GOVERNMENT FOR THE new is us A-BOUT THROUGH Ma xims ol a More Man Cdtalrttki-thtlllse. .Yl0lI PIOPl.I'I PAPII -3-? 3 i. the A III IV IVIIVIOIV Covers Prince Edward Island Like The Dow 16 PAGES ,. Public Health Association Convene C oming Events "Your Saturday night Jamboree -Forum. "Dance in Mlilview Hall every Friday night. "Dance in Cardross School. Friday. May 20. Good music. ”Crokinole pa rty, Wheatley liver ball tonight. "Regular Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. "Cake Sale today. 3. A. Mc- Donald's. 130. Trinity Junior W. A. "Dance in Kelly's Cross School. Monday. May 23rd. Sale of lunches. "New Argyle Variety Concert in Canoe Cove Hall. Monday. May lard. "Rismniage sale at Y.M.C.A, today. 8 p.m. Sponsored by Jun- ior W. A. "Dance. Mount Stewart Mc- morial hall tonight. Canteen. Burns Orchestra. "Dance. Iourls Line Road South lchool. Monday. May 3rd. Good music. "Rummage Sale Friday. May 20th. 7 p. in. St. Peters Cathedral Parish Hall. "Reserve July lith. Acadlans Bi-Centennial tlons at south nuatico. "Don't forget Covehesd load Variety Concert. Marshfield I-fall. tonight. "Gram! Bingo. St. Andrew's Hall, Mi. Stewart. Monday. May 33rd. 2) games. Door prise. "in stock-Barb and Page Wire. Clover Seeds. Westun had Oats. W. l. Bowman. "Conservative Headquarters are located on Queen Street. next to Pennell at Chandler. Dial 9717. h' lie Celebra- "Dance Vernon hall Monday. May as. MacDonald and Mor- rimy Orchestra. ifxeliyls Cross Players present their 3 act comedy play h, Afton Hall. Tuesday. May 14th. "Pantry Sale. H ' , Friday. MW nub 3-39 P. at. York Point Women's Institute. "Reserve Friday, My Zion Scout and Cub food 8. A. MacDonald's. "Dance in St. Peter's Holy Name Hl"- Chaluon's Orchestra. Cliff Peters at the piano H Ilay Nth. "Dance in It Peter's Holy Name Hill. Chaisson's Orchestra. Cliff Peters at the piano on May nth. "see Annaof Iraaa Cables II. for sale at F"-HM Trinity an to s:.r.':?:? Ea. "W "57"- "D in Emerald ha mm :3 and all gone In- "'0 Nun ' o-"r3ly":'4u””Yli'u"”"'”m”" i &..'t'.'.a..”” :'u.aI W. . - Stewart. Cherry Hm. "ill born. Ohm East. P ' i to the third meeting of the New Brunswick- Prince Edward Island Branch. Canadian Public Health Associat- ing to begin sessions today. Pictur- ed left to right are the members of the executive: Vice president, A. J. Cameron. B.Sc.. sanitary en- gineer for the Province of New Brunswick; 2nd vice-president. Dr. A. M. Clark. D.P.H.. New Bruns- wick; secretary treasurer, Miss Dorothy Cox. P.H.N.. Prince Ed- ward lsland; Miss Mons Wilson, director of Public Health Nursing. Prince Edward island; Dr. J. A. Melanson. deputy minister of Health. New Brunswick. Missing from the picture is the president. Dr. 0. H. Curtiss. who is absent at a World Health Organization conference in Mexico. After the delegates who were about seventy in k had checked in, they proceeded to the Y.M.C.A.. where registration and a get acquainted party took place. A full program is before delegates when the meeting opens at 9.30 under the chairmanship of the vice president. A. J. Cameron. The delegates will be welcomed to the City by Mayor Stewart at a luncheon at the Charlottetown when Dr. Frank Macl(lnnon will be the guest speaker. The high- light of the meeting will be a talk by Dr. D. R. E. MacLeod of Cott- naught Laboratories. Toronto who will speak on the subject. "Salk Vaccine and Gamma Globulin." A lobster supper at 7.00 o'clock will be served at the Charlottetown. Barter's Film Lab. A meeting was held in the Board Room at the Provincial Department of Agriculture on Wednesday evening to consider the possibility of the Provincial Plowing Match Association endor- sing the organization of the Can- adian Council of Plowing Asso- ciations. Representatives w e r e present from the Provincial Plow- ing Match. the Queen's County Plowing Match and the Federa- tion of Agriculture, as well as the Department of Agriculture. Mr. Alex McKinney. Jr., of Brampton, Ont.. who is the pro- "Showing at Mt. Stewart. Friday and Saturday-Desert Rats-the battle of Toburk starring James Mason. Also next Tuesday, A Queen is Crowned. "Don't miss seeing the Vernon River Players present their three act play "The Little Clod-Hop per" in Vernon River hall Tues- day. May 24. Good specialties. Dance after. Curtain 3:30. ””The Irish Millionairc." a 8- act comedy-farce by Cornwall Players. in Cherry Valle Ju 3rd 8 y gull; . ll! . I0 3””-ny ii.” Valley