wuohbsdlnonwork. alone men an tlsgtools with I The Pe Read Everybody MAXIMS MAXIMS , 01" A or A MERE MAN" MERE MAN Nothing is more hopeless than a scheme of usvl 'inent. x . Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLQTTETOWN. CANADA. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1953 The Guardian. Five Cents ly carrier: Charlottetown, lununerlido 010.00 per annuni. Elsewhere Morning Daily Founded 1881. In r.n.x. use. Other Provinces and o.s.s. new pet uunun.) 14 PAGES' PPOSITION SAYS ABBOTT BUDGET FOR THE W Debate Bill. OF T U. S. Experts British, Belgi Training afns And Dutch In Atom Warfare By GEORGE BOULTWOOD EONN. Germany, (AP)-United States experts are training the British. Belgian and Dutch armies in offensive and defensive atomic warfare. Gen. Sir Richard Gale re- vealed Tuesday night. Gale. who commands the three- country northern army group un- der NATO, told a press conference that this was a "new develop- ment." thus indicating that the United states is giving more atomic information than before to her allies. He said groups of American soldiers were attached to various levels of his command. ”They know exactly how much they can and cannot say with security," he said. Two Main Jobs Tile general said these American groups had two jobs: 1. To advise commanders and their staff on the effect atomic weapons available to the west would have on an enemy so that they made the right tactical plans. 2. To help train the troops to lake defensive measures against enemy atomic weapons. The northern army group con- sists of four British and three Bel- gian divisions in Germany and I Dutch corps in The Netherlands. Gale said that nuclear warfare is taken into account in all training and planning. A-Weapons Available "We know that a certain quan- tity ni atomic weapons will be available to us. This fact is being considered in our higher level training and we are also getting technical advice on both-the offen- sive and defensive aspects. "If one has a few atomic bombs the findings of suitable targets will not be beyond the wit of man and it will make a tremendous differ- ence to the campaign. "W9 are going to stage demon- strations in Germany as that the troops will know what to do to avoid being badly burned or in- jured. We can do nothing about direct hits, of course. and that applies to any weapon." Quebec Gives 535.000 For Flood Relief QUEBEC. (OP)-The legislature gave unanimous approval Tuesday to a government bill authorizing the Quebec government to make a 385,000 donation to the national relief fund established to assist victims of Europe's flood disaster. Premier Duplessls said the gift was small in comparison with the magnitude oi the disaster but that it comes "straight from the heart." Coming Events "Crokinolo Party tonight. Cherry Valley. Ausplces Y. P. U. "Hampton Hall, Variety Con- cert, February 21th. Aid of Hall. "Try our Purina Finance plan for feeding your hogs and poultry. Preferred Helping Indians To Life On ll.lf. Estate An 83-year-old missionary who chose to work among the Indians on s Muskoks. ont.. reserve rather than claim an extensive estate in Yorkshire, England, died recently in Bracebridge, 0nt.. hospital. Educated in France and Belgium. Rev. William Kendall iorsook a law career to come to Canada as a. missionary student. He never re- turned to England but spent the rest. of his life on the reserve with his Indian wife, who died in 1946. Banks To Handle chequestamp Refunds (5'I'rAWA. (OP)-The Revenue Department. overwhelmed with in- dividual requests for cheque stamp refunds. has obtained the agree- ment of all chartered banks to act as collection agencies. From now on, any person seek. ing refunds on the three-cent stamps can get them from the nearest bank. a revenue official said. The three-cent stamp tax was repealed in Finance Minister Ab- bott's 1060-64 budget brought down Kb. 10. The Canadian Bsnkers' Associa- tion agreed Monday to have the banks act as local collection agencies, the official said. Prominent Canadian Author Bios At 75 DIGBY, N. 8., (GP)-Dr. Theo- dore Goodridgc Roberts, '75. one of Canada's 10 top authors. died at his home here Tuesday follow- ing a brief illness. A brother oi the late sir Char- les 0. D. Roberts and n cousin of Bliss Carmen. Mir. Roberts was Dillon and Spillett. "Come to the masquerade car- nivsl in North River Rink Mon- day. March 2nd. "French River concert in Sea- view hall Friday. Nb. 27th in aid of rink. "Hockey - North River Rink. Thurldly. 