MAXlMS Cf A MERE MAN --:1 roi-iahwith him mu throolh 0'" good. the folly that 1? 3, carrier: Charlottetown. ulllliiflllll 818.00 per I.Il.ll.Iln. Elsewhere ur.I.l.l0-Oil 0'-MPPNVIIIOOI Ind, l'.I.I.A.ll3.00por annn-. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1952 l)EFENCE MINISTER DEFENDS STOCKPILING ARMY GOOD Rail Conciliation Board Cuts Union Demands Meeting Favors Provincial Legion Urges can To Share Gasoline 'Tax With The City A resolution concerning a request that the Provincial Government give consideration to giving the Charlottetown City Council a share of the Provincial gas tax was pass- ed at a meeting of the Charlotte- town Branch of the Canadian Legion last night.. It was the sec- ond time the resolution was pre- sented and adopted. Mr. Arthur King, who moved the motion, stated that the action if carried through would relieve a property holder from a t'very unfair and unjust tax” levied for maintenance of streets, and indir- Presldeiit C. to the Branch V, vestigalor of the I ment. of labor had visited the City in connection with resolution of the Provincial Com and calling for the employment of more veter- ans on national defense jobs. A more definite statement would be forthcoming following the report of Mr. G. H. 'MacGee. special in- vesllgator, to his superiors. The president also announced that the Branch would hold a "children's Christmas party"! and urged all members to co-operate g (Continued on page is col. '1) Probe Price Of American Gigarets OTTAWA. Nov. 2"! -(CP) - Revenue Minister MoCa.nn said today his department is investigat- lng reports that American cigarets are being sold by some chain stores in Canada. cheaper than Canadian brands. The investigations are being made to ascertain that all taxes and duties had been paid on these shipments of cigarets. The minister was replying to s quetion by Raymond Anderson (L -Norfolk) who asked if the Min- ister had seen the reports and if the government planned any act.- ion. Mr. Mccann said cigarets do not fall in the class of imported goods which might be subject to dump- ing duties if.sold in the importing country cheaper than in the iountry of origin. Coming Events Fri- "Riverdale school concert, day, Dec. 19. "Dance. Millview I-lall every hiday. "The Annual Meeting Wlnsloe Road Hall, Monday, December 1st. "Klnkora Hall I tonight, V911 Hi Tom Edison." ”Dance. l-lowe's Ball, Brsckley Beach. Friday. November 26th. "Try our Purina Finance Plan or” for feeding your hogs and poultry. Dillon dz Splllett. "Dance every Friday night, south Rustico Hail. Music by the charlotietonians. "Dance. Kelly's Cross school. mister. November ma, 9 to use "Highfleld United Church, W. A. Pantry Bale. Moore and MacLsod's, Saturday, 2 o'clock, November 29th. "Master Feeds. Another carload ll"-V Irrlved at Prince Edward Is- "W1 Fur Pool. summerside. Feed- ers who keep records use Mast N"Dancs. St. Peters Bay Holy 1""! Hall. many. November ascn Tom 9.80--1. Chaisaon's orchestra. l-Int dance before the big Midnight Dance Christmu night. . "HM"-Mi! meeting. Crapaud- Xflfrll Board of 'ri-ad. will be too D” in Crapsud hall. Monday. 60. lat. Good attendance please. 5:500 and hear at Mt. Stew .. ojvurdny. Novem ma. at a clock. Dennis Morgan and vir- mlhi ammo grfainung the Clouds ...;h'T0'l1 M only. The stars of m 9 31' Man" in a new axoitina In 'f,""l1'8l.JoIcph Cotton and win R W013 Softly Stranger". An m'hK- 0- Radio picture. Don't. miss show. ll-'l 3ood., .;x.sai. page gums . .1 us no is mw aliiixihatmu by the ohiir,-' iiiiinllhlldti and can g solemnlty, but ' a colorful Bishop Boyle To Speak At St. F. X. Anniversary ANTIGONXSH. N. S., Nov. 2''!- (CP)-St. Francis Xavier Univer- sity opens a. year-long centenary celebration here Dec. 3, the 400th anniversary of the death of its . patron saint. A full day's program of events. ' largely religious, will open the celebrations. Accent will be on aca- demic procession will precede Pontifical Mass. Celebrant will be James Car- dinal McGuigan of Toronto while Most Rev. E. Q. Jennings, Bishop of Fort. William, will deliver the sermon. Most Rev. James Boyle, Bishop of Charlottetown, and Judge W. F. Lane of Moncton will be chief speakers at in diocesan dinner. Hockey will take the spotlight in the evening when the St. F. X. team takes to the ice against Laval University of Quebec, which has just completed its own cen- tenary celebration. The religious observance touches off a 12-month program which continues in May with the holding