Y. P. "At Howl's Hall. Brackley Point Friday. May I). Cornwall Players present "The Irish Mil- lionaire". Curtain I215. Admis- doa 5 and so. "The Red Rooster Restaurant CGIII IIIIIIOT any I. from 1I:& to 8 p.m., standard time. Dinner 81.50. -Wetsnaa dues, Clover Club. Ila) . Oouplu only; Dancing no to I o'clock. Tickets may be purchased from Legion canteen 01' from IN I150! H the iigp TNEO ion arrived in the City last even-i the ' annual: --t-'--m T--m No Reports On New ice Field ST. JOHN'S. Nf1d.. (CPi.Trsils of ice continued to move along the northeast coast of Newfoundland Thursday but there were no re- ports from Labrador settlements where a 120-mile-long ice field is . working south. A small iceberg and loose ice- ; pans temporarily disrupted ferry service Wednesday between Port- : ugnl Cove and Bell island, in Con- Cention bay. immediately north of here. The ice is the left over of a big Arctic ice jam that paralyzed sg ipplng on the northeast coast for fi e weeks earlier this spring. A new ice field was sighted sev- eral days ago pouring down the coast nf Labrador and squeezed inltn the 10-mile strait of Belle 8 C. FOUND IN BOXCAR SUDBURY. Ont. (CF) - A 50- year-old Sudbury man was found almost dead of starvation Wednes- day in a railway box car near Westree. 100 miles northwest of here. provincial police said. Philip Rainville, who had been missing from his home since May 1, was discovered by workmen when they prepared to load pulpwood into the b . car. police said. The man. ex- tremely weak and suffering from n-italiiutrltion. was brought to hoa- pi e . Discuss Canadian Council Of Plowing Associations visloiial president of the Canadian Council of Plowing Associations, was present and gave a very comprehensive outline ol the ob- jectives of such a council. The two principal objectives are: (1) To organize an annual Can- adlan Championship Contest. (21 To provide a means of se- lecting two Canadian champion- ship piowmon truly representative of all Canada to compete in world playing matches. Many mailers in connection with the formation and duties of this association were discussed. and it was finally decided by a vote of the meeting that the Pro- vlnclal Plowing Association pn- dorse the formation of the Cana- dian Council of Plowing Matches. Each Provincial Association has the privilege of naming a direc- for to the Canadian Council. and it was decided by the meeting that Mr. Leslie Hunter of Bridge- town be named as a director. (Continued on page 2 col. 1) OTTAWA, (CPl- The St. Law- rence seaway grmind-breaking ceremonies. planned for the latter part of June. were cancelled be- cause of high costs involved. ses- way officials said Thursday. Prime Minister St. Laurent and Piesident Eisenhower were to have participated in the event wall. 0nt.. and the opposite side of the St. Lawrence at Mas- sena. N. Y. Officials said that when a Can- adian-Asnerican committee began investigating the costs of what was to have 'heen a ."grand show." they found they would run to about lN.000-on be shared an a sentive. Cancel Seawa which was to have taken place at said. Corn Q-I proper cele'bs-stinn of CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, MAY 1). 1955 TORONTO BANK OL-Ellll MANAGER. BANOITS SHOOT ITOUT Parliament At A Glance I1 Till CANADIAN PRESS ursday . Prime Minister It. Laurent said appointm i of a commission to s.CCOI'lBldGl' vernment radio and TV policies being contemplated. Mrs. Ellen Fairclough (PC-- Hamilton West) said the govern- ment should put its advisory couri- cil on manpower to work to help solve unemployment. Clarle Gillls (CCF-Cape Breton South) proposed establishment of industrial councils to find ways of offsetting results of industry mech- anization. c Senalo Norman Lambert (L- Ontario) said reform of the Senate is long overdue and should receive early government attention. Friday The Commons - 'l resume de- bate on labor ii 'iment esti- mates. The Senate is adjourned until Tuesday. YHl1I10ll1'lItT.0bsfOl' Fishermen Quit-ring YARMOUTH. N.S. (CP) - The in. 'er fishing season in this dis- trict of western Nova Scotia is not due in close until May 31 but low prices and poor catches had rompted scores of fishermen to quit Thursday. Indications are that few if any will be out next week. The price of 35 cents a pound was regarded by many fishermen as too low to More Soldiers Pressed lnio Fight Against Flood BRANDON. Man. (CPl-Nearly 300 soldiers set up camp Thursday on the banks of the flooding Asslni- holne river. (0 miles west of Winni- peg. and began throwing up sand- bag defences on top of weakening river dike.