030 P. M. Nine Mile Creek-Milton Hornets. sponsored by Kingston Branch Canadian Legion. Proceeds for Flood Relief Fund. "Buying pigs Monday at Fred- ericton. paying 020.00 a pair for good pigs over 40 lbs each. Will also buy smaller ones. Knud Jor- aemon. ' "Amateur shur Gain Cavalcade in lrookdsld Hail. March llbth. Sand entries to Alice Dollar before Mlrenoth. "Hockey at North River Rink Wednesday. February nth. Mll- ion Hornets vs. Psi-kdsls Bomb- the author of numeous poems, short stories and novels. A native oi Fredericton, his novels started to appeal in the 1000's and he soon became known as the author of thrilling adven- ture tales. His books included "The Red Pirogue”. "The Fighting Stark- lsys". "The Harbor Master". "Hon- est Pool". A son oi the late George Good- rldge Roberts and Emma Wctmore Bliss Roberts. Mr. Robert: received, his education in public schools in Fredericton and at the University question after I5,000 For House Repairs Defencellepl. Puls Blame On Brig. Connolly OTTAWA (OP)-Brig. AlsnOori- nelly was idennaed officially Tues- day as the officer adjudged ”ii-re- sponsible" in the use oi public funds in 315,000 worth of repairs. made to a House in Regina in 1951 when only 3800 was author- ized. The Commons defence commit- tee got that information on the record through a last-minute CCF tip-toeing around the issue. Brig. Connelly. a 44-year-old engineer from Calgary, was retired from the army last fall on the grounds that there was no further employment for him. Opposition members have charg- ed that he was fired to appease government "embarrassment" over the dispatch of Canadian troops to Koje Island, off Korea. to guard Red prisoners. They say he was let out because he wrote, rather than wired. the information he got as liaison offi- cer in Tokyo and because the gov- ernment learned about the move after it was on the way. Separate Issue The Regina issue is separate from Kole. It came up in the com- mittee on the basis of summzrized reports of the defence department”; auditors about various irregului. ties in army administration. One consisted of expenditures of between 310.000 and 315,000 on the area commanderls house in Re- gina. The auditor-general. in on earlier report on the same inci- dent. said 315,000 was spent al- though only 5800 was authorized. Army comments appended to the" report said "....A board oi offi- cers convened to investigate this matter and it was found that there had been a degree of irresponsibil- ity in the use oi public funds... the .area commander concerned is no longer in the service." C.C.F. Question It was obvious that every mem- ber of the 26-man committee knew the identity of the officer but it remained for E.W. Herridge (Ceri- Kootemy West) to bring it to a head when he asked whether the officer under discussion was Brig. Connelly. Elgin Armstrong, assistant dep- uty minister of defence. said he was. Up to then members have been raising questions about the matter without naming Brig. Connelly sl- ihwah some members suggested that he should be identified. Mr. Armstrong said the house in question was purchased in 1961 on authority oi the chief of the gen- eral staff for 014.000. It was to serve as a home for the area com- mander, the job Brig. Connelly held. Evidence indicated. he said. that the area commander himself auth- orized most of the repaiiis. An auditorls report in February. 1052. touched off invutigatlon. 4-Cent Tax To Remain 0n Quebec Cigarels , QUEBEC, (GP)-A Quebec Fi- nance Department official says Quebec's provincial tax on cigar- ets will remain at four cents for a package of 20, despite a two-cent cut in retail prices Monday by manufacturers. Quebec law provides for a sales tax on clgarots oi 10 per cent of the retail price. It also authorizes the government to charge a full cont where the tax amounts to a fraction of a. cent. With cigarets now retailing at 33 cents a pack. the provincial tax comes to 3.3 cents. However, Que- . of New Brunswick. He received a honorsr degree of doctor oi literature from U.N.B. in 1000 He married Frances Seymour Allen. daughter of Rev. Thomas Allen. Moncton, in 1006 and they had one son and two daughters. bee smokers will pay the full four cents. bringing the retail price in Quebec to 3'1 cents against as cents in provinces where there are no provincial taxes. Before the iour'-cent budget out last week. clgarets retailed in Que- bec for 43 cents a package. era. Intermediate B game. Ad- mllllon 50 and 25 cents. Game - ”'"' 5 0":10ck- Skit! Ift"- mow vonx. (CP)-John Kaye, ., -mm president oi