of annual commencement- week ceremonies. .1-llghllghts in- clude the National Conference of Canadian Universities which as- sembles in June for a three-day meeting on the campus. Early in August the Diocesan Eucharistic Conference is ex- pected to draw thousands. The Jubilee Convocation Sept. 1-2, one of three planned for the centenary year. will have inter- national representation. Four-Day Holiday Planned In Moncton MONCTON. Nov. 27-(CP) - Storel in this Maritime rail hub today agreed to give their staff: a four-day Christmas week-end. Owners decided to remain closed Dec. 27, the Saturday after the Christmas and Boxing Day holi- Recommends 16 Cent Increase; Union Asked 45 ' By John Leblanc OIITAWA, Nov. 2'1 s(cp).;rhe Federal Conciliation Board on the i5l60,000,000- a-year railway-labor dispute, slicing union demands sharply has recommended an aver- age 16-cent-an-hour increase for non-operating 1-all workers. The majority finding of the three-man hoardnmade public to- day, proposed for the 1444100 union employees a little more than one- tfiird what they asked in wage boosts, granted them two other demands and rejeced two more. The report, aimed at settlement of a four-months dispute between the major railways and unions that staged a paralyzing strike in 1950, is not binding on the dis- putants. It may form a. basis for negotiation. The majority finding was signed by Mr. Juztice R. L. Kelloclr of the supreme Court of Canada, board chairman. and Paul Smith, Mont- real lawyer and nominee of the railways on the board. A minority report by the board's union nominee suggested a 28- cent. boost-the unions asked 45- and went along with other union points. It was written by David Lewis, Toronto lawyer. . Both Sides Silent There was no immediate react- ion to the findings either from head officers of the majority rail- ways at Montreal or from a 100- man meeting of the general con- ference committee of the 1'! rail- way unions in session there. Both sides indicated there would be no official statement until to- morrow. , Meanwhile, some informants here said there was a good pros- pect that the railways would ac- cept the majority finding. Union observers thought it was certain the labor group would reject the majority re- commendation. It was consid- ered a likely bet it would ac- cept the minority report, al- though it falls short by 19 cents an hour-or some 303,- 000.000 a year over-all-from the union demands. on the basis of company cal- culations during the negotiations. the whole cost of the 45-cent in- days. stretching the vacation from Thursday to Sunday. That John Louis Acorn came to his death in the vicinity of Tea Hill on the afternoon of November 21st by being struck by ii. half-ton truck driven by Leon MacPhee was the verdict brought in by s Coroner's Jury at an inquest held at City Hall last night. Coroner; Dr. J. A. Coady presided Ind Mr- J. P. Nicholson. represented the wn. In bringing in the verdict the Jury stated that in their opinion the accident was unavoidable and that they believed the driver should be exonerated. Members of the Jury were: Messrs. Blake wood, foreman. James Mhclllachern, James L. wstherbia, William W. MacEach- ern, Wililm E. Balderston. Harold L. Arsenault and Leigh Worth crease would have run to 3141,000- ((C:ntlnued oi:-page 15131. 2) Inquest Held In Tea Hill Traffic Accident fred smith of'1-fopefield, objected to taking an oath on the Bible on religious grounds but took an af- firmation, said that he had gone into Charlottetown accompanied by Mr. MacPhee. Mr. MacKay and Mrs. MacPhee on the mornoing of the fatality. They had left on return from Kent street about 3 o'clock. This side of Tea Hill, the wit- ness continued, a. vehicle appear- ed to be stopped in front of the residence of Blake wood facing in the direction of the city. A man stepped out from behind the ve- hicle in front of M1acPhee's truck and started across the road. Mac- Phee's truck went over him. Mrs. MacPhe'e screamed. the man dis- appeared and the truck stopped quickly, the witness testified. Kennedy. The first witness called, Mr. wu- o'1'rA.WA. Nov.- 2'! -(OP) - Long-distance telephone rates bo- twuii Newfoundland and the Canadian mainland are being out sharply. Transport Minister chev- rier announced in the Commons ay. The reductions will average a lit- tle more than to per cent. officials said. Mr. Chevriar said the cuts will become effective Dec. 1, under an ant by the six companies- including two crown ooncerns- that provide the service. The re- ductions will be borne proportion- ately by each conipan . New rates, the in said, will be based on mileage rather than the present charge of 7.20 for a three-minute call. As example. the new rate between at. John's. Nfld., and Halifax will be 03:90 (down to). between Corner Brobk. mid: and Moiicton. N. 3.. 