-i. Further west. at Portage La Prairie, Mayor H. L. Hendcrsonl said the Sioux Indian village on the mile earth wall protecting rich farmland along the trans-Canada highway. The additional army aid was te- duested Thursday by the provincial government. An army spokesman said the men would remain on the job "until it is done." 5 . T . city's southeastern outskirts faced lI"gh"""g Kms a "critical situation." the result of eroding river banks. Floodwalers have eaten away several sections. some 40 feet long. and many homes were in danger of falling into the river. The river rose 3?-Q inches over- night at Portage La Prairie. boost.- ing the level more than 22 inches since the last peak May 4. EXPECT NEW CREST The last crest is sweeping easi- ward and the Assinlboine is ex- pected to rise another lib feel at Portage La Prairie by. Saturday. the highest level since 1923. At Brandon. the river held steady overnight while workmen poured another foot of gravel, clay and concrete into the city's two- mile diking system. The top of the dikes is now 15 inches above the river level. The soldiers, members of the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery of Winnipeg. commanded by Maj. Buff Cameron of Red Deer, Alta,. augmented a force of so other soldiers sent to the area Wednes- mske fishing worthwhile. day to help provincial government engineers stop eepages in the UA- Polls lnclicaie E,clen's LONDON; (AP)- Two baromet- ms of political I ' ubllc opinion polls a stock mar- ket-indicated .'l'liui-sd . that many Britons believe 'Pr roe Min- ister Eden's Conservative party will win the May as general elec- tions. Opposition Laborites remained unconvinced. The Socialist candi- dates and party workers pointed out that "elections are won in the ballot boxes and not by the black type of Conservative newspapers." The public opinion polls-often remarkably accurate in the past- showed a mounting Tory tide. The poll-takers predict that such a trend. if it continues and is real- ized on election day, would boost the Conservative margin in the House of Commons to from 30 to 100 seats. The stock exchange reacted to upward surge Wednesday particu- larly in the industrial list. The Conservatives won a 17-seat. House of Commons majority in the-' last election. in 1951, but fell be- hind Labor in the total popularl Battle Brush Fire BRLDGEWATER. N.S. iCP) - Municipal firemen fought a run- ning battle all day Thursday to keep a bush' fire on the outskirts of this south shore town away from a nest of oil storage tanks and at dusk the outcome was still in doubt. Boyd Wagner, a 19-year-old olunteer firefighter. was taken to Dawson Memorial Hospital suffering from burns received in the fight. Several hnuscs in the district were imperllied half a dozen times but later reports in- dicated they were out of danger. HEARS INSURANCE MEN MONTEBELLO. Que. (CPI-E. C. Gill of Toronto Wednesday was elected president of the Canadian Life "insurance office.-rii' Associa- tion. at the annual meeting here. Mr. Gill is president of the Can- ada Life Assurance Company. y Ceremony Seaway Authority and the U. I. st. Lawrence Seaway Develop- ment Corporation. "That figure appeared to be rather high. particularly in view of the fact that we would have to have another ceremony when the seaway is completed perhaps at the and of not." one informant A ground-breaking observance on the power phase of the seaway took place last August. The ugway Lu monies were cancelled May 0 in an announce- ment which said they were post- poned indefinitely by "unforeseen and unpredictable obatagaa to the the Conservative prospects with an: Gov't Will Be Returned vote. The Laborites believe they still have most of that backing. OTTAWA, (CP)-Canada's two largest labor congresses have called for wider unemployment insurance coverage and for higher maximum benefit payments. They appeared before the Com- mons industrial relations commit- tee, which is t..nsidering a gav- ernmcnt bill overhauling Canada's unemployment insurance legisla- ion. The Trades and Labor congress of Canada. in a brief read by re- srzircii director Leslie Wismer. said coverage should be extended to all Canadian workers. At pres- ; ent. it applies to about .'i..'i72,000 persons out of a total force of 5,200,000. The Canadian Cuiiqrcss of Lab- or said coverage should be ex- tended at least to employees of hospitals and charitable institu- tions. It accused the government of "lsck of moral fibre" in sc- coding to representations from such institutions opposing this move. - - - working 3 Four School Boys KINGVILLE. Tex.. (AP)- Four high school boys were killed by lightning on a school playground here Thursday. A teacher and 42 other boys. and a group of girls were knocked from their feet by the bolt. One boy. Jose Espinoza. 