' MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Tact consists in ” owing how we may go too far. 7”? By Carriers Charlottetown. Snsnsnorsids 315.00 per umum, mung." h P. I. I. 00.00. other Provinces and U. I; A. ais.oo per annnsn. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTT BOARD URGES ECONOMIC INVESTIGATION OF MARITIME ETOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1952 Britain Has Worst Train Wreck Since l9I5 Progressive Conservative Government Office In N. FREDERICTON. Oct. B-(CP'- The Progressive Conservative Gov- ernment of Hon.I-lugh John Flem- ming formally took office tonight. succeeding Premier John B. Mc- Nslr's New Brunswick Liberal ad- ministration. Earlier today, before the swear- ing in ceremony, the new govern- ment leader annou.nced his cabi- net as.-follows: , er. and Public Works-Mr. Atfdfnui-General-W. J. West, Q.C., lrederlcton lawyer. Health-Dr. J. F. Mclnerney, Fredericton. .. Education and Municipal Af- fairs-Claude S. Taylor. River- vlew, Albert County. real estate and insurance agent. Lanlis and Mines-Norman Bu- chanan, st. Stephen merchant. Industry and Development-Rap er Pichette. Campbeliton merch- ant. Provincial Secretary-Treasurer- Donald D. Patterson,- Saint John investment broker. Labor-Arthur E. Skaiing. Saint John mason and labor executive. Agriculture-Cyril B. Sherwood. Midland, Kings County. farmer. Chairman of New Brunswick Ei- ectrio Power Commission and min- ister without portfolio - Edgar Coming Events "Dance. Friday. Beaver i-fall. Montague. Mcsser's Orchestra. "Dance, South Melville School. Thursday. October 9th. "Dance. same as usual. wumoe Station Hall. Good music. Canteen. "Dance. Belle River Hall, ni- day. October 10th. "Masquerade Dance in Little Pond Hall. Monday. October 21th. "Dance. Miiiview I-fall Friday. every ,..m. "Regular Thursday night dances at Mount Stewart are cancelled. "Feed wheat 33.00 per hundred. MacGuiga.n and Boyle. C "Women's Institute hot chicken supper, I-Iunter River I-fall, Oct. lsth. ' "Thanksgiving Dance. Kelly's Cross School. Monday, October isth. "Try our Purina Finance Plan for feeding your hogs and poultry Dillon and Spiiiett. - "Dance. st. Charles Hail, every Thursday. 9.30 to 1. Chsisson's Or cheatra. i "Don't mtss the big sale of Plants today. at Joe R. Smith's Gardens. Clinton. '"chicken supper and Dance, St. Teresa's. Monday, October 13th. supper served 5.30 till 8.30. "Annual Chicken Supper and Bazaar. St. Mary's Parish. Souris. October flat and land. "Reserve November llth. for hot Chicken Dinner and Bazaar. South Rustico Hall. "lteserve Tuesday. November lith. for Trycn United Church Chicken supper and Bazaar. "Farmers. ask about the shut Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part lculsrs contact your local food mill "Don't forget the Lads and Lsasies Pipe Band in Kingston Hall, October 0th. "Dance, Emerald Hall. Thurs- day. October 9th. Music by Ruaseu Warren and his Blue Haven Ramb- lers. Canteen service. "Thanksgiving Dance. st. Mary's l-lall. sourls. Monday. goctober lath. Round and square dancing. Chais- son's Orchestra. "Annual Chicken supper. Immaculate Conception Church Parish Hall. Wellington. Thanks- giving Day. October llth. "Annual lasaar. High Tea. Bingo. Dance. Ausplces st. James church. sorgetown, Wednesday, October it h. . s "The Annual Meeting of the Hope River Credit Union Ltd. will be-held in the Union Hall. on 'l'i3ursday evening. October 0th. at as P. M. ',-Monthly mating Kinitou Branch osasdisn Legion wt be held in -Legion l-isms. Chsrlctts- lad irons and gap llaursdli: October 0th, at Sworn Into B. Yesterday Fournier, Edmundston teacher. President of Executive Council and minister without portfolio- T. Babbitt Parlee, lawyer and for- mer Mayor of Moncton. In reviewing the presidency of the Executive Council, Mr Flem- ming added one post to his 11- msn cabinet as compared with the outgoing 10-man adm lstra- tion. The last government had no minister without portfolio. Average age of the young cabi- net is 45. with most of its mem- bers in their 30's and early 40ls. The oldest member, Mr. Skaling. is 61. Only Mr. Flemming has had previous experience in the legis- lature. Premier Flemming announced his slate after submitting it to Lieutenant-Governor D. L. Mac- Laren. Unique Ceremony The oath of office was admin- istered io the new premier by the lieutenant-governor at tonight's unique swearing in ceremony held (Continued on page 8 col. 5) Hurricane Reported MIAMI. Fin.. Oct. 8- (AP)-A hurricane with 100-mile winds whipped the Atlantic east of Puerto Rico today. The storm is about 2,000 miles southeast