' Town". Admlssion'50 cents. : Charlottetown, lnnrursldo ul.00 per annual. Elsewhere lv carrier in l.l.l. 89.00. Other Provinces and U.I.A. 012.00 per sniiun.) Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, APRIL 2. 1953 RUSSIAN DISARMAMENT MOVE BRIGHTENS U.N. PICTURE Commons Approves Water Conservation Plan Russia Pledges Full Co-operation In Move To End Korean War By Thomas P. Whitney Moscow. (AP)-Russia. praised the Korean truce bid by Red China and North Korea and pledged full co-operation Wednesday in the ef- fort to end the war. The Kremlin backing for the plan. cspoused Tuesday by Prem- ier-Forelgn Minister Chou En-lal of the Peiping government, was announced by Foreign Ministcr Molotov in a 1.000-word statement broadcast in eight languages by Moscow radio. Praises "Noble Act” "The Soviet government expres- ses its full solidarity with this no- ble act of the government of the Chinese People's Republic find the government of the Korean People's Democratic Republic and has no doubt that this act will find ardent support among peoples throughout the world," Molotov said. "The Soviet government also ex- presses confidence that this pro- posal will be correctly understood by the government of the U. S. A." Molotov plugged anew for admis- Coming Events "Dance in Millview Hall. Easter Monday. "Dance. Kelly's Cross School, Easter Monday. "Pantry Sale. Pennell Chandler's, April 4th, 2.30. and "Roidls Feed Service will be closed Good Friday. April 3rd. "We will be closed Good Friday. April 3rd. 13:. .l. Mt-Dougall, Ver- zion. i ' "Reid's Feed Se;-vice will close every Saturday aftemocri. begin- ning April 4. until further notice. "Meeting of the Clyde L,O.E.A. Thursday. April 2nd at 7.30 sharp. Urgent. Members please attend. "Dance Easter Monday night, Mt. Stewart Legion Hall. Burns heetra. "Farmers, ask about the Shut Gain Feed Finance Plan. For part iculsrs contact your local feed miu "Bonshaw grain cleaning plant will operate on Monday and Thursday during April. "Special: Limited quantity day- oid and started mixed chicks. Also cockerels. Phone quick 2192. Co-Op. Hatchery. "Our places of business will be closed Good Friday, April 3rd. signed: Crapaud Oi-eameny Co.. Waddell Bros, Pinker Canfleld. , "At Souris. Monday. April 6th. 3.15 P. M. Three Act comedy and Specialties. "Aunt, Tillie Goes to "Grand re-opening of St. Peters Legion Hall. joint dance Easter Monday. Sponsored by Canadian Legion and C. Y. 0. Dance to the music of Chaisson's Orchestra. Lunches and canteen service. "Don't miss the big Dance at South Rustico Hall. Easter Mon- day night. Music by the Charlotte- tonisns four piece orchestra. Canteen service. "Attention Morell and Vicinity. Coming. Saturday only. No show Good Friday. Tyrone Power. Michel Prelle in "American Guerilla". --in the Philippines. Technicolor. This is another outstanding 20th Century show. You'll enjoy it. "Attention Farmers in Sourls. St. Peters and all in between rsil noinu. Messrs. C. C. Pratt as Sons will be loading hogs for Canada Packers Limited. Charlottetown, st Souris on Tuesday. April 'Ith and -very week thereafter. Canada Packers Ltd. '"Atteniinn Fanners in Elmira. Kingsboro. East Baltic and sur- roundinrareas Mr. Gordon Rob- ertson will be loading hogs for Osh- Idl Packers Limited. Charlotte- town at Elmira. on Monday. April lth and every week Take ..:vsntsge of this weekly mlpplsf service by listing your hot: th Mr. Robertson. Phone iohilith Lake 5-12. Canada Packers thereafter. , sion of Red China and North Korea to the United Nations, saying the UN could do more regarding an armistice in Korea if it included the ”legal representatives" of those countries. Washington View (In Waehingfton, the U. S. State department press officer said the U. S. did not regard Molotov's call for Red Chinese and North Kor- ean representation ln the UN as part of the Red price for ending the Korean war. (Lincoln white made the state- ment in I. press conference called following announcement of hue- sia's support of the new peace plan.) Christie llharged With Wife's Murder LONDON. (CF)-Bored-looking .lolin Christie heard himself charg- ed Wednesday with murdering his wife in a "house of death" where a sex fiend strangled five other women. Christie. 55-year-old clerk and wartime special constable. stared glumly at the floor of the crowd- ed little magistrates court while the charge was read to him. He was remanded one week while investigations continue in the bizarre multiple-murder case. Christie. who has a penchant for photographs taken of the nude. was charged specifically and only with the murder of his wife Ethel. 