14. was taken to hospital. The others were unin- jured. but some of them suffered from shock. The dead: David Rojas. 18: Estanislad Barrera. 14; Israel Prado. 14, and James Martinez, 4. I Automobile Color Schemes pDl:TROIT (CP) - Top automo- tive experts forecast Thursday that two and three - tone color schemes will continue in vogue on next year's automobiles, but the garish reds. yellows and purples will be toned down. The color stylists said the new colors used on this year's models are one of the major reasons w L955 car sales have reached an a - time high. but. they said the colors may be a bit too bright. ' Woman object to some of the bright exteriors because they have too much trouble matching their clothes to the car, they said. Labor Groups Ask Wider Unemployment Benefits On the question of maximum benefit rates. both congresses agreed they should be hoisted sharply. The maximum under the bill would be 830 a week for a worker with dependents. The TLC urged that it be in- creased to 66 2-3 per cent of a worker's salary. declaring :30 a week is ”litile more than a sub- sistance payment" for those in the higher pay brackets. The CCL said the maximum should be at least to per cent of earnings. Both ionk exception to the gov- ernment's intention in the bill to reduce to 30 from 51 the maxi- mum number of weeks in which an unemployed person can draw benefits. The Candaian Brotherhood of Railway Employees CCL also np- posed the suggested change. Vice- presl” Elroy Robson said it would strike at railway workers forced to retire at 65. Want Teaching Profession Made More Attractive By Pauline Kennedy SASKATOON. (CP) -- Teaching must be made more attractive for young people financially and in the matter of prestige. Mrs. 0.W. Mitchell of Toronto told the an- nual meeting of the National Coun- cil of Women Thursday. She said the time has come from classroom teachers to be relieved of extra-curricular . ” ilitles. Future Teacher Clubs have been formed in high schools to give stu- dents the opportunity of examining the advantages and opportunities offered in 'ieachin'g.' she taldl ' Through these clubs students get a chance to try out simple class- room instruotion. . . . PAY IONUI "Rural schools suffer most from the teacher shortage." Mrs. Mitch- all said. trhaps other areas would benefl from British Colum- bla's practice of paying isolation bonuses of OS) I month above the regular salary as a method of attracting more tascbe .." Beatrice Bridgen of Winnipeg. reporting on the national council arts and letters committee. said there is an outstanding need now for more adequate and modern ae- comrnodatlon for little theatre lumps. art-ilallieras and hobby craft workshops. Miss Brigden sale local emin- Kiiiri iii: IHEETL l aaaafnl field of work in planning rind as- tablishing such centres. Receives Award Miss Mary Nadine Maclnnis. of Soilris. P.E.I.. who received her diploma in Public Health Nursing from Dalhoiisie University on May 17. Miss Maclnnls was chosen by the School of Nursing at Dalhousie as winner of the Lantn G. Hall Memorial Award, offered by the Registered Nurses' Association of Nova Scotia for high academic TORONTO. (CP)-A 25- PRICE Sc KILLED WHEN year-old bank clerk, caught in the cross-fire between a determined manager and two holdup men, was shot in the back and killed shortly after noon Thursday. Allan John Hannam, it bank employee for six years. fell to the floor of the Toronto-Dominion bank at mid- town Dundas and McCauli streets when a bullet hit him near the shoulder blade. punctured a lung and name out his chest. He died a few minutes later. The bullet. fired at close range. came either from a .22 - calibre rifle carried by one bandit, the bank manager's .38 - calibre re- volver nr a revolver witnesses said the other hanriit fired after he dropped it slioictin. ONE WOUNl)F.D One of the liiinriils was wounded as he