oi Miami and 800 miles east of Puerio Rico. It threatens no land at this time but ships were warn- ed from its path. The storm was reported drifting slowly north- ward. TIT. BRUSSELS. Oct. 7 -(Reuters) Earl Alexander. British Defence Minister will fly to Belgium Oct. 11 to be present when King Baud- ouin opens a memorial at Mons to led there in the First World War. MOSCOW. Oct. 7 -(AP)- Em- bassy counsellor Elim O'Shaugn- heesy arrived by plane today to take charge of the United States sador George Ke-nnsn. whose re- call has been demanded by the Soviet Government. By GEORGE McARTHUIt SEOUL, Oct. 0-(Thursday) - (AP)-The big Chinese push jar- red to a halt Wednesday in a carnage of casualties on a peak guarding the road to Seoul. but the Reds t cw fresh hundreds into the flam g battle. south Korean infantry at the point of the bayonet drove the Chinese from the summit of White Horse Hill. about 50 miles north of this Korean capital, and stood firm against a storm of counter- attacks, field dispatches said. Both sides poured thousands of infantrymen and dozens of tanks into the struggle for White Horas and nearby Arrowhead Ridge. where U.B. Second Division and French troops withstood the shock of attacks. An American officer said one division, alone in this western sec- tor hsd inflicted about 3.000 cas- ualties on the Chinese since the Reds opened their big drive Mon- day night. OTTAWA. Oct. I -(OP) - In- dications are that the number of new houses completed in Canada this year will fall far below the total for 1051. The Bureau of statistics report- ed today that only 83.065 houses were completed in the first seven months of this year compared with (8.020 in the corresponding period of loll, a decrease of 10.505. The report showed that if the 1001 total is to be matched. 08.- 200 houses will have to be complet- ed in the last five months of this year. it appeared unlikely that such fast pace could be set. The number of new houses started. al- thbu it higher in June and July. was over. for the seven-month period. The number of houses started in the first seven months of the year totalled 44.050 compared with 40.- IIO in the car 1001. In June an July starts total- s.-no compared with em ind 0.12: for the .....upona- i log months of 1901. British and Canadian soldiers kii-' embassy in the absence of Ambns-. Fear Deadii Toll May Beach 125 In Triple Crash (By Alan Harvey Canadian Press Staff Writer) HARROW. Middlesex, England.i Oct. 8 - (CP) - A triple train wreck, Britain's worst in 37 years, killed at least 85 persons today. Another 40 were feared dead. Police at. one time issued a count. of 116 bodies recovered but later withdrew the figure, leav- ing the established death toll at 85. Two speeding express smashed into n commuters' local at Harrow Station leaving the bodies of Cthe dead and at least 170 injured in a 50-foot-high mound of wreckage. Late tonight, 16 hours after the wreck. rescuers still were digging into a 55-foot high mound of wreckage toward a coach buried at the bottom of the heap. Searchers figured probably 40 were entomb- cd in the coach. Officials said the death toll might climb above 120 in this worst British railway disaster since 227 were killed and M6 in- jured in a collision of two pas- senger trains and a troop train at Gretna, Scotland. May 15. 1915. The tremendous impact hurled (Continued on page-lo col. 47 trains That freight raiea instead of being prices for services are more and more taking the form oftaxes was stated yesterday by Mr. Rand H. Matheson, executive manager of thettlvfarlllmes Transportation Commission. He was speaking Maritime Board of Trade annual Maritime Boar dot Trade annual meeting at The Charlottetown. Mr. Malheson said that this tax form is being paid by shippers and consignee: who find they can- not avoid the increase by divert- ing to other forms of transport. In the United States, he remark- ed, other forms of transport were carrying an increasing share of the country's volume of traffic. Regarding suggested equaliz- ation of freight rates. the speaker said that the Maritime: did not Chinese Halted But New Troops Go Into Action subscribe to nor support any plan The U.S. Eighth Army com- munique reported that two of seven outpostsihllls over-run Mon- day when 15.000 Reds struck along two-thirds of the Korean front. had been recaptured. Later tactical summaries indicated. however. that the Reds had rcwon the positions. Allied artillery fired tens of thousands of rounds. Allied guns caught about 1.000 Beds massing for an attack and wiped out half of them. A tank officer flying over the area said he saw 