54. whose body was found under the floor of their squalid tenement flat. iieteran Canadian War Nurse Dies GUELPH. Ont.. (OP) -Mrs. George B. Fraser. who held the distinction of being the first nurse to enlist in the Royal Canadian Army Medical Corps in the First World War. died Tuesday. Mrs. Fraser was decorated with the First Class Royal Red Cross by the late King George V and was mentioned in field dispatches while serving in Gallipoli and other theatres of war. Born in Ottawa she was a grad- uate oi the sohool of nursing in Atlantic Cit. inquiry dwells in Steamer sinking BELFAST. iReulersl - A res- cued passenger said here Wednes- day that men helped each other to escape from the sinking Irish sea steamer Princess Victoria last January but that he saw no ni- tempts to save the women and children. The passenger. Ernst Flack. was giving evidence at. a government inquiry into the disaster in which men. women and children were lost. The 44 survivo'rs all were men. The ship went down in one of the worst gains ever known in those waters. sEEi8Bs- rnaaue RANOOON. (Reuters)-A serious plague has broken out at Lane. 40 miles outside Slngkaling on Burma's northwest frontier. offic- ial reports reaching here disclosed Wednesday. A plague last year killed about 5.000 Nags tiibesmen. Projeclsgldusi Be Of National. Importance Size OTTAWA. (CPl-The Commons agreed Wednesday to the principle of in government measure to pro- vide federal contributions up to 37 1-2 per cent of water con- servation projects undertaken with provinces and municipal- ltles. Resources Minister Winters' bill, which received second reading. makes statutory the government's practice of entering into individ- ual agreements on such projects. No dollar limits are set on fed- eral contributions. but it is speci- fied that projects must he of a size that make them of national importance. I The hill was still under discus- sion in committee-of-the-whole stage as the House rose and will be taken up again today. All parties expressed approval of the measure. Excise Tax Act Earlier. the Commons gave third and final reading to a series of amendments in the Excise Tax Act. implementing changes in Finance Minister Ahbottls bud- get. Members gave detailed study to the tax changes. The Commona' only olhcr.leg- islaiive action of the day was to give third and final reading to a full revision of the legisla- tion providing for government of the Yukon. The elected Yukon council of five members is given jurisdiction in several fields where Canadian provinces exer- cise control. including roads. elec- iions, hospitals and agriculture. OTTAWA. April I -- tSpecial) --Prince Edward island may par- ticipate in a Federal-Provincial water conservation plan, it was intimated in the House of Com- mons here today by Resources and Development Minister Win- ters. The Minister when spon- soring a bill for overall conserva- tion of water resources was ask- ed by W. Chester S. McLurc if any provision hires contained in the hill to aid small projects such as the rebuilding of old dams which held farmer mlllponds. He said lllfll. while Prince Edward Island had no large rivers and no grave flood problems such as are found in other provinces. it noneihclcss had water conserva- tion needs. Mr. McLure felt that widespread benefit would ensue by rebuild- ing former mill-dams and turn- ing the ponds above them into fish reservoirs and liatcherles. When he asked Mr. Winters if the legislation would encompass such a development, the minister explained: "Each project would have to be reviewed on its merits. whether or not it was too small or too large would depend upon the size of the project, the rev- enues of the province and the willingness of the nlllrllClp.'Iliii('S and the provincial govt-rnmr-nt to participate and bring it forward for consideration." In previous water conservation projects. Mr. Winters said. it has been the practice for the muni- clpallty involved to pay 25 per cent of the total cost of construc- tion while provincial nnd domin- ion governments pay 37 and a half per cent each. The Federal Gov- ernment would match but would not pay more than the provincial government contrlhut ion. Training At By Ilton 0. FL! IDAHO FALIJ. Idaho. (AP)- The school for atomic submarines is getting ready to andu-te its first class. The score or so officers and men in the class will be the "engineer- foree" for the atomic-powered lu brine Nautilus. When. probably some time next year. the skipper of Nautilus speaks the old order "one-third ahead." these men will be the first in the world to turn on atomic energy for motive power. Behind them will be a year and a. half of training unlike that any sailors ever swuted through. - neck at llettis field near Pitts- burs . PL. in the laboratory built by the atomic energy commission and operated by the Westinghouse Electric corporation. they began Atomic Submariners In U.S. School an academic course. At. first it. was quite common- place. Then it began to grow tougher. more intricate: there was the theory of nuclear fission. Then they studied the blueprints and "mock-up" models of the atomic engine itself.