Maxims i. {Mums "'""; or a g - . p: ‘ o,‘ i / PWREMAN i '- . _ . Mans MAN g-iqgsvmmnsma: The Peop e's Paper f/ "r". Read by Everybody ifimfii ' ~ . ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew A ~ I p) k 4&2... "" °""m"“g"in'é.s.'il°“nn. . cunaaorrarowu. CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL 1s, 1949 1s PAGES - ,.',',',"',:'.*;?°,;'.,.?‘ELF,.;',,:‘£°'.,_ .,,._.. U.$.Air Force Leaders BelieveBomlsers Could Win__gWari Will .,_.-_._.... ... -_r::. .-~ LABRA B. C. General Election Called For June 15 V1 TORIA, B. C., April IT-(CP) --Pr ier on Johnson has made it plain that free enterprise versus socialism will be the no. 1 issue in British Columbia's June 15 provin- cial election. The 58-year-old head of B. C.'s seven-year-old Coalition Govern- Comlng Events "oil Cake MIC-how's“: per sag. lloGuigan dz Boyle. "Mali your Pllml to Garnhum Photo Studio, Charlottetown. "Show Morel], every Tuesday and Friday. Show starts 8.30 o'clock. "Dance and Card Party, Trac- adie Ball, Monday. April 10th. "Cleaning Grain month of April only. Walter MaiieihYork. "Dance in Miilvicw Hail Easter Monday night. "lropkfieid grain cleaning plant now operating. We clean and clip your- grain. ‘nines, at. Peter's Legion Hall, lasts;- Monday. Cliff Peters’ Orch- estra. Canteen services. ii- "Dance, Mt. Stmrt Legion Hail Eastdr Monday, 1 Rollie Mac- Kensieu Orcbutij. ,p ‘ ‘t. "..';-li'm‘~ui;"ian= eat, fresh stock ldooreb and Jspalaopeiot.‘ 12.1.. Dioklason.‘ ' "Cherry valley grain cleaning plant new operating Tuesdays and Fridays. ‘ . "Dance at the Gordon Lodio Monday night, April 18th. dancing from 9 till L ' "Come to the "Norboro Play" in Srsdalbane Hall, Mont-la, night. April 1 s "Dance in Rustico Hall, ltustico. Easter Monday night. Good music, refreshments. "New Wiltshire District Scarlet Chapter Brookfield Hall Tuesday. 19th, - "Tonight-Easter Pageant "Chol- gelligeuof the Cross", Salvation Amiy "Reserve Tuesday, April 26 for Winsioe plays "Kitty" and "Saving Dad" at Milton Hail. "Public speaking contest spon- sored by Junior Farmers, Cornwall '.~lall, April 19.‘ "Farmers Co-operative seed cleaning plant of Crapaud is now ready for business. John Leard, Secretary. ' "Kelly's Cross Dramatic Club’ will present their play in Kelly's Cross flail, Easter Monday night. Curtain 8.30. Dance after. "l-lear Donald MacLean. C.C.l~‘. Federal candidate in Freetown Hail. Monday, April 18, 1949, at 8 ll. m. "Soejcven Mile Say players present their play "Masquerade" Li} hltinkca loll. Instr Roads! l’ . . v "New. bearing elm.- seed. P! our prices will save you money Rush your orders. Hac- 9 S Boyle. "Jimmy Powers‘ Variety Concert Will lie. in New, Glasgow Hall Wad- "Ihir. night, April so at aao in Llilldolithe rillk. Lunches will be .;.‘C30rIl ' “farmers. . n ’ n on ao- loust aieknesavgd resdheonai- wSMl for further announce- ."hssrve Tuesday, April It'll. for “rt la Orepauo ma, in aid of ll Jonson-ed by- omens d“ ed surrounding ammuni- ment of Liberals and Progressive Conservdtives made his election call Saturday, He promptly added to the announcement: "If British Columbia is to con-s tinue to prosper we feel that such can only be accomplished where the‘ people are assured of a contin- uance of the principles of free en- terpriae." Finance Minister Herbert Ans- combe, chief of the Provincial Pro- gressive Conservatives, subscribed to Mr. Johnson's declaration. In a joint statement, the party leaders said: "It is felt that there should be a clarification of the fu- ture administration in the Prov- ince." Fear o‘! the C. C. F. and its so- ciaiistic program led to the birth of the Coalition in 1941, under the leadership of former Premier John Hart. , Harold Winch, leader of the C. C. F" has accepted the challenge. "The C.C.F, is all set for a win- ning election campaign," he said at the annual party, convention Vancouver. “We have our election question but that the swing is to the C.C.F.” Mr. Johnson dissolu- tion of the 21st Legislature, fixed the election date, and said nomin- ation day would be May 25. He has been leader of the Lib- eral Party and Premier for 1.6 months, and was elected on the re- tirement of Mr. Hart, now Speaker of the Legislature. At dissolution, the Coalition had 86 members in the dB-member _ Housey-Zl Llberalsand- 15 Pro- gressive Conservatives. The C. C}. e ast election was Oct. 25, 1945. in machinery all in order. There's no BiiiltW-‘ps Chinese Messrs. Baker 6f Cullen‘ eicompe Cabinet Members Reds Noi Taking B Orders from. USSR _By James n. White Associated Brass News Analyst Are the P“ Communists tak- ing orders from Moscow? ‘Iihis is the question people have asked me more often than any other since I returned from a foru- month visit to China. 