Stanwood 011 com. Reserve Wednesday evenlnm which is about to absorb New "ml! 4th to Mar Dr. H- 1- niiuiswicir Oilfislds Ltd. said Stewart of Dslhousls University -1-uggdgy any .,n "gxpqnm. to. sneak on the subject "Present '1-gm" of exploration and deve op- Dliilsr Spots and Available safe- luards of World Peace." TM! "willie. sponsored by the Char- loliotown and the Charlottetown Rilyel Teachers institutes. Wm be Mid in the Prince of Wales '-”""m, Auditorium at a ;-.m. mont is in prospect for the Monc- ton, N 8., area. Kgye said all agreements have been signed and a deal is about to be closed under which his oom- psny. now producing crude oil and natural gas in Pennsylvania. will OilDeve1opment.Program Plarmed For Moncton Area take over the New Brunswick com- pany. The company. whose crude re- serves in Pennsylvania are esti- mated at 24,000,000 bsrrals, will take over issues on 0,000,000 acres of land in the qlidodnctonj sires. " GDNDON o as o ofex- plorstlon and development there and will vlobsbly spend several million dollars." Km said. The New Brunswick company has Iago serving Moncton with natural A new annual scholarship has been made available by Queen's University to graduates oi Prince of wales college to be known as "the W. E McNeili scholarship”. in honour of Dr. William Everett McNeill. a distinguished alumnus of Prince of Wales who for many years was Vice Principal of Queen's. one scholarship will be awarded each year to a graduate of Prince of Wales who has maintained dis- tinguished standing in the third and fourth years and who is re- commended by the Principal. The scholarship may be held in any faculty of Queen's University. It includes full tuition and 0100 in cash for as many as three years. If held in the Faculty of Arts. the total value may be as much as Waller Callow Praised In Commonsllebale OTTAWA. (CP)-Waller Callow, blind and legless invalid who spends his time in at Halifax vet- eran's hospital planning the com- fort of fellow cripples, was des- cribed in the Commons Tuesday as "one of the most remarkable Can- adians of our time." The tribute came from :. Gordon Graydon (PC--Peel). one of a dot- en apeakers to support a bill estab- lishing the Callow Veterans' and lnvallds' Welfare League. Samuel Balcom (L-Halifax). sponsoring the measure said it will allow the Callow organization to further its work in providing hos- pitals with special invalid coaches. The coaehes..deslgned by the 58- year-old invalid has a special ramp for loading wheel chair patients for outings. Stretcher cases also can be taken. Resources Minister winters, John Dickey. parliamentary assistant to (Continued on Page 5 God. 5) U. N. General Assembly Session is Resumed UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.. (OP) - L. B. Pearson of Canada re- opened the adjourned session of the United Nations general as- sembly'Tuesday and read a mes- sage from President Eisenhower reaffirming United States faith in the world organization. Pearson. Canada's external af- fairs minister and president of the UN assembly. referred in his open- ing statement to the Korean item on the agenda and the lndlan peace plan which was approved by the assembly last December be- fore it recessed. The plan was re- jected by the Communists. The message from Eisenhower. welcoming the delegates. said the UN had already pllshed much and he hoped it-would become "an- increaslngnly effective instrument of peace.” Tuesday's session took only nine minutes. Today the assembly, with Russia's delegation hoadsdlby Foreign Minister Andrei Vishlnsky facing U. s. representatives led by Hendy Cabot Lodge. will get down to businem. with Korea still the big topic. ll. 3. Planning lletall-ed Study. Of Education costs HALIFAX, (GP)-Nnvn. scotia is soon going to look into education costs in the province. Ilkiucatlon Mlnlnster I-licks told the Legislature Tuesday his de- partment will have an announce- ment shortly on the appointment of a royal commission to make a detailed study of costs to municip- sllties. the province and the fed- srsl government of running the classrooms. Mr. Hicks was replying to 6. 1. smith (PC-colchesteu. who re- ferred to demands for a commis- Iion from the Union of Nova sco- tia Municipalities. The minister added that appointment of a sin- gie commissioner was contemplat- ed- New Scholarship Will Ho nor Distinguished P. E. Islander .;mj:. 