32.85 (down Stu). Rates for calls between any Quebec points and Newfoundland will be reduced to 84.50 from sun. companies agreeinl to the new (Continued on page 8 col. 4) Sharp Cut In Telephone .Rates To Newfoundland ...M..M.............s-. rates, Mr. Ohevrier said. are the Canadian Overseas Telecommunic- the over-water link of the network: Canadian Newfoundland, the two these private companies: Avalon Telephone and, Telephone s lephone Company and Brunswick Telephone Company. will be routed over a new leased by Canadian overseas Tele- communication National Telographa. other calls will continue Telecommunication radio facilities and -at Ysinachiche and Drum- mondvilis, in Quebec. Stewart when he got out of the truck he atlon Corporation, which operates National Telegraphs, which provides land-line service in govern- ment-oontrollsd firms involved. and Company of Newfoundland. Maritime Telegraph Company, Bell New It was understood calls between Newfoundland and the Maritimes radio- telsphono link between New Wat.- erford. N. 5.. and Red Rocks. Nfld.. from Canadian to be routed through loll awitchboards in Montreal and Canadian overseas Corporation's in Newfoundland The naming of provisional com- mittee of eight members was de- cided on yesterday at a prelimin- ary meeting to discuss the forming of a. Provincial Home and Sc ooi Federation. The committee wil do the preliminary work of exploring and give a full report when a full organizational meetng will be held not later than the end of January. Appointed to the committee are Mrs. Ruth Macbeod, Montague. and Mrs. Helen Mclsaac, souris, for Kings County. Mr. M. A. Hub- ley, Summerside. and Rev. Dennis Gallant, Tignish, representing Prince County. The two members for Queens are Mrs. M. J. Doyle. North Rustico, and Mrs. Claire Canada Urges Quick Approval Of Truce Plan UNITED NATIONS. N. Y4) Nov. 2'! -(CP) - Canada today ap- pealed for quick United Nations ap- proval of an Indian peace-plan for Korea in the hope the Chinese Communists and North Koreans want peace despite Russiais reject.- ion of the compromlsexprpposal. While Health Minister Paul Mar- tin of Canada spoke before the political committee of the Generni Assembly, the United states dele- gation announced it has thrown its full support behind the resolution to which it previously had strong objections. The U. S. swing was based largely on the change made Wednesday night in the Indian plan by Krishna. Menon. deputy leader of the Indian delegation. The amend- ment set a time limit in which prisoners who refuse repatriation will be turned over to the UN in- stead of remaining indefinitely the problem of a political conference to be. called three months "after an armistice. i Martin, who was the first to publicly outline the prisoners for- mula which became the basis of the Indian plan. said the commit- tee should avoid lihaggllng over non-essentials." i A vote on the Indian plan is ex- pected tomorrow. Suggests Koreans In llniis From Commonwealth OTTAWA, Nov. 27 7- (CP) The United States Government has suggested to the Common- wealth countries that they accept South Korean troops into their units in Korea and it is consid- ered likely that Canada will agree. Bill Boss, Canadian Press staff writer with the Canadian troops in Korea, reported today that roughly 300 South Korean soldiers may soon be serving with Canada's 25th Brigade. It was learned here that Canada is likely to agree to the American proposal as a way to help strength- en the United Nations front and hasten the day when a South Kor- can army will be able to take over an even greater share of the front line burden. Canada would provide the Boutrr Koreans with food. uniforms. equip- ment and accommodation but would not pay them. FIVE-YEAR SENTENCE HALIFAX, Nov. 27-(CP)--John Francis MacDonald and George Guthro today were sentenced to five years in Dorchester Peniten- tiary for theft. The pair pleaded guilty to stealing cash and rav- ings bonds valued at several thousand dollars from an office safe. Leo Murphy. 