and iv: companion made their escape with about 32.000 they had scooped into a bag. Their get- away car tins iouiiil 8l)3l'l(lf)i'led on a west-end street an hour later and there was blood on the seat. Police began a house to house search of the area Bank maiiaizer William David- son said lie was sitting in his office when one of the bznriiis. wearing sunglasses niiil carrying a sawed- off shotgun entered and demanded "the money." Davidson said as he went out he picked up an inkwcll and threw it through the plate glass window to attract attention. He noticed standing and general proficiency. Misa Maclnnls is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Maclnnls of Souris. there was another man standing at the door with a rifle. "When the man with me couldn't get into the first cage he went BUENOS AIRES (AP) - The Argentine House at Deputies voted 13 to 12 Thursday night to separ- ate the Roman Catholic Church -from the state. The vote came after two days of debate on the crucial issue of the ” ' between Pr ” Juan D. Peron and the church. Thursday night's session ended with a noisy ro-Peron demonstra- tion. Peron imself is ill with influenza and confined to his home. Deputies in the chamber shouted "Peron. Peron" and pounde1 their desks to celebrate the major initial victory for the Pernistas over the church. Action by the deputies was the first but most important hurdle for the proposal to eliminate the rights and privileges granted Cath- qolicism under the constitution. Peron last November accused some mcmhcrs of the clergy of seeking to undermine his regime. The church has denied the accusa- tlon. Congressional procedure calls for the proposal to go from the House to the Senate to Peron for Causewny To Open Tocloy HALIFAX. (CPI -- Highviays Minlstcr A. W. Mackenzie said Thursday night the Canso cause- way In Cape Breton island would be open lnr vehicular traffic at l p.m. ADT today. The minister said there would be no special ceremony to herald the first trip over the 7,000-loot land bridge by cars and trucks and the vehicular ferries taken out of service. Trains hair her-n using the causeway since last Saturday. The formal opening of the 523,- 000,000 link hciwocn the island and the Nova Scotia mainland is Mrs. Wendell Colpiiis, Mom-ion.innt schcdulcrl until Aug. ll. It is N. 8.. national chalrman.of radioibeing opcned now to road traffic and television. proposed that the council do a Canada-wide survey last month of the vehicle fire ferry partly due to the loss in a of radio and television programs. lJohn Cabot. Argentina House Votes To Separate Church, State to the next one and l ducked Tim: the vault and grabbed a gun. FIRED SHOT "I fired a shot at tho man at the door and I fired more shots as the men ran out. Then i ran alter them down the street and fired into the back of the car." Hnnam. a single man whose mother had warned him to till" his job because she -laid ,it. was dangerous, was standing near the teller's cages when the shooting started. He fell, blood pouring from his chest. It was the third bank holdup he had been in. - Taxi drivers. alerted by "'9" dispatcher.'took up the chase but followed the wrong car. Police cruisers later found.a car about two miles north-west of the bank. A sawed-off .12-calibre rifle and the car keys were found on the street. N. sfcoai Meeting Today HALIFAX. (CF)-Top brains el government. industry and labor who took up qliarters in hotels here Thursday night may today decide the future of Nova Scotia'a faltering coal industry. They will gather around a con- slgnature. The government then would call an election to select members of a National Auembly to rewrite the nstltution. If this is do all financial aid to Catholic sc is will be can- celled and the kmall salaries paid inals. bishops and a few other clerumen will be discontinued. from government funds to cnrd- 8" ference table It a government of- fice at 10 am. to deal with prob- lems that have brought. the indul- try to its bleakeet days. The talks may last all day. The prospect that will face the province's 10.000 miners when the delegates riaa are still anf J 'a ess. . . Few of the delegates were will- ing to speculate before the mee 2.400 Grade 2 Pupils Receive Polio Vaccine In the third round of polio in- munizatiou clinics held this week by the Health Department, 2400 and; 1 pupils throughout the province received their first in- oculation of Salk vaccine. Many parents remarked how pleased they were when they nerird that enough polio vaccine was avail- able to inoculate the children in Grade 2 as well as those of Grade i. There were also 530 Grade 1 pupils given polio inoculations who missed these last month. 