1 asked it often myself while I was there. The answer-except from Nank- iing officials anxious for more Unit- ed Slates aid-invariably was "no." ' I was told that no report of Rus- sian aid. advice or direction to the Chinese Reds has ever been verified (Continued an Page 5 Col. 4) Record Trout For Openinglay? Sgt. DJ. Heath of Summers“ detachment R.CM.P. pulled in a big on, on Saturday owning in the form of a rainbow trout ‘that weighed eight pounds two ounces. One of the largest trout ever’ to be caught in 2h, area. it was taken at Scales Pond, Freetown, on Sat- urday morning, the first day oi tlhe fishing season. Sgt. Heath was using bait at the time and he played it about ten minutes before Ila-riding it. Despite inclement weather. there was quite an exodus of local fish- ermen from Charlottetown on Sai- urday for the oponingof the trout- aseaz>risir= catches were report- ed, with a 3% pourider reported 1831mm nimbm and-Labor ls..- i‘ Seamen Aboard Ship Ar_e___Bealen MONTREAL. Avril 1r _(c r) - Poiice aafd today that 15 mism- bors of the Seafarers’ Intemat- ionai Union (A. F. L.) were at- tacked in their bunks aboard the cargo - ‘liner Beaverburn in an Easter Sunday outbreak of violence on the strike-bound Mont- real waterfront. Seven required treatment in hospital. Others‘, loss seriously irr- Jured. were sible to remain aboard the Canadian Pacific Steamships vessel. Six of the men token to hoqiibai are from Vancouver. The 5.1.11. men were hired in Vancouver and were aboard the Beaverburn as a passenger-crew bound for Great Britain to bring back a Canadian ship that is strike- bound there. Their attackers were not identified. Police said the outbreak was started by about a score of men, o boarded the ship and worked ir way to the butt-its of the S.1.U. crew who were beaten while still asleep. Once awakened, they re- taiiiated in a fiat-swinging battle that last some 20 minutes. Members of the Beaverbsirnb British crew were not attacked and we’: no par-t in the battle, police sa Beery Dies av cans assassins . B1181, Caiif., April 1'! - (AP) -— Wallace Scary, tbs arteries’. lovable rascal with i110 gravelly’. voice and squash-like fltlllflll dead. - slurp-a t6 his living-room Ho‘: about i0 o'clock rrlday night and died mostly alter from a heart d t of iaeny months’ tion. was 0d. The funeral will ay at Forest lawn fa- gonadal ens. ciiendsie. ysareontbe essdedoniy. caught near Montague, ~ Credit Union League ' Essay Contest Winners ~ Robert Croken Summcirfieid. Simeon Farmer, Kinkora._and Mil- dred Joan Mullen. Gienaiadale. were first prize winners in their respective grades lit the essay cun- test sponsored by the Prince Ed- ward Island Credit Union League, in which there was keen- com- petition from students from all parts of the Province. Over 120 applications were re- ceived in the contest and prizes totalling 0155 were given to suc- cessful contestants. Following is the complete list of prize winners: Group i (Grades VII and V111) - "Why I should belong to a Cerdi Union." (Not more than 500 words: 1st Prize ($25.00) - Mildred Joan Mullen — (Grade V11) Gienaiadaie. 2nd Prize (815.00) - Anna Mac- Intyre — (Grade VIII) Charlotte- town. 3rd Prize ($5.00) — Bernadette Pineau (Grade VII) South Rustico. Honorable Mention - Christeiie MacKenzie, Little Pond; Helene Nicholson, St. Augustine. Group II (Grades IX and X) — "The Role of the Credit Union in the deveipoment of Community Welfare." (Not more than 1000 words): 1st Prise (scam) — Simeon I” umbess “Ting. m “a. "@114. longest career in pictures. His I0 by Lionel Barrymore's - Fdillmvinbl.‘ (Continued on Page I 0d. l) Movie Actor Wallace Suddenly _____i___.__..____.. most successful movie combina- tions. H’ won an Academy All!