- Eventually they came to the "submarine thermal reactor" site at the national reactor testing station about 40 miles from here. In Washington Tuesday the ABC made the first official announce- ment of what these men were up to: that an atomic power plant to propel a. submarine had been placed in operaton-on the dry land of its Idaho testing station. Actually. the'ersw has "grown up" with the prototype atomic en- gine like that to be used in the Nautilus. Pictured above are William C. Cairns of Freetown, P. E. I. tleft) and Herman Arason of Glenboro, Manitoba. the winner of the Nut- field Foundation Scholarships which provide six months study of English agrriouilture. ' Mr. Calms and Mr, Arason were selected by The Canadian Fede- Scholarship Winners ration of Agriculture from cants in each province. Sailing from Halifax today. these appli- two young men will arrive in England in sufficient time to ob- serve British cropping operations. and at the oonoulsion of their course, plan to visit the continent before returning home, WASHINGTON, IA?) The state department urged Congress Wednesday to abandon an exist- ing curb on imports of dairy pro-' ducts, while a spokesman for Or- egon nut growers asked that it be P. E. I. May Al?-articipzite in Wateig Conservation Plan made even stronger. Harold F. Linder. assistant sec. fisheries Federation Quarterly Meeting p A strongly worded resolution ob- jecting to the change made in the minimum sire of lobsters permit- ted to be taken by fishermen was passed at the quarterly meeting of the P. E. Island Fisheries Federa- tion heid at the Queen Hotel yes- terday. The resolution substanti- ated at greater length the protest forwarded to Ottawa. last week. The dinner meeting. which was held at 1 pm.. was presided over by Mr. Lorne Noonan. president. The resolution.was prepared for tilstribution to the Minister of Fisheries. the Fisheries Council of Canada. the P. E. Island Members of Parliament at Ottawa and the Hon. Eugene Cullen. Provincial Minister of Industry and Natural Resoiir--2 The president announced that the meeting had been called at this time in order to treat with matters to come before the Fish- eries Council of Canada. which meets in Ottawa on April 20-22. These meetings will follow the meeting of the National Fisheries Institute of the United States. and approximately 50 members of that organization have slgnined their intention to come to Ottawa for the Canadian meetings. Provision has also been made for the first time for entertain- ment for the ladies and as a. re- sult. tnany delegates will be ac- companled by their wives. Reser- vations have already been made for several Island representatives and their wives, including Mr. L. f... Noonan, vioe-president for New Brunswick and P. E. Island. offic- isl delegate from the P. E. Island Federation: Mr. S. H. Burhoe. at. rector of Fisheries Federation of P. 12. Island, official delegate; also Messrs. John H.Mb'i'1ok and James E. Burden. both of whom are directors of the Isl.a.nd Federation. President Noonan mode the an- nouncement. that Hon. Eugene Cullen, Minister of Industry and Nafurall Resources. accompanied by Mrs. Cullen. would also be in attendance. Other Provincial Miiiiaters sche- duled to attend are Hon. W. J. Keough. Newfoundland; Hon. W. T. Deuphinee. Nova Bcotis: and Hon. Roger Pinchette, New Bruns- wick. one of the chief speakers will be the Hon. James Sinclair, ioonti?iTiErToi"i"i5ige-s'Po(31,"5i” WABHINCVION. (AP)-LPresidenl. Eisenhower Wednesday signed leg- isiation creating a new cabinet rank department of health. educa- tion and welfare. effective April 11. ' The new department will be headed by Mrs. Ovets Cjip Hob- by. now chic-f df the federal secur- Congress Urged To Drop Ban 0n Dairyplnuiorts retary of state, told the Senate banking committee that 10 coun- tries including Canada have filed "well-founded and repeated pro- tests" agalnst