1106 in- fants and young children attend- ed the school clinics too. to re ceive protection against diphtheria. whooping cough. tetanus and smallpox. Paper Mil Workers To Take Strike Vere CORNER BROOK. Nflri. (Cl")-- Twelve hundred union employees voted Wednesday night to call a strike vote .lune 2 against the world's biggest paper mill unless the Bowaters company gives ground in a job dispute. Local M of the International Brotherhood of Pulp. Sulphite and Paper Mill Workers are demand- ing that Eowaters reverse a deci- sion which bans union members from the particular Job of unload- ing wood boats calling here. U. S. Ponders Polio Moves Number Of Cases Higher WASHINGTON (APT-A series of official and unofficial statements Thursday dashed hopes for an early resumption of Salk vaccine shipments to keep the US. anti- polio campaign going. A spokesman for the U.S. public health service. which controls re- lease of the vaccine from manufag- lurers. reported that it will be ft least next week before any sh p- ments are resumed. Eli Lilly Co. of lndisnpolis. to another statement, said it did not expect government a roval of any more of its vacc ne before May 19. and that its scientists have decided on further tests because of the "public hysteria." ' Representative Harley Itauers (Dem.-W.Vn.) said he had assur- ances from the "highest compe- ient public health aut orities" at there is nothing to worry about in the immunization program. CONFUSED SITUATION When New York city authorities opened their clinics Thursday for school children scheduled to get their initial inoculation. 31 per cent of the children failed to show up. Dr. Morris Greenberg. in charge of the program. said he thought an important factor in the absences was the "confused national situa- tlon." While government-approved sup- plies of vaccine are dwindling throughout the country. the public health service is taking what one spokesman described Wednesday as "another look-see at this whole very confuiiin picture." Another apo esman said Thurs- day that after coin letlon this week of the plant-by-p ant inspec- tiooefthaflvensanufa uuh F GROWING-VOTE l the reappraisal of previously cleared lots of vaccine. the gov- ernment ieam will return to Wash- ington and "begin to apply more refined standards and test data to materials on hand." CASES INCREASE Meanwhile the number of cases increased in the United States. The public health service reported there were sos new polio cases in the week ended May it. This was a 30-per-cent increase over the pre- vious week and compared with ill cases in the second week of May last year and a five-year average of US for the same Period. But the numb of developing after ' ocu ttoa with the Salk vaccine remained un- changed at 77. A health an-vice spokesman said almost s.0tli.tM laualatioashavonowbaaauvu. Iaaertadh BERAL inii. some said they were gel with open minds and none wan to discuss their ideas. CONTRMKY Yo Pueue opinion It fwirric OFFICER is A Human Berna Q TORONTO iCPieMinimum and maximum temperatures: Min. Max. Dawson . Vancouver .. Victoria . Edmonton . Calgary . Regina . Winnipeg .. Toronto . Ottawa . Montreal .. Quebec Fredericton . Saint John .. Moncton . .. Halifax . .. Charlottetown . Sydney Yarmouth . St Johns . . . . . . . . . . . . .. HALIFAX (CP)eThe Dominion weather office says today is love- cast to be fine and cooler in all parts of the district. Forecasts: Prince Edward Island. eastern N.B. counties. st. John river VII- kyg, lay of Chalenr: Sonny and cooler: winds west 15. law-III at Charlottetown II II If. 3939' ton as sad It. Fredericton II III 52. saint John ll am ll. IIRII5 Item and Campbelltel 8:” --I tlierii Nova Scotia: my C coNI:': west winds 13. low-hlnll at New Glasgow as and 9!. . any of Fundy: West winds 15. clear: vlaibilit! 15 mil": W" ehanlo h temperature. my. ad; hday at Charlotte- town at 8.36 s. m. and 9.57 p. m.; at Rintico at 4 a. at. and 0.41 p. m. ' '-' tide eighteen min- atu later than Charlottetown. The no rises today at 4.3 a. I. out Q at 7.0 p. m. S?&23S3i if-'&'a'3S?i3333i933 id 49 47 50 45 53 54 . 45 47 46 43 44 44 44 46 17 45 I2 Provllddlrltrdlnaj . ,:.-... .-- 3fKhMrses.. s...