900; in the Faculty of Applied science 31300; in the Faculty of Medicine 31305. Born in Lower Montague Dr. W. E. MlcNeill was born in Lower Montague. P.E.1. in 1876. He won a provincial scholarship to Prince of wales College in 1892 and remained there until 1894. In 1000 he graduated from Acadia with a. BA. degree and the Gover- nor Genei'sl's medal. He took a B.A. again in 1900, the M. A. in 1000, and the Ph.D. in 1909. all at Harvard. He taught at Bates Col- lege for three years and was as- sistant in English at Harvard from 1900 to 1900. He married Caroline Emily Libby, Professor of Romance Languages and Dean of Women at (continued on'EEE'5 Col. 77” British Infantry To Get New Weapons This Year LONDON, .iReuters) M British Army infantry units this year will be re-equipped with revolutionary new weapons. including a recoil- less anti-tank gun described as "probably the most powerful in the world." War Minister Anthony liead an- nounced Tuesday that plastic armor, designed in the United States and currently being worn by United Nations troops in Korea. is in production in Britain and will be issued to Brtlsh infantry. The American 3.5-inch rocket launcher will also be used by ”Tommics." U. 5. interested The 11. S. is interested in British arms. he added. "Large orders" for the 52-ton Centurion tank have been placed by the U. S. govern- ment. Bead described new weapons in a memorandum to estimates which say army expenditures in 1953-54 will be 2526,000,000 an increase of i34,000.000 over the current year's expenditures. Discussing the anti-tank gun. Head said: "It is probably the most power- ful used by any infantry in the world today. It is lighter and more easily msnoeuvred than existing guns." Pull production of the weapon is already under way, he added. The British regular army will be issued with it this year. Anti-Tank Grenade Another new weapon Head men- tioned is a tiny but powerful anti- tank grenade which is fired from the infantry service rifle. "Though this grenade weighs only 21 ounces. its destructive cap- acity is equal to that of the most powerful infantry anti-tank gun used in the last war." he said. "Any soldier can be taught quickly how to use it." t The minister predicted that Brit- ish, Canadian and Belgian indus- tries would shortly produce a cart- ridge acceptable to all North At- lantlc Treaty countries and 8. rifle styled like the .280, the British- designed weapon claimed in th;s country to -be.the best in the world. Bigger -Tdx Culs Possible If Waste hailed . orriiwa, (or)-spokesmen for the Progressive Conservative and CC? parties have described the Canadian government's 1053-54 budget as one that will give greater relief to the rich than to low-ln- come earners. J. M. Macdonnell. chief financial critic for the Progressive Con- servative opposition. said Tuesday a s100,000.000 reduction in personal income tax will mean more to people with large incomes than to those at the lower end of the in- come bracket. M. J. Coldwell. CCF leader. said the wealthy will receive at least '10 per cent of the 528,000,000 tax reductions announced' in Finance Minister Abbott's budget Feb. 10. Traditional Motions Mr. Macdonnell and Mr. Cold- well. first to speak in debate on the budget. ended their speeches by moving traditional motions non-confidence in the government. The motions will be put to a vote at the end of the debate. Mr. Macdonnell said in his mot- ion that the Commons regretted that the government proposed to take more money from the tax- payer in 1953-54 than ever before. The government. he said. has not taken "effective steps" to deal with "waste. extravagance and ad- minlstrative inefficiency:" to give tax relief "to those who need it most;” to offer encouragement to Canadian farmers; or to permit an independent inquiry into ad- ministration of the defence de- partment. Mr. Coldwell's motion described Mr. Abbott's proposals as a "rich man's budget." It noted that tax reductions were made retroactive to Jan. 1 for corporations but not Mild Earthquake In Seattle Area slilA'I"I'LE. (AP) - A mild earth- quake shock. which rattled dishes and doors in some homes, was widely felt over Seattle Just be- fore noon Tuesday. No damage was reported. At Ottawa, officials at the Do- minion observatory said the quake did not register here. They said the mild quake would not be felt outside a radius of 300 or 400 miles. but probably was recorded at Victoria. Tommy lllanvllle To Wed Again" GMEELNWIGH, Conn., (AP)-Ab hestos heir Tommy Manville and Mrs. Lillian Bishop Alvesr, 29, of Union city, N.J., obtained a mar- riage llcence here Tuesday. It was the 12th such licence for the much-married