the curb. He said it was ”seriously undermining ef- forts to build confidence along the whole front of our foreign policy." Canadian sales of dried whole milk. buttermilk and cream have dwindled to a small amount fol- loiving import restrictions set last December by the U. S. John Breckenridge, A lawyer representing the Northwest Nut Growers Association of Oregon and other groups, made an oppo- site argument to a House of Rep- resentatives agriculture rub-com- mittee. The Senate group is studying legislation to set up a standby system of federal economic con- trols for use when and if needed. The House group is looking into the needs of the domestic dairy industry. At issue is section 104 of the Defence Production Act. which glV95 the secrvetary of agriculture power to control imports of but- ter, cheese and other dairy prod- ucts as well as other fats and oils. some oils are produced from nuts. MONTREAL. (OP)-Thieves who stole 525.000 worth of mink coats and nearly some in cash, bonds and cheques from a wt-st.-and fur- rler during the weekend. returned the cheques Wednesday. More than a score of post-dated cheq- ues turned up at the post office's dead letter office. Police said their return. however. gave no fresh clues to solution of the theft. i when L. B. Pearson. president of 0! A MERE MAN Probe Him that He died for men. praise Him that no rose again. MAXIMS 16 PAGES The Guardian, Five Cents Morning Daily Founded 1881. illso Tlll'liV7S iSuppori Behind Truce Mines By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER” UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.. (AP). -The Soviet Union Wednesdal” made twin moves keyed in the question of peace. It threw its support to Peiplngs Korean views and made an apparent. bid to close long-standing differences on gen- eral disarmament. The disarmament action.--an in- volved situation still under study by Untied Nations delegates- iookcd like the first break in a seven-year stalemate. The West has long ds-niandedj ifool-proof control of atomic cner-l lgy and the world's ai'-mament5.i Russia's Andrei Vishlnsky Wed- nesday rapped his old-Gme hard words condemning the West on the question and accepted awcst-i erii plan calling for continued work by the UN disarmamcnt commission. omits Old-Time Demands Vishinsky also omitted any ef- forts to renew at this time the old-time Russian demands for a one-third cut in the armed forces of the Big Five powers. and for an immediate prohibition of at- omic weapons. some delegates speculated he was ready to go. along with the West in a study of plans foi' the balanced of nrmanients and putting atomic energy under definite controls ac- ceptable to all sides. In the past he has refused to accept even the plan of work put. tip by the West, to say nothinvii oil the ..estern proposals for arms contr'oi. i The United States and, Britain reacted cautiously to the Russian move and said they would study it fully. Adjourned For Easter l . reduction The Russian move on disarma- ment cante just before assembly adjourned for Easter. The ad- journment prevcnted Intiiats V. K. Krishna Menon from making a demand for the earliest. possible debate here on Red China's new truce plans. Mcnon had served notice he would make such amove in the assembly just before it ad- journed. He was out of the hall the assembly, announced several delegates said they were not ready to talk, and adjourned the assem- bly. -- Receive Appeal Front 8 Provinces OTTAWA. (OP) Ti-arisport Minister Chevrier said Wednesday in the Commons that the cabinet has received an appeal from eight provincial governments against the latest general freight rate in- crease. Announcement. that the petition has been filed was made Tuesday in Winnipeg. where it was pre- pared by officials representing .'.ll governnieni.s except those of On- tario and Quebec. Mr. Chevrier said he assumes that in due course the appeal will be set down for consideration at a cabinet meeting. OTTAWA. iCPi -- The federal governnient will cxtcndNewfound- land's salt-fish marketing system for three years with some modifi- cations. it was announced Wed- nesday in the Commons. The system. established under the terms of Confederation, is op- erated by the Newfoundland fish- eries board. which gives an ex- cluelve export licence to the New- foundland Association Fish Ex- porters. Ltd. The board's power would expire March l. 1954, but they are to be extended three years. - A Modiil " J. W. MsoNaught. parliuneritary auistant to Fisheries Minister Sinclair. said there will be these modifications: . 