28 of no stated address. was dismissed on a sim- ilar charge when the crown offer- ed no evidence. OITAWA, Nov. 2'1 -(CPl- Group Capt. A. 0. Adams. on. 52. of Ottawa. RQAF co-oniinator for standardisation, is retiring after 20 years' service with the air force, it was announced today. A pilot with the RA! in the 'rirst World Wui-, he was closely asso- ciation with the Air Board prior the forming of the RCA! in iome & School Association Ferry Requirements Presented Before Maritime Commission Tercsea, Glenaiadale. In addition two were named for Charlotte- town. Judge C. st. Clair Trainer and Mrs. Helen MacDonald. Presiding over the meeting held yesterday in the Vocational school was Mr. Bramwell Chandler, who briefly outlined the purpose of calling it. He stated that it was to determine-the advisability of the many Home and school Associat- ions in the Province having a cen- tral organization on a Provincial basis. He said the associations were springing up spontaneously with no directing force as people were realizing that there is a lack (Continued on page-175Ac'ol.--4)'i OTTAWA. Nov. 20-ispor-inl) - Representatives of Northumber- land Ferries and of Prince Erl- ward Island today conferred with the Canadian Maritime Commis- sion on federal aid for extension and improvement of the ferry service between Wood Islands and Caribou. The delegation was accom- panied in the commissions board room by J. Watson MacNaught. Liberal M. P. for Prince and Parliamentary Assistant to Fish- eries Minister Sinclair. A brief, setting forth public demands for improved service and indicating federal responsibil- ity for aiding such service, was presented to the Commission h.V Arthur Peake. solicitor for the Northumberland Ferries. and both Mr. Peake and Marine Superin- tendent Capt. Hunter answered questlons- asked concerning the service. The request was divided into two sections, first for immediate relief on a temporary basis, and second for a new and larger ves- sel to meet increased transporta- tion needs. Claude Lossnrd, rlialrmnn of the Maritime Commission presid- ed at the hearing and was accom- panied by Capt. L. C. Audzitc, commissioner, Angus McGugan, commissioner, and Capt. J. A. I-lei:-nan, director of the subsidies branch. l-ion. Dougald MacKin- non, spoke of the importance of the Wood islands-Cnribou ferry service as a. link between his Province and Nova Scotia and of the needs as he knew them of strengthening that link. Mr. MacNziught mentioned the importance of the ferries both from a commercial standpoint and that of tourist traffic. A report on the subject will he made by the commission after it has opportunity of considering to- day's evidence and making any Claxion ll-eplies To Criticism By Opposition OTTAWA, Nov. 27 -(CF) -De- fence Minister Claxton said today in the Commons that his depart- ment has been doing no more and no less than its duty in accumulat- ing stores for the possible outbreak of war. V Replying to Progressive Conser- vative charges of waste and ex- travagance in defence purchasing, he counter-charged that the Op- position would be the first to ac- cuse him and the department of negligence if war came andcaught them without necessary stores. He denied that there has been any excessive purchasing and argued that the wonder is that there have not been more errors in a program so large. He also said: 1. Stores are bought for four main reasons of which mobiliz- ation is only one. 2. There are constant reviews of purchasing policies and there have been important modificat- ions and will be more. 3. Mobilization stores are be- ing laid aside for the first three months of any general war. -4. ''I do not think that in any field we will have stockpiled more than we would have re- quired in about a year and a quarter of ordinary current "954-l In other words. not a single article has v...en 0,. Wm be wasted. Everything will 3,. used." One Deduction One possible deduction from his remarks was that the forces plan to mobilize 100,000 men in the first three months of any global war. He said it costs 5369 to clothe a regular force recruit and that clothing stocks worth roughly 537,- 000,000 have been put aside for mobilization in the first three months of war. He added: ttln 1939, three months after we BrietT?sEi3Ii”" 0f Commonwealth Conference LONDON, Nov. 27 -- (CPI -The conference of Commonwealth prime ministers got off to a slightly anti- climatic start tonight with a short session at 10 Downing Street. Prime Minister Winston Chur- chill greetcd delegates, including five other Commonwealth prem- lers, at his