12 155-mm shells burst squarely among the Chinese. A pooled dispatch from the front said at least one full Chinese division, possibly 10,000 men, had tried to take two big hills but the Allies held all major positions which they were in when the at- tack broke Monday. Eighth Army sources said they believed the heavy Communist at- tacks, described as a limited of- fensive. were destined to put pressure on the United Nations Home Bui1din.g Likely Below Last Yearis Level in! Period of I00 command for an armistice. The bureau's report gave no rea- son for the decrease in the num- ber of houses started and complet- ed. However. the crown-owned Central Mortgage and Housing corporation has blamed high costs and a shortage of mortgage money for the drop in construction activ- lty. in its last report, the corporation said there were indications that the house construction trend would swing upward. More housing loans were being sought. C ,” high costs and higher interest rates. No shortage of house building mater- laia was reported. - - The number of new houses com- pleted by provinces in the seven- month period. with the correspond- ing figures for 1051 in brackets: Newfoundland 45! (Bio); Prince Edward Island is (:20); Nova Sootia 7'12 (1.001); New Brunlwiek (M4): Quebec 9.020 (10,114): Ontario lI,I10 (10,804): Manitoba 1.029 (ism: Saskatchewan I25 (172): Alberta 2.804 (3.220); Brit.- lsh Columbia 3.060 (8,001). 'Reviews Trade Development With British West Indies Hon. Donald Sangstsr Freight Rates Discussed At Trade Board Meeting for equalization in appearance be- fore the Royal Commission on Transportation. Instead it h e y pressed for a continuance of the arbitrary freight rate structure re- cognized by the Royal Commission as an integral part of the whole class rate structure. The technical discussion of the freight rate problem in the Mari- time Provinces traced ihe efforts in fight against proposed changes. Mr. Maiheson said that some of file original protagonists of rate equalization in Western Canada now realize that what they are likely to receive in an equalized rate structure is the form rather than the substance and in some cases neither. Railway Increases I In regard to several past ap- plications by the railways for rate increases Mr. Matheson asked what extent are the railroads in Canada pricing themselves out of the market. He said the money they lost to other forms of: trans- port had to be recouped and then only from sources where they Cilil be assessed without resulting in diversions. l-ic added, ”i.ll(-ire is therefore involvctl not only A -icTnt'i'iE cfiiii-pa1;'eCi'5vc'61.-'3 7 3 Norman Boyd Is Acquiiied TORONTO. Oct. 8 - (OP) Norman Boyd. brother of Edwin Alonzo Boyd. today was acquitted of bank robbery in n dramd-pack- ed trial which reached its peak when his father. a former Toronto policeman, testified in his defence. Edwin Glover Boyd, who said he retired from the police force in 1946. testified he borrowed money from Norman to help pay for a farm near Wiarlon. He said he gave his son a mortgage on a house in suburban North York and understood the mortgage later was sold. Edwin Alonzo Boyd, Norman's brother. had pleaded guilty to the 35,047 robbery a year ago of the Dominion Bank. at suburban Lan- sing. Norman Boyd, jointly charg- ed, steadfastly denied his guilt. Today Judge Robert Forsyth said he acquitted Norman because "the defence has raised some doubt in my mind and I must give him the benefit of that doubt." Presbyierians ConiinueaSessions NEW GLASGOW-.. Oct. 8 -(CP) Increased grants for the home for girls at Truro and the inter- provincial home for women at Coverdale, N. 13.. were approved today by the 79th annual Miaritime Synod of the Presbyterian Church. Rev. E. H. Bean of New Mills. N. 3., was appointed clerk and treas- urer. a ppsition he had been serv- ing in an acting role. Rev. T. H.'.B. Somers of Char- lottetown presented the name of Dr. Ross MacDonald for the Ross Miller bursary lat Dalhousio Uni- versity. This was approved contin- gent. on ratification by Pictou Presbytery. was the closing event in the three- - ada A talk which ranged through a wide variety of connected sub- jects while never losing its main theme of aid for the development of Jamaica, West Indies, was given last night by Hon. Donald sang- ster,. M. K. R., Minister of Social Welfare for that Island and De- lplity Leader of the Jamaica Labour Party. lie was addressing member; 3;. tending the annual dinner of Maritime Provinces Board of Trade at The Charlottetown. it day annual meeting of the Board. I-ion. Mr. Sangster traced the early days of