Manville, who listed his age as 50 and gave Mam- aroneck. N. Y. as his home. His bride-to-be is the mother of two children. Her first marriage ended in divorce. Earlier Tuesday Manville and Mrs. Alvear applied for s mar- riage licence at New Rochelle. N. Y.. but it was denied at least temporarily because of Mexican court papers served on Manville The study and design of guided 135.; 1:-rm”, weapons is being war minister wrote. Admiifsdnii 14 Firesy MONTREAL. (CF) - A 17-year- old youth. said by police and fire investigators to have admitted set- ting 14 fires because "something was pushrng me." was committed Tuesday by Judge C. 1:. Gucrln for mental examination. one o-f the fires was in 1. hospital. Judge Ouerin issued the order after Dr. Rosario Fontalne. med- ico-legsl expert, expressed belief that the youth was abnormal since he was obsessed in committing acts which he could not control through his own will power. llo lland-shakhig For Photographers UNITED NATIONS. N. Y.. (AP)-A UN aide asked Henry iabot Lodge Tuesday if he would a site hands with Andrei Vishin- sky-for photographs. "Certainly not." Lodge replied. Told such handshaking was just a diplomatic custom. the now im- ited Ststes chief delegate to the UN commented: "Don't you know there is a new administration in Washing- continued, the ion '3" Mrs. Alvear will be Manville's tenth wife. The ninth was Mus. Msnville. the former Anita Frances Roddy-Eden Rene-ea, Mexico. in the papers served on Manvillc last Friday, wife No. nine claimed the divorce was illegal. Manville actually has been mar- ried 11 times but two of his mar- riages were tn former wives. German Field Marshal VonRunstedt Dies In Sleep By Ian Iran: HANNOVER. Reuters) -- Field Marshal Gerd van Rundstsdt, '17. the man who might have won the Second World War for Germany if 1-lltlsr hadn't interfered, died here Tuesday. He died in his sleep in his tiny. three-roomed apartment, surroun- ded by photographs of himself at all stages of'hls 52 your military service. Archtype of the cold Pruulan junker. his business was war. not politics. If Hitler had not counter- manded some of his orders, the course of the Second World War might have been different. Von Rundstsdt directed the light- ning "blitzkrieg" which pulverized the Polish Army in 11 g days in September. 1900. He that led his army group smashing around the Maglnot Line and down through France, and would have overrun EALTHY 8 Persons Tenement Halifax Yesterd Tax Changes Announced In N. B. Budget FR.EDl3R.ICrON, rC'P) - Several tax changes were announced Tues- day in the first budget of New Brunswick's Progressive Conserva- tive gcvernment, elected last Sept- ember. 'I'he provincial secrotsry--treas- urer. Hon. Donald D. Patterson. said that all medicines and drugs will be added to the items exemp- ted from the four per cent provin- cial sales tax, He e.-rsimated this will save tax payers about 3250,- 000, No other change was made in this tax. In his budget speech in the leg- isluture. lvfr. Patterson also an- nounced the governnient's intention to offset a threatened loss in rev- enue by action of tobacco manu- facturers in cutting the retail price of cigarets by two cents for a pack- age of 20. He said a bill will be introduced to change the method of computing the 'tax and keep it at the present rate of four cents per package. If this were not done, the province would lose 25-per cent of its 10 per cent "tobacco tax revenue. A pack of 20 cigarets will cost 37 cents or four cents more than in provinces without such a tax. Quebec prov- ince has announced a decision sim- ilar to New Brunswick! in this matter. other changes were confined to increases in the wild tax and for- est fire tax, the latter due to high- er fire hazard as a result of pros- nectini: and other new mining sc- tlvlties in New Brunswick. Mr. Patterson said tlhat New Fire At all HALIFAX. ' (OP) - An any morning fire flashed with lightning speed through a. decrepit old black of wooden tenements Tuesday and eight persons, five of them child- ren. died in the flames. One was seriously injured and a dozen families. many scantily clad. fled into the biting pre-dawn cold. The dead: Mrs. Jessie)-larvey and her sons David, 4. George, .1, Sheldon. 2 and Kenneth, 1; Patrick Furlong. 35, his wife Eileen and son Stephen. 