“ (o; "Th; champ" in 1081. Ha was voted by exhibitors one o! the top l0 box-office attractions from m2 through 1N6. and min in i040. leery, a Kansas city poiiosmarvs son, in youth was an engine wiser in a railroad roundhouss, an ele- phant handler kl circusss. l!!! l" ala-a-week singer in a Broadwa! chorus. After a short career I! I dirt-track racing driver he made his film debut in 1m with the gun” company in Ohiclso. His oorrugatld. bomb 1m WI h" fortme. . n; estimated that his victims earned 86041110000 W‘ 334'" “out, He appeared in more than m0 fires. eountins earl! on! I04 two-rosters. At hem‘! side. when be iiiod were his: divorced wife. Mfl- m" ' ; his anther. Will: ddilghicr, lAaa is . ‘W’ ' to Gloria lady-was married ‘Manson from i010 to 1011. i k i lion. C. C. Baker Hon. Eugene Cullen ilevaiuaiion Oi ~ ibreign Currencies Seen Possible mrw YORK. Aipril 1'1 - (A?) - Eventual devaluation of foreign currencies is seen in Wail Street s; a possibiiityerssuiting from the pressure of declining prices in i-ho United States. ' ~ The sensitive New York market for foreign money has _been un- settled several times recently by rumors of devaluation of mlivl’ currencies abroad and by 0111101411" ed reports of an impending chandc in the United States price of s36 an ounce for monetary gold. All of these waves have passed without. materially altering the basic exchange rates between the American dollar and other curren- cies, which are fixed by internat- ional agreement administered by the International Monetary Fund. The British pound sterling is officially valued at about 4.03. but you can buy various other kinds of sterling at prices as low as 81.00. The big pressure on foreign rrcncy is the slowly sottllrifl "V01 of American prices which makes it more difficult day by day for other countries to sell their hill"!- priced wares in this country in competition with American goods. they can't aeii here, they can't get American dollars to buy here. That kind, of stagnation in international trails puts the squeeze on foreign money. Devaiuation is me quick way out. Somemuthorities think it is the only way out. You can. of course. raise a storm of argument on that point. ‘Mean- while everyone is watching Britain. AIIBIOIPoIII Au eyes are on the pound sterling which once was the ruler .of the value of the world's monies. niadoiiartookthstopseatasa result of the depression and the last war. But ndw starting is tryi- ing a comeback along a hard and rocky road. u Britain is forced to devalue the. bound against the dollar. many other mater currencies are sure b0 follow. - The value-of sterling depends on the health of British business. lflfl the health oi’ business depends to a major degree on tha increase in their volume of exports pra-ticuiariy to countries that can pay in dollars. - 1f American prises decline. British (Continued oh figs) Col. 'i) i-lon. C. Cleveland Baker, Fourth District of Prince, and Hon. Eugene P. Cullen. Third District of Queen's, were sworn in on Satur- lay as non-portfolio members of he Provincial Government, replac- ing Messrs. Horace iii/right, now chairman of the Workmenb Com- pensation Board, and John A. Campbell, farm supervisor at the Infirmary at Beach Grove, whose appointment to their present posi- tions was announced last week. Big Planes Could Operate From Bases a B)’ e WASHINGTON, April i7 —(AP) -—-'I‘cip_Unlted States Air Force men think that planes which they now have tested could bring about, from United States airfields. the‘ surrender of an enemy almost any- l where in the world. They don't say it could be done‘ tomorrow. There aren't enough. Hon‘. Mr. Baker, farmer and fox breeder, resides at Kensington. l-le ‘was first elected to the Legisla- i ture in the general election of 1935, ,and re-elected in 1939. Defeated by ‘Mr. Heath Strong in the following general election of 1943, he was re- turned four years later along with Mr. Wright whom he now replaces in the cabinet. Mr. Baker is a na- tive of Margate, where he was born in 1886. _ i Speaker of the Legislature dur- ing the past two sessions, Hon. M". Cullen has been prominent in‘ti'e dairy industry for some years. He was born at Hope River in 1905, and now resides in Charlottetown. He has represented Third Queen's \ ‘into aerial tanloer refueling planes. planes. But planes exist which air force men think could load cu‘ American fields. do ‘round-the- clocir bombing (providing there was enough of thorn) and return to American fields. Three planes are involved: The 13-36. the 3-50 and the 13-29. Some of the 13-29:: have been converted 1f the air force is right. the United states could rely on air- fieids in North America. ‘Iihe air force thinks it has about. 