1. A consiiltative committee is in be established by the board to review NAF!iL's operations. It will include mpresentatives of Asher- inen. NAFEL and the Newfound- land government. 2. N'Al"liL'S inclusive export privileges will be somewhat re- striated. Most important of these chang- es, Mr. Mac.Naught said. is that sales of wet salted and pickled fish may be made directly by non- NAFBL ex-porters--including fish- ermen themselves-to the Canad- ian mainland and continental Un- ited States. PM-arranged sales are to be made by April 30 of each year to protect fishermen. If forward con- tracts are not made before April 30. purchases will be through NAFEL as at present. In announcing the extension of lty agen the arrangement. Mr. MacNaught To Extend Nfld. Salt-Fish Marketing Plan 3 Years said it is the view of Newfound- land fishermen and merchants that the provincels special prob-I lems call for some plan of organ- ized marketing. ”To try to revert to independent merchant selling next year," he said, "would be to court the clan- ger of niarket disruption--a dan- ger that would affect the Mari- times and Quebec salt fish trades as well as Newfoundland. system of organised marketing fori Newfoundland is iiecessary." Mr. MacNaught added the pro- posed modifications are aimed at meeting criticism of the NAFEL system from fishermen and others. Doubles Imm PITTSBURGH. (AP)-A new in- fluenu vaccine that doubles the period of immunity and seems to protect the human body against all known types of flu bugs has been developed at the University of Pittsburgh. the sun-Telegraph said Wednesday. The same man who last week excited the medical and lay world with announcement of it polio vec- cine headed the flu research. RA- suits of experiments conducted by Dr. Jonas Salk will be published Friday in the Journal of the Am- erican Medical Association. Dr. Salk was out of the city and un- available for comment. The ordinary household medicine eminernl oil--apparently provid- ed the "magic totlph" to prolong Strong Objections Voiced To Potato Marketing Act one of the most heated discus- sions of the session began in the Lcgisiiailtire yesterday afternoon ivlicn an amendment to the Mar- keting Act. which had previously passed the committee stage was brotigiht back for minor changes. The bill was being piloted by Mr. Haiwcv Douglas. Second King's. in the absence from the House tlii-nugih illness (nf Hon, C.C. Baker. Miiiistrr of Agriculture. Severall members, particularly on the Gov- ernment side of the House. took strong exception to the proposals. Hon, Keir Clark. Minister with- out Portfolio, Third Kings. asked hair the Legislature knew that the general farmers of the Province wanted it when there were only ap- proximately 2.200 in the Federation of Agriculture out of the 8.000 here. his WDll'ld favor the proposed leg.slatinn if the farmers really asked for it, but said he wanted to see the result of a clear plebiscite before he would support it. The amendment deals with pow- ers to be given to the Potato Mar- ketig Board to "fix and collect ser- vice charges from persons produc- ing. packing, transporting, storing or marketing the regulated prodwot; and for this purpose to classify such persons into groups. and fix the service charges payable by the mcmbcrs of tlic dil”fel'etit groups in different am'ounls having regard to the volume: and to recover such service charges by action". Mr. Clark instanced the Nova Scntia Apple Marketing Board and said that after it came into being his firm had to pay 32.00 per bar- Legislature To Prorogue At Noon The Provincial Legislature l0 scheduled to prorngiie at noon to- day. Last night the hciise complet- ed detailed study of the estimates in committee and adjourned to meet again at l0 this morning. A composite guard of honor from members of the reserve forces will provide the traditional military display. Capt. L.G. MacNevin will be ill command. The band of tin P.E.I. Regiment will be in attend- ance under command of Capt. Reg- inald Mahar witih Bandirnilatei Thomas MucFarlane in charge. A salute will be fired from Fort Edward at 12 noon. Major C.l-f. Kydd. M. C. will be in charge of the. party with Capt. J.G. Lacey, second in command. The Legislature opened March 3. rnl more for the apples he purch- ased. He said the apple growers got rid of the Board. The speaker was very critical of the Potato Marketing Board and asked how a group holding six meetings in four months could keep its fingers on the market pulse. De- spite the heavy sliipmenvts of pota- toes this season he believed there would have been another 1.000 care sent. out if they had not been art- ificially kept, off the market, . He maintained that the real price 7 c7aKt'intieri'6ii"PEeVi Fchi.