official residence in Whitehall. Tomorrow, the hand- shakes and the formal welcomes over, delegates get down to the real business of the conference. Todayis brief meeting was de- layed seven hours by the late ar- rival of several delegates, includ- ing the Canadian party headed by Prime Minister St. Laurent and Finance Minister Douglas Abbott. St. Laurent told reporters he is in a "hopeful mood" about the nine-country conference. officially described as a survey of the whole further investigation it may deem advisable. TORONTO. Nov. 2'1 .16?) - Abitibi Power and Paper Co. Ltd.. is advising its Canadian customers that the price of their newsprint will be increased 310 a ton, effect- ive Jan. 1. The increase is the same as that put into effec for United states customers last June iii, which did not apply in Canada. Other Canadian newsprint pro- ducers are also understood to have advised their customers of the in- crease. None of the companies have yet made an announcement. The Abitibi increase was made known by customers who received notices. Le Devoir, of Montreal, in a newspage story Nov. 22. said it had been advised by Consolidated Pap- er corporation, Ltd., of the added 010 in price. Today Consolidated, Price Broth- ers and Co. Ltd.. and Ariglo-Can- adlan Pulp and Paper Mills, Ltd.. all Quebec Province producers said they had "no comment." Under s 310 increase the Canad- ian base-area price will be sin a ton. Canadian publishers also pay a federal 10-per-cent sales t on all but the transportation pa t of the price. Accordingly. their newsprint cost. with the increase will be about 3133 a ton in the base area. with higher prices in other parts of Canada. The United States price remains at me a ton, landed in New York, with higher prices in various reg- ions. to 1004. Report M0 Ton Boost In Price Of Newsprint i 75..n'.:..;d on paiz'e”5.c'E;l.'-er” of Quebec and Ontario and west to Winnipeg in Manitoba. However, Quebec Province cus- tomers get a. price of 53 below the base price. so that their price un- der a 510 increase would be sill? a ton, plus sales tax. Customers in Quebec and Ontario towns where there are mills are charged as below the base. Ac- cordingly thcir price, with the in- crease, would be 3.117 a ton, plus tax. Abltibi is one of the big Canadian producers. Canada produces more than half the world's newsprint. with most of it going to the United States. VANCOUVER. Nov. 27 -tCP)- The log has been thicker than curdled pea soup here all week. Even the birds are walking. Visibility has been reduced to I few feet at the worst times. Dur- ing the day, the sun has burned away some of the fog so a person can sometimes see as far as two blocks. , , The weatherman said all he can see for Friday is more fog. Traffic is crawling and there have been ii. number of tandem collisions. one Thursday involved The Canadia base area consists lo cars. l Everything b not known but everything is said. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN 16 PAGES The Guardian. Flu Gents. Morning Dally Founded 1881. Canadais Commonwealth Exports Down Almost 30 Per Cent During October OTTAWA, Nov. 2'! ..(cp)' H Canadian exports to the Common- wealth which helped power a big trade expansion earlier iiig October, flattening adnls foreign trade drive. Exports to the Commonwealth declined to 365,100,000, down 526,- . 600.000 from 391,700,000 in October, 195), the Bureau of Statistics re- ported today in apreliminary state- ment. There were these other develop- ments: 1. Exports to the United States were virtually unchanged from a year ago, but imports climbed, causing another large Canadian deficit in U. S. trade. 2. Gains in exports were made among some of the smaller markets, but on the whole exports were just slight- ly behind imports, causing a 3800.000 deficit in total trade. 