5. Robert Harvey, 27, was injured in the blaze which wiped out his family. He rushed into the street in a daze and police took him to hospital where he was being treated for third-degree burns. Crying Baby Saves Foul- A crying baby was credited with saving a family of four. All were tenanns of a single building in the ancient block of four on north Barringwn street which fire chief F. C. MncGil- livray said had been previously condemned. "The conditions there were the same as exist in hundreds of tene- ment buildings all over the city," the chief said. "There will be no change until someone relieves the housing shortage." The flames, believed to have started in the kitchen of the Har- veys' two-room ground-floor apart- ment. devoured tinder-dry wood and within half an hour had spread to adjoining apartments over two grocery stores and a tavern. Worse Blaze Since 1050 It was the city's worst blaze since a. department store fire took 10 lives during the Christmas rush season in November, 1050. One of the first on the scene was victor Prudhomme. a. railway brakernsn working in the nearby naval dockyard. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 6) (Continued on Page 5 Col. 0) Dutch Plan For 6-Nation Tariff Plan Welcomed By James M. Long ROME. (AP) - The Nebherlands' plan to knock down West Europe's tariff walls took its first step for- ward Tuesday. but the broader pro- gram for a joint European Army encountered heavier going. Foreign ministers of the six coun- tries involved expressed unanimous approval of the "general principle” of The Netherlands' proposal for a customs union which would cre- ate a common West European mar- ket in about five years. Foreign Minister Paul Van Zec- land of Belgium, chairman of the two-day conference. said after the first day's closed meetings it would be impossible to work out all de- tails of the scheme here. He add- ed the ministers probably would iecommend that a special commit- tee be set up to clarify "how to fit the principle of the plan into hard economic realities." Debate Defence Plan The ministers began debate on the proposed European Defence Community which would bring soldiers of France. West Germany. Italy, Belgium, The Netherlands and Luxembourg into a single- unliorm army. France's Georges Bidault pre- sented his country's request tnr amendments to make the EDC "more palatable to Frenchmen. Germany's Konrad Adenauer has already said he would fight to I. finish any changes which would weaken the proposed army plan. Members of some delegations hinted that the whole French-Gen man disagreement might have to be settled in talks outside the con- ference hall. the British Army at Dunkeraue 11 Hitler had not ordered him to stop at nearby Gravellnes. .. Von Rundstedt also scored sweep- ing successes in the opening stages of the Russian campaign. He want.- ed in withdraw to Poland for the winter. to avoid Napoleon's fate, but Hitler ordered the offensive to continue. The results were fatal. The field marshal retired be- cause of this. only to be ordered back in the front to face the threatened Allied invasion of Eur- ope. t But. von Rundstedt's heart for the war had gone. He had taken in drinking heavily and loft direction of operations largely to his sub- ordinaics. notably Field Marshal Erwin Rommel. lie commanded the Third Relchis "last fling" offensive in the winter The dispute over the French amendments centres on France's demand that it be allowed to with- draw. troops from the army in case its overseas , ssessioiis are threat- ened. Adenauer fears this would let France shift its soldiers at wilL leaving the main burden of Eu- ropean defence to Germany. fut: Wiscsf Aeao HA9 fits CLOSESl; Moods mm-in TORONTO. (w) .. maximum temperdunes: , Min. Max. Dawson 4 14 ; Victoria . 37 50 : Edmonton 22 ti I Oaifgary .. la 41 Regina .. so no ' Winnipeg 11 SR Toronto .. 30 40 Ottawa 28 34 Montreal 28 34 Quebec . . I0 -- sainl. John 10 33 Moncton .'l 31 Halifax . 14 13 Charlottetown . in 28 Sydney 18 all Yaitmouih 16 37 St. John's, Nfld. 19 23 HALIFAX, ft?) - The Walther office says that milder air will cover the southern Maritimes Wed- nwday. In northern New Bruns- wick and eastern Quebec tempera- tures will remain unchanged. The weather will be fine in all regions. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Variable cloudiness and milder; ligiht winds. Low-high at Charlottetmvn 22 and 38. High tide today at Charlottetown at 0.20 A. M. and 0.15 P. M. High tide on the North shore at 4.89 A. M. and 8.48 P. M. of 1044-45, which had the Allies groggy for a while. But. it was Summersids tide eighteen min- utes ister than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 7.00 A. M. and 7Ic3FiiiHuEdTiT13ace 5 Col. 5) sets at 5.53 P. M,