500 borrlbers which could get into combat almost immediately, each able to reach out 4,000 miles, drop its bcimibs and return in one of the 57 bases in the United States and Canada which could take planes of as a Liberal member since July 1945. (Continued on Page 5 Col. d) lnlcddeni MONCTON. N. 3., April 17- (CPl-Four residents of Saint John had an almost miraculous escape from death tonight when their car left the main highway five miles west of Mnnciorl and plunged down a 75-foot. embankment. Fred Robirhaud, a passenger in the car, is in hospital for treatment but his condition was not regarded as serious. Charles Walker. driver of the car, and two other occupants. Miss Gertrude Robinson and Miss Emma Barlow, were not injured. ' The accident occurred while the car was approaching Mono- ton on a straight stretch of road. It sheared off two tele- phone poles before plunging over the embankment and com- ing to a halt a few feet from the muddy waters of the Petit- codiac River. News In Brief BERLIN, April 1'1 - (AP) — Germans in the Russian occupa- iion zone, are putting pressure on the Russians to lift the Berlin blockade, it was reported auth- oritatively today. NANKING, April 1'1 -— (AP) - 'l'he Communists tonight gave the Chinese Government. uni-ii Aiiril b0 - three days hence - to s18“ surren/ar terms. The pensliy for refusal was not publicly slated, but obviously was a threat to in- vade South China. CAPEDOWN. April 1'7 — (Reu- ters) - A government commission which investigated last Januarys riots in Durban between native Africans and East Indians warn- ed today that the natives may again attack the Indians "to square} (heir account." 1n the iwn day! 017, race rioting, 14/1 were killed and; 1,087 injured. l WAfl-HNGION‘. Aipfii 1'1 i iCF) -— Dean Acheson. seerflaryt of state, is reported ready to tell Congress that the United States should be prepared to send arms to Western tin-ops for ‘many years.” SQANTON. Pa. April" 11 - iori -.Jobn lloloarw 4i. died Satitndl! from eating 28 aspirin tablets with the belief they were salted peanuts. Hospital authorities quoted him as saying before he died that he found a bottle on a tabla and thought it contained peanuts. when he discovered his error, there were two left of the bottle of II. A blood test showed he had been drinking. aaoota. Suffolk, Ingland -- (C?) - Because of siuoected boi- iutiosa. the bltllinl 9001 l! u" liver Wayne! here ma! have to Many Attend Churches ' ForEasterSunday Services Four iiave Close t .of Christian Arabs worshipped mas non Asrntm rsaaars~ (By ThfCanadlan Prods) The Christian world celebrated the resurrection Sunday in its churches and passed the lighter hours of Easter Day under gen- erally sunny skies. At Windsor, England, warm wea- ther brought out the King, who is recuperating from a leg ailment. He and the Queen, with Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edin- burgh, went to Easter services at the royal chapel. 1n London dandies sported feii hats in bright Easter-egg colors and embroidered ‘waistcoats. _ 1n Nazareth. Israel, thousands while others demonstrated under Communist flags. Jerusalem's holy places accessible only to official persons and religious dignitaries. Arrange- ments under the Israel-Trans- Jordian anriistice allowing free ac- cdss to the holy places have yet to be worked out. 1n New York th. biggest crowd in memory — 1,800,000 persons, po- lice said -- jammed Fifth Avenue and nearby streets for the annual fashion parade. Much of the United States had good weather for the day, but a Chicago forecaster who predicted "cloudy and slightly warmer" saw rain failing. mixed with snow. In‘ an Easter broadcast from Washington Seiden Chopin. Un- ited