-27 Stresses Need For Show Building At Exhibition The urgency of constructing a new show building with a seating capacity of four or five thousand people on the Provincial Exhibi- tion Association grounds. was stressed in the Legislature last. night. by Premier J. Walter Jones during the consideration of the mtimates. Premier Jones brought up the matter when the amount of 510,- 000 for the Exhibition Association was noted in the estimates. He explained that there is a three- way working agreement between the Provincial and Federal Gov- ernments and Exhibition Associa- tion by which each contributes 510.000 5. year towards the con- struction of buildings. This plan has been in operation for three years and will run another two or three years. The Premier envisioned the new building as being 190 by l65 feet. in he used for indoor exhibits and for the show of machinery as well as for livestock shows on wet days. He also stated that. the building could be used for selling cattle. It would be a central placc for buy- rrs to buy cattle at least. once a. week and as such would serve to cut out the extra tirovers' charges. He added that it would eliminate the practice of crrovers driving in- to the farmer's yard and taking advantage of a rising market. Tim Premier stated that he would like to see seven, eight or a dozen places in the province ll'l”lFT8 central cattle sales could be held each year. i Asked by Mr. B. Earle MacDon- aid iI,ib.. Fifth Queens) if the biiildlitr were to be started this "car tlic Premier rcpllcd that ll" lioard lite lll0n8(t' was going into the supplementary estimates and that he would vote for if Mr. Mar-Donald suggested that the building should be made larg- er for liockey. The I,rl!:lSlallll'P concluded its consideration of the estimates last some 1 night and trill meet again at ti-iii olclrick this morning. The House will he prurogucd at noon. l'rze Road Improvement SPl'Pl'lil nlPl'l'll)PP8 made strong pleas for the improvement of roads New Influenza Vaccine unity Period the effectiveness of the vaccine and enable it to knock out. more flu bugs. reported the Sun-Teic- graph. continuing: Preliminary studies have shown that the vaccine. containing vvir- uses hntched in chick embryos and emulsified in light mineral oil. provides protection for at least two years. The latest tests of the new var- cine were conducted on thousands of soldiers in army installations. Earlier experiments had been con- ducted since 1950. Although it is made in I differ- cnt way, the flu-vaccine acts on the same principle as the polio in their districts during the com- lng year. Mr.- George saville. (Lib. Fifth King's) stressed the need of paving the road from Dundas in Annandale and also from Wood Islands in Montague. Mr. Keir Clark (Liib.. Th.ird Kings) and MY. John A. MacDon- ald (P.C.. Third King's) asked for the paving of the road between Cardigan and Dundas. Mr. Mac- Donald also asked that the road from Wood Islands to Souris be pavcd so that King's County could reap some of the benefits of the (Continued on Page 15 Col.-A534 ---H- I W You Atwtts Follow tilt: CROWD Youii. NEVER ctizf V do data Fuouf 9 TORONTO. iCPi -- Minimum and maximum it,-nipci'atiii'cs; Xlirl. Man Dawson :7 Victoi'la. 35 50 Ednionton 24 42 Calgary 24 41 Rr-'.',lllFi 27 44 Winnipeg . . .'ll iii Toronto . 44 51 Ottawa 13 34 Montreal 42 50 Quebec M 47 Saint John .. its 49 Moncton 31 -16 Halifax -ii an Charlottetown . 32 40 Sydney . 33 S2 Yannrouth . . . 42 4.2 St. John's, Nfld. . M 40 lMl.IFAX. vCl'lt . . Oilicial int"- msia issued hy the Dontlnmn WM- ther Office and valid im'til Thurs- day midnight: Prince Edward Island. New Brun- swick. Bay of Fhaleur: Variable clmidlness; continuing very mllri; light winds: low-high at Edmund- ston and (lnmpbellton 35 and 50. Fredericton 40 and 53. Saint John 40 and 55. Outlook for Good Fri- day. cloudy. Bay of Fundy: Might winds: cloudy with fog patches: v'isihillt.,V Plight mules lowering in fog patches to aihoui. one quarter mile. mild. High tide today at Charlottetown at 12.42 A. M. and 12.13 P. M. High tide on the North shore at 7.02 A. M. and 7.55 P. M. summersldc tide eighteen min- uteo later than Charlottetown. vaccine. The vaccine mode the body to produce antibodies and the antibodies fight. off the flu. sun rises today it 6.43 A. as. and sets at 6.41 P. M. u-.-....aaa-,-. l...:-.... 1-,.