3. The trend indicated that the peak had been reached in Canada's foreign trade with soft spots showing up more prominently than in any prev- ious month of 1952. During the month, Britain, Can- ada's second largest market, re- duced imports from Canada by .'Sl4,600.000, with shipments declin- ing to 549,600,000 from 364,200,000. It was the third and largest rliailonthly drop of the year. Sales to ev;;;i-1 were consistently higher in Whoa-is month with the ex- Cepmm M July when exports de- clined by s5,100,000 Irnm R yea, ago and in September when they declined by 510,300,000, Trade with Britain Imports from Britain, however, were slightly higher. inc in to 036300.000 from s3a,1oo,(i:oB:s gm- ain's traditional deficit in tradg With Canada was still there, amounting to sia,7oo,ooo for the month and turf i th . total to.!5333.40d1,go3'g e 10 '"”'"” Sales to other C countries declined -.'im";f,5,ll5”,f.,”.l,f,i,l, from s2'l,500,000. imports aw; dgopg ped-to 516,600,000 from 521i this year, . dropped by almost 30 per cent dur- V out can- Leaves For Montreal Mayor .1. D. Stewart leaves to- day for Montreal where he will attendla meeting of the Nations) Executive of the Federation of Mayors and Municipalities and W111 be Dart of a delegation from this body when they present their yearly submission to the Federal Cabinet, in Ottawa. on December 5th. Declares Tax Reductions Will Precede Election OTTAWA. Nov. 27 .- (CP) J. M. .Macdonnell.. Progressive Con servative financial critic, said to day Finance Minister Abbott preparing the ground for tax rt: ductions next spring. Mr. Macdonncll. member to Toronto Greenwood, said in 1,11. Commons that if next springls bud. get does not contain tax reductions it will mean there will be no elec- NV: This trend in Commonweaiul trade contrasted with develop- ments in the first nine months of 1952 when exports climbed by s1'l0,- 000,000 to 984,400,000 from M14,- 000,000 in the similar period last year. Imports declined by 5187.000.- 000 to M0l.800.00 from 5588,900,000. tion until 1054. The tax reduction: won” mmc "we an election, not win... , cc” "trio situation made them at-Q slmble u. when me taxpayers needed them. "The ordinary taxpayer is tax- angry, inflation-angry and waste- angry." said Mr. Macdonnell. 1 Former Czech Leaders Sentenced To Hang VIENNA, Nov. 27 -(APl -- The Prague purge court today sentenced 11 former Czechoslovak Communist leaders, once trusted servants of the Kremlin, to die on the gallows as traitors who led Azionist, Trotskyite plot to overthrow their pro-Moscow government. Rudolf Slansky, 51-year old for- mer boss and hatchet man of Czech Communism. and former foreign minister Vlado Clementis. 50, headed the roll of the doomed, all but three of whom are Jews. Three Jewish co-defendants es- caped wiih life terms. The court explained that one of these helped implicate the group and the other two were "merely links" in the purported conspiracy of treason. sabotage and espionage. Prague radio announced the out- come of the week's hearing, mark- ed by virulent anti-semitism and an obvious effort to brand the group as acapegoats for Czechos- iovakla's failure to fulfill Russian orders for industrial and war sup- ics. All 14 had confessed to the cliarges. reciting their sins against sialinism and President Klement Gottwalds Czech regime in a pat- tern that first became familiar to the Western World through the national Communism, he admitted it last week in 3 1-2 hours of testi- mony. The 14 were convicted of plan- ning "to liquidate the people'i democratic system, to restore cap- italism, tear Czechoslovakia. from its firm alliance with Russia and take it into the camp of imperial- ism... Luck is ME?-Ei.Y ' Cami-ic. WHAT THE OTHER FEi.i.ow blood-letting Moscow purge trials of the 1030s. Slansky. ii Jew, was called the ringleader of the plot. Long a powerful figure in inter- Vancouver Groping All Week In Pea Soup Fog v Harbor shipping is almost at a standstill. ,'f'he fog made a mess schedules. Planes and then it. took buses two three from there. out-of-doors work and temptation. of airline were re-routed to Alrbotsford Airport so miles east to hours to reach Vancouver other activities were banned for the 500 inmates of the British Columbia Penitentiary at New Westminster. Officers said the fog was too much It's the worst aesalon of fog since the 19-day stretch in December, 1944. HALIFAX, Nov. 21 -(CPi --0f- ficial forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Friday. Drier and slightly colder air from the west has entered New Brune- wick and Eastern Quebec. The showers have ended there and the clouds are thinning out. on nidav the drier air will continue its way across the Maritime. reaching Cape Breton by afternoon- Reglonal forecasts: - Prince Edward Island-Cloud? with a few sunny intervals. Con- tinuing very mild. Light winds. Low and high niday at Charlotte- town 42 and 50. High tide today at Charlottetown at 0.01 A. M. and 7.54 P. M. High tide on the North Shore at 8.11 A. M. and 3.10 P. M. Summer-side tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. Sun rises today at 7.21 A. M. aw sets at 4.35 P. M.