Slates Minister to Hungary who was asked by that country to leave, said Communist-dosriinatcd countries are fostering “a new sec- ular religion of the state . .. to absorb the churches." In Washington President and Mrs, Truman and their daughter Margaret went i0 two church services. With Mrs. Truman and hiargarci, who are Episcopalians, the President went. lo a holy com-i, munion service at 8 am. at St. John's Protestant Episcopal Church. s block from the White House. Tihen the Trumans attended 9:30 a.m. service at the First Baptist‘ Church. ‘The President is a Bap‘ (Continued on Page-ii Col. 6) | Village Has Narrow Landslide Escape In BALMON BEACH. Wash. April 1'!—,An earthquake-loosened cliff gave this little colony a breath- taking brush with disaster Satan'- day. A threat of another possibly dis- glide continued to hang over the semiement of 10a homes. six miles from downtown Tacoma. A side of a cliff broke loose and roared past the community at 2:05 am. PST Saturday. It hit Puget Sound so hard it kicked up an estimated eight-foot "tidal wave" to wreck near-by small boats and waterfront installations. There was only a 20-yard gap between the and house of the fish- ing and beach settlement and the edge of the tremendous slide. which was close to 1N0 fem. across. The roaring cliffside mead pro-dawn be slossd this amour. WEN 1Q9 Poor Laureate John Minefield ls Ill BURGDTB. Brock, Abingdon, Berkshire, April 1'! - (AP) -John Mssefieid, the poet laureate, was reports; today to be seriously iii at his heme here. Be is ‘i0. Masefield recently suffered attack of influence. and complic- l ations followed. Ireland Celebrates Birth of lepublic DUBLIN. April 18 - (Moridayil — (CP) — The thundering of can- non. Jubilant singing in the streets. and a few tears marked the birth today of the independent republic of Ireland. Prnmptiy on night Sunday celebrated the pendence they years ago. i Irish soldiers fired artillery andl rifles, searchlights pierced the mid- ' night blackness and green, white) and orange flags fluttered in the light Easter night air. 1n 36 of Ireland's 32 counties Irishmen sang and shouted to each other "na pobiacht abu," the Gaelic words for "up the republic." In the storied streets of Dublin happy men, women and children mulled and pushed. shouted and sang. Estimates of the throng were between 40,000 and 70.000. All the pomp and pageantry the country could muster went into the proclamation that Ireland and its 3,500,000 population were no longer a vaguely-defined part of the British Commonwealth. But. the six northern counties remain apart of the United King- dom. Even therb the independence spirit ‘ bubbled lover; At Cari-ick- more inroads" clubs‘ Sunday night to- break tgs-"a crowd of S00 young men celebrating the birth of the republic. Several were hurt. Such demonstrations had been banned in Northern Ireland. the stroke of mid-l Irishman formally regaining of inde- lost to Britain ‘I80 Nova Scorio Pioneer Woman Dies "At 102 YARMOUTH, N. 5., April 17- (CP)»Funeral services were heiri here Saturday for Mrs. Milly J. Duncanson. oldest resident of Yar- mouth County. She died Thursday at 102. Mrs. Duncanson was the daugh- ter of William White, who died at 104, Her grandfather lived to be A pioneer of the county on Nova . Scotia's south shore, Mrs. Duncan- son built her nwn home in the wild- erness when- she was 30. While at that job, she feii through the part- iy constructed flooring. Her skirt caught on a naifand she hung sua- pended for two days until a neigh- bor found her. Her husband died about 1910 and Mrs. Duncanson carried on his farm work alone. She cut and haul- ed wood, mowed hay and planted the crops. For a living she sold po- tatoes; vegetables and apples she Md grown until she was more‘ than 80 years old. One year she picked 1,950 boxes of blueberries. Mrs. Duncanson slept. outside un- der an apple tree except in uiinier. In her later years. she lived with her son. Fred, and she died at his home at nearby Quinsn. N. B. Hus First Forest Fire of Yeeir_ i WOODSIOCK, N. 8.. April 17 - iCiH-New Brunswicirs first forest. fire of the year was brought underi control quickly Saturday after burning three acres of small growth near