trade between the Maritlmes and the West Indies, in trade pioneered by this part of Canada. when that trade came to a. virtual standstill much of the financial aid received by Jamaica Came from Great Britain. the speaker said. but it was not forth- coming now in sufficerit amounts to permit handling the increasing- Iy heavy burden of social welfare work. He said, in suggesting Can- might become interested, "take over our burden or leave us its a feeding ground for Commun- sm.' Loyal To Commonwelaih At the same time he pointed to the association with the Common- wealth and expressed the feeling of his people that they wish to remain within that political stru- cture. Briefly referring to strikes which take place in this country he said there were fewer strikes in his country and fewer unjustified ones beca e "we cannot allow laborg industry.” lie for a. strengthening of the services provided by the Can- adian Nationai Steamshlps as he stated the Lady boats no longer call at Jamaica and thus the peo- ple have been deprived of access to . former markets. He particuiariyi spoke of the shipments of ioma-J -icTiiti'EE7:nCSaH;eVi5 col. Zlw Soviei leis Fire Ai U. S. Hospital Plane BERLIN, Oct. 8- (AP) -Two Soviet jet fighters made several passes at a Berlin-bound United States Air Force hospital plane over the Russian zone of Ger- many today and one fired mach- ine-gun bursts. but the plane es- caped undamaged into cloud cover and landed here safely. The jets were Mig-155, used by the Communists ill Korea. The American ship, which does not carry hospital markings. was a C-47. Maj.-Gen. Lemuel B. Mathew- son, 1.1.5. Berlin commandant. protested hotly to the Soviet com- mand in Berlin, declaring PI de- mand that this unwarranted and unciviiized behavior of soviet air- craft cease at once." Mathewson told reporters the plane. bound from Frankfurt to Berlin to pick up nine army pa- tients and take them back to military base hospitals in Frank- furt. was on course and at a proper 7.000-foot altitude in the Allied flight corridor to Berlin when the challenge came over Kocnnern, Saxony. In his protest. Mathewson ack- nowledged that unexpected winds might have forced the plane un- intentionally oi! course. Specblsglii Plane Shot Down By Rusgainsl TOKYO. .Oct. 9 -(Thursday)- (AP)- Armed U. S. jeis Wednes- day guarded planes which swept the seas off Northern Japan hunt- ing for s Superfort that vanished after being approached by a plane from Russian territory. Only an oil slick off the north- east coast of Hokkaido was found but the search persisted de- spite bad weather. A cautious air force headquar- ters announcement did not spec- ulate that a unidentified plane which it a led on radar was R.ussian. Nor did headquarters say the 3-D. missing since Tuesday. was attacked. It emphasized. however. that the "unidentified plane" came from the easi-Iwbere the Russian-held Kurils Islands lie-that it intrud- ed in Japanese territory. and that its tracks merged on the radar- acope with those of the missing B-20. Saint John Man To Survey P.E.I. A Poiaio Siiuaiion for Cuban Marllel Senor Jose Alvarez, Havana, Cuba. has arrived in Charlotte- town to survey the potato market- ing situalion with a view to pur- chasing P. E. Isand potatoes for his country. Senor Avarez is the representat- ive of the Cuban Bank for the de- velopment. of Agriculture and In- dustry and is accompanied to the Province by his wife. They will be here for several days. After he has examined the situation he will re- port to his principals and a decis- ion wiil then be made as to wheth- er to purchase potatoes for one of the farm organizations patronized by the bank. Heads Maritime Board oflrade Mr. G. G. Angliu, Saint John. N 3, yesterday was elected president of the Maritime Provinces Board of Trdde when it held its closing business session of the annual meeting at The Charloltetown. He succeeds Mr. P. W. Curtis, Char- lotteiown. Other officers named were vice- prcsident: H. W. Jamer, Saint John, for New Brunswick: G. w. Wilson. '1'ruro, for Nova Scotia; H. R. V. Earle, St. John's, for New- foundland; and Frank A. MacKen- zie. Charlottetown, for Prince Ed- ward Island. Directors appointed for two years were, New Brunswick: E. M. Hen- derson. Campbeilton: Marven Mc- Coomb, st. Stephen; .l. Dougali MacLean. Biackls liarbor. Nova Scotia: A. F. Barrow. iialifax: L. .l. Doucet. Sydney; W. W. Smith, Lunenberg. Prince Edward island: Otto Johnston, Crapaud; Douglas McGowan, Montague: Bruce Stew- art. souris. Newfoundland: T. S. A. Freeman, St. Johnls: D. G. Myers, St. John's: Cyril OlNeil. Wabana. Those appointed