices went into elect, and ate the loaves they had boarded in heavy buying in the last few days. Prices rose in an uneven pat- tern across the country with 0n- tario bakersrreporting their gen- eral three-cent hike enabled them to "lust scrape by." The M-ounce standard Ontario loaf now costs a minimum of i3 cents. The three-cent price increase came as a comparatively pleasant surprise to lnsny householders who had expected to pay at least 8%.’. cents" more and likely four. A uniform rise in prices adver- tised simultsheously by some of the larger Winnipeg bakeries drew‘ the attention of P. A. McCregor. Combines Investigation Commis- sioner, who said 'slmllar inquiries would be made wherever there were ‘indications of agreement among bakeries for price increas- as. - . Malt bread was the only line of lumped in price but bakers of ryl Bread Price Increases Form Uneven Pattern one males bakery which had not —Ita-1y has notified the United States she needs about $1,000,000.- 0000 in outside aSsisianCe ‘to meet the immediate economic crisis and survive through next year, Ameri- cdn officials said today. US. officials said experts are now going over (he ltaliambalance sheets m see what this country can do to help maintain order in Italy, now plagued by leftist-led strikes against the non-ccmmuni government. - bread reported the worst situation with their prices‘ doubled. “Millers are trying to eliminate rye flour," a Toronto baker charg- gd, "They may want io use the rye grain for whisky and other products which would give them more profit." Meanwhile. the retail price of flour was still unsettled although millers predicted it would event- ually increase 100 per cent. Most flour was selling at a 25 per cent increase. Answering charges that mlilers had jumped the price of flour for which they had not had to pay the high price, H. J. Dowseet. secretary-manager of the Ontario Flour Millers‘ Association. explain- ed the subsidy had been paid in the form of a refund of half the buying price. When the refund was withdrawn prices went up immediately on flour stocks since the full 81.58% had been paid by the miilers. The Prices Board announced that the increase in the cost of flour to bakers was slightly under 1% cents per one-pound loaf or .i.a Guardian's iiondillon " Unchanged» " a. Mixed Reaction To ky Speech By John A. Farris, Jr. _NEW YORK. Sci)!- 18 --(APl— Dnplomais of (he United Nations rcr-civd xvlill mixed feelings tonight to SOVlGi Deputy 1701115511 Mlllibifi‘ Aildrrl Vishl-ilskys blisicriilg al- iack ccntroing mainly on the \ United States, Few described it as "brilliant." More gsnerally agreed that it was “sharp and hard.” Some looked upon ii as sheer "propaganda," Of the four other members oi.’ the Big Five, only Britain and Franco u auld comment. The heads of the Chinese aind United States deiegatioxts declined comment. ' Hector McNeil, British Minister cf Stain and chief delegate. ex- prc-ssd the biiiercsl vlcwv. "it was an interesting speech. but most of the quotes and charges were old and familiar." McN-zil said. ‘The Russian resolution call- ing fcr i-ho UN. to halt world. propaganda. particularly in (he United Siatcs. was the prototype of what can be had at any Communist party meeting." The first reaction from a United States congressman came from representative Emanuel Cri- ler (Dem-NY), who listened to Vlshinsky from the gallery and booed the Soviet delegate at one point. “The speech was most vituperat- ive and insulting," Cellar said. "it was a combination of blilingsgate and Vlshinsky vcmn." British and American sources said they interpreted Vishinskys resolution-calling upon . the As- sombly to urge all governments to prohibit "war propaganda" on pain. of criminal punishment-ms a move by Russia to prohibit a free press I-n (he World. (By The Associated Press) NEW YORK. Sept. IB-Florello H. La Guardias physician said tonight. there had been “n0 change" in the condition of the former New York City mayor, critically ill at his home. La. Guardia, 64, collapsed Tucs- day night and has been in a coma. WHEN You Ask A LiibY FOR lick Haas he Soar. You potrf wuss up UHpER use manna? TORONTO. Sept. l8 -(CPl - Mlnlmum and maximum tempora- lures: Vancouver 39 63; Edmonton 30 d0; Regina 39 45; Winnipeg 47 551 Toronto 58 79; Ottawa 49 761 Montreal 56 7i; Quebec- 53 Sol Saint John 5i 68; Moncton 44 621 Halifax 52 67; Charlottetown 59; Sydney 50 66; Yarmouth 70. HALIFAX, Sept. i8 — (OP) < Weather synopsis and official in land forecasts issued by the D minlon Public Weather Office Halifax at midnight Thursday. Synopsis: There is variable cloudiness ov one Maritimes Thursday night wi a few sprinkles o-i rain. During ti] da the suln was obscured much the time and the highest iernpe ature was about 70. A disturban developing west of the Lakes likely io cause the clouds to thlc en on Friday and intermittent ra will spread into the western r gions. Forecasts valid until Friday mid night. Prince Edward Island: Overcast with occasional lig rain. Little change in temperatu Light winds. High Friday at Q1 lctletown as. High tide this afternoon at 21 and tonight st 1.55, a Sun sets this evening at 6.07 an rises tomorrow morning at 5.41. First quarter moon Septembl 22nd. 12.4.“ '\. M. Simmer ‘do tide eighteen in! 3 l/B cents on a il-ounce loaf. utes later than Charlottetown.