Cenireviiie. It. result- wooded area.,A forest ranger and. crew extinguished the outbreak/ Heavy rain averted possibility of’ further damger. A narrow crack opened along tha 00p of the AOO-foot-high cliff by last Wednesdays earthquake was blamed for tha slide. A-n ex- tension of the crack runs along the precipitous bluff behind the senile- ment itself. While residents eyed the cliff with alarm. the Tacoma City engineer's office started a survey to determine whether evacu- zaion of the homes should be order- ‘iirees protruded strangely from Puget Sound ‘waters that had been up to 100 feet deep. The slide area is west of Taoomab Point Defiance park. The Salmon Beach community would be trap- ped if the cliff above it should break away. The cliff is so steep Saint John -_ 46; Halifax 4i M; Charlottetown 32 87; DHOIl INFLUENZA EPIDEMIC 100 Eskimos Reported Ill p In One Village‘ . - Air Fe-JT.» fly "at medicine; S a u r e I reaches coast with food. By Joseph Mac-Swami Canadian Press Staff writs. ST. JOHIVS April l8 --iCP) -—A village in ice-ringed Labrador, suf- fering from an influenza epidemic, sent out another call for help today, The call for aid to sickness-stridi- en villagers far in the sub-Arctic district come just after an an- nouncement that the Icebreaker SiAMrEl had miashed - its way to Labradors southern coast to help relieve starvation condit- ions. Premier Sanalivi-ood released hers the texit of a message from Hdoron. Labrador, telling the story o! more than 100 persons-mostly Eskimos- who are caught in the grip of an influenza epidemic. Mrs. Margaret Grubb. wife of a Moravian mission- ary in the northern outpost. prev- iously had reported smile 80 persona ill in the district. » Mr. Snuillwood inunediatcivoail- ed on the R.C.A.'i-‘.. at Goose Bay, Laibrador, nearly 300 miles south of tha affected village, to fly in penicillin as soon arpossiibie. It was understood s. plane would take off tomorrow. Baurei Reaches Coast ' Meanwhile the Canadian ice- buster Satire] body-checked its way to the Southern Labrador toast withaboui. $25000 worth of food _att'er being ‘ cntoilodi in‘, wright] ciamipersfor several daya.__ The superman srmeroytsip if to the region of-St. Mary's Bay, about all/miles north of Nawfotmdw land's tip. where some half-dozen villages were threatened wit! starvation until food was air-lift- ed to the district last week. The Ssurel was unable to reach (Continued on Page 5 Col. 0) BEFORE You ASK A win ii\S_CANDlD tlPiNliiN About-You‘ 18E PREPARED, For.“ TORONTO. April 1'! — (CP) —a Minimum and maximum temper- atures: , Victoria 3'7 00; Edmonton 40 05: Regina l9 48; Winnipeg i7 30; Toronto 28 46: Ottawa 28 49; Montreal 33 47: Quebec 34 Moncton 31 38: Sydney 40 40; Ynrmnuili - 45; Si. Johns, Niid, 33 54. HALIFAX, April 17~iCP)—Of- finial inland forecasts issued to- night by the Dominion Public “'95- lher Office at H-ilifrw "'1". valid until midnight l" ' - gunqay s=\(>||iii,__' , >111!!!‘ was Qlqudy m-er Prime Edward island. i od from s grass fire spreading to a i In Southern New Brunswick and Nova Sroiia it was aian cloudy and there are scattered snowflurries and riiinlhmvers, In the northern sociions of the districts skies are clear. Temperatures are in lhP 10W l Clearing useather is expected to spread slowly across the district so that Monday skies will be generally clear and temperatures milder. A disturbance is movinli P!!!‘ warrl from the Great, Lakes but id not expected to affect the Mari- times before Mondl? mldfliilit- Regional fnrecasts:—- Prince Edward Island: Overcast with ivldeiy scattered anowflurriel. clearing by morning. Monday clear and milder. North winds 15 becom- ing iight Monday afternoon. Low early Monday morning and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 30 and 46. High tide today at 2.62 A. M and 1.54 P. M. EIJn rises this morning at 5.2a anti sets at 659. Suirmersida tide eighteen min- utes inform Charlottetown CAI, Y FABBGWEIT‘ wast bars Leaves lkdess 0.i0_A. M. and arrives at Cape Torncmtine at that the only land access to the panic in tbs eofiisaitv- string of homes along the water is by twisting foot trail dos-a the cltffside. insati- " Loam Torntsnttne 1M P-lls at: isllrlsatall‘. o dlsadfletasffbot.