for one year were. "toErTtiEEEci on page-175 coi.'"a7 Dr. MacKinnon Following are excerpts from an address delivered yesterday by Dr. Frank Macxinnon. Principal of Prince of Wales College, at the annual convention here of the Maritime Provinces Board of Trade. p "in these days we can demands for more slid more development of our physical resources-in other words demands for increased pro- duction. At the same time each year brings more needs for social and economic benefits-that is, more security. This situation poses a serious question: Who is to en- courage and guarantee both pro- duction and security? It seems obvious. that neither business not government can do it alone. They must. do it together. Each must supplement the others advant- ages; each m at compensate for the others weaknesses. "The advantages of business and The speed of a runaway horse counts for nothing. ' MAXIMS ; OIL MERE MAN 16 PAGES Asks For AC1-ipointment Of Royal Commission Pleased With Army Benevolent Fund In P. E. I. Lieut.-Gen, E.W. Sansom of the Army Benevolent Fund Board ex- pressed "great satlafaction” with the results of a two-day visit to Charlottetown to review the ach- levements of the Army Benevolent Fund in the Province. The former Armoured Corps Commander. now retired and living in Fredericton, reported that the Fund had been able to render 538,411 in financial assistance to PEI. veterans since i949. - in commenting on the work of the Fund, General Sansom paid high tribute to Fund officials and to the welfare officers of the De- "TcWfnEFd 71 Ta? e75.cbi.”i)- Find wrecug? or R.C.A.F. Aircraft Missing 5 Years VANCOUVER. Oct. 5- (CP)-. Wreckage sighted near Rossland in British Columbia's southern interior was identified today us an R.C.A.F. Mitchell bomber which vanished five years ago with nine persons aboard. An R.C.A.F. spokesman said to- night the identification was made by an R.C.M.P.-directed ground party which reached scene of the wrerknxzc. some 250 miles east of here. after it. was sighted by is Rossland resident. Wilt. Hibbard. The Mitchell bomber was on a photographic mission. flying from Calgary to Penticton, BC, when it disappeared on Oct. 18, I947. Aboard were seven R.C.A.F. personnel and two civilians, Harry Knight, a Pentlcton hotel man. and his wife. Discusses Business Atlgdiiovernment government enterprise in public undertakings are obvious. Busin- essmen have the training in the methods peculiar to their trade and in the principles df produc- tion and consumption in the goods or services which they provide. They know the public as consum- ers and they know one another as producers. The government, on the other hand. is supposed to have a broad, over-all view of the problems of public administration. It can see. not one business. but many. It knows the people as voters and is aware of what they want and how much of it they will stand. Bfg Responsibility "Both business and governments have had an enormous responsibil- ity for the opening up of Canada. Much of the nation's history is it -(-Cbnl.inuc-d7); page-B colji: Navy Reveal 0'f'llAWA, Oct. H- ICPi -Just one enemy shell hit I-l.M.C.S. Iro- quois last week in an action which resulted in three dead and three injured aboard the Canadian destroyer. The lroquois silenced tiling: shore battery which made the This was disclosed today when the navy issued details of the nrst action in which a Canadian ship has been hit in the Korean war. The casualties were reported Oct. 3. "The Iroquois was part of a task element which included Utili- cd States navy destroyers and de- stroyer escorts and smaller craft. of ,the Republic of Korea navy," R.C. N. headquarters said in a statement. "Last Thursday. on the fourth day of a. scheduled three-week pa- trol. the Iroquois and the 11.8.8. Marsh. a. destroyer escort, were bombarding a portion of a North Korean railway skirting the shore- line. The section of the railway had been a previous target for U. N. warships and the Communists were trying to put. it. back in ser- vice. ”The Iroquois and the Marsh blasted the target for about an hour. Working parties were dis- persed and the rail line was ob- served to be well saturated by sheilflrc. As the two ships broke off the bombardment and turned to seaward. shore batteries opened fire on the Iroquois and almost immediately a full salvo bracketed s Details Of Iroquois Shelling the ship.- "Although taking evasive action and making smoke, the ship was subsequently hit by one, shall. Liexxt.