Maxims of E Mere Man Running is no use: thing is to start in time. * I 16 PAGES Charge Pension Commission With laxity orrravva. (OP) -—The Canadian Legion Wednesday charged the canasian Pension commission with lax administration. In a brief submitted to the first meeting of the Commons veterans’ affairs committee. the 200,000. member lesion cited seven cases of commission "failure to seat-eh records. failure to assess properly evidence on file. administrative error and unjust pension ap- pllC&!lir&- Tom Goode (L—Burnaby-Rich. mondi said: "My experience has been entirely different.‘ Dr. C. B. Lumsdcn of Wolfvllle. N s.. legion president, said in re. piy to Ml‘. Goode that the legion has 3 great many more such cases on its files. MADE RETROACTIVE He said it would take the legion nearly two months to supply In. curate figures for the last 10 _vears—“We have no statistical mt-lip like the government"-— but admitted the number of cases is small compared to the total num- her of pension claims handled by iire commission. a. .1. Brooks (PC—Royal) said: ‘The principle is the same whether here are a few cases or 100." icontinued on Page is col. 4) V 0 Coming Events "Dance in Mlllvieiv Hall, every Trzday. "Dance in Graham's Road Hall, Friday evening, May 215:. "Dance in st. Gcorgrs Hall. l-zrriay. May 21st. "Reserve July lsf. Lobster Sup- per. Chepstow School Cardigan Sale of "St. Theresa’.-' pin}. imi, Thursday. .\lay 20. r-arid)’. "Rummage sole. Ladies Auxil- iary Y.M.C.A. Friday_ May 21. 2.30 pm. "Reserve Wcdncsda:'. June and for Crapaud Worncn‘s Institute rnrirert. "L 0.B.A. rummage sale in Fioyne Hall Friday. May 21st, at 230 to, variety concert. ant Grove hall. Friday, May . Sale of fudge. "Bingo North Rustlco Friday. 8 pm. Pour 35.00 bingoes. jackpot .1:-.d treeaeout. Admission 35 cents. V "Dance in St. Andrew's liall. .\i- stcwart, Thrirsday, May 20th. Good music. Canteen service. "Seeds! Store open daily. also .\'fnnda_v and Thursday evenings ilr".'ll 9 p. m. Arthur veaey. "l-‘or complete Shur-Gain Feed St‘r\‘lC(‘. Dial 9514. We deliver. Bea- ion at Macftae. "Rummage sale. st. Peters (‘,.'itht'tlral Parish Hall, Thursday. May 20th, 7 p. m. "Be sure and attend the Variety ('onrrrt in North Wlltshlre Hall, l"l'1dfl.\'. May 21st. "Show. Morell Hall, Friday. ‘High Noon.‘ 'This is one of the lwsl pictures made. Don't miss sec- lni; it. "Noticc.—-All 'I‘axes due Nine Mile Creek School must be paid by June lat. or they will be collected By order of the Trustees. "In stock, all kinds of Ray seed, Clover Seed. Mangel and Turnip Brod. Hybrid Corn seed. Wheat. etc. Dillon and Spillett. "All Taxes due Cornwall school Wiust be paid by May 31st, other- X15!’ further action will be taken. ly order of Trustees. "St. Mary's Hall, Bouris. Fri- dil/. May 21. St. Teresa Dramatic “Uh present their three-act com- “ii. Curtain 8.30. Specialties. "See that splendid performance "Rise and Shine" by the st. Ther- I‘-Ws Players. Tuesday. 25th, Ver- llfin River Hall. Curtain 8:30 pm. Dance after] "Unloading Cedar Shingles. All Hades. 10% discount. this week *‘ll