-Cmdr. John L. Quinn of Moose Jaw. Sask., and Able Sea- man Elburne A. Baikie of Ham- ilton were killed instantly. AB. Wallis M. Burden of Sauit t Ste. Marie, Ont, was critically wound- ed and died a few hours later in ghe ship's sick bay." The statement said the three Canadian dead are being buried today with full naval honors in the British Commonwealth cente- tery at Yokohama, Japan. Three other men were wounded by shrapnel and shell fragments and seven received minor cuts. "Aa the two ships withdrew." the statement said. t'the Iriquols' main armament poured a steady fire at the shore battery and all- enced it. "The Iroquois received only slight damage and her fighting efficiency was in no way impair- ed. The Marsh was not fired upon in the notion." AB. Edwin M. Jodoin of Toronto and Joseph A. Gaudet. of Tignish. P. E. I.. are in the U. B. army hospital at sasebo. Japan. the former with a broken leg and shrapnel wounds in the leg and foot. the latter with two shrapnel woundsi n his rigbtieg. AB.Waido Berggren of Newport. N.B.. is in the ship's sick bay but is expecte to be released for regular duty by tomorrow. Morning Daily Founded 1881. The Guardian, Five Cents. A formal resolution calling for the appointment of a Royal Com- mission to investigate economic conditions in the Maritime Prov- lnces was passed by the Maritime Provinces Board of Trade at their annual meeting held here yester- clay. The request stemmed from a proposal for a survey made in a. paper read by Dr. C. H. Blakeny, Moncton, N. E. He traced briefly both the ad- vantages and disadvantages of ths Maritimes and spoke of the nat- ural wcalth while regretting that 'the tide of immigration was always Wvest. He thought that to evolve any practical plan there must be a full understanding of our economic position and its causes. a summary made of our industrial psslbilities, and an appreciation of our regional disabilities. Dr. Blakcuy stated that without the true facts concerning these matters no solution can ever be found. He called for full co-operation between the various social, political and industrial groups as he re- marked that we "are sadly in need of R unified policy for the Mari- time Provinces. In order to ascertain the true economic position of the Maritimes today in relation to the rest of Canada: to discover the forces which should make for growth: and to make recommendations re- garding prosperity. growth and ex- pansion it was decided to 'ask for the app inlment of a Royal Com- mission 0 be representative of all the participating Provinces Detailed Study Its purpose would be to study advantages and difficulties. includ- ing transportation: discover the force which should make for ccnomic growth and stability; and learn methods calculated to ensure the economic future of the area. They would be asked to determine what industries could most profit- ably be expanded or developed. and what could be done to stimulate venture capital. Questions asked in the paper oi Dr. Blakeny included the possibil- ity of small business suffering from lack of technical and manage- ment consultants. He also wonder- ed if the Maritimes would have a. chance to share in the Labrador development and in general sug- gested a variety of points which the Commission might well consider. Also addressing the gathering during the business session was Mr. L. W. Slmms. chairman of the Maritimes Transportation mission who treated with the threat to the economic well-being of the Maritlmes which has been posed by horizontal freight rate increases. Unfair Burden The speaker said that recurrent increases are definitely resulting in some long haul consumers in the- Maritimcs bearing a rolat.lvciy greater share of such increases. At. the same time some long haul shippers here are forced to absorl: s. relatively greater . portion of 'CfCont-in-ued on page 8 col. 6),.- KC like Most Divttaovs fear or A. an is (us not our NLDS fiiv. sngcnmc. WHEEL 9 J HALIFAX. Oct. I -(GP) -0!- ficlsl forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Thursday. Synopsis: Cool air covered the tlistrlct in- day and afternoon temperatures were in the 50s in most regions. Thursday will be sunny and warmer in the southern Mariiimcs. A disturbance moving through Northern Quebec. however. will bring considerable cloudiness andn few showers to the northern part of the district. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward island-Sunny and warmer. Light winds. Low and high Thursday at Charlottetown 80 and 50. Hi tide today at Charlottetown at 1. A. M. and 3.21 P. M. High tide or! the North Shore as 10.1: A. as. and 9.09 P. M. sununerslde tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. sun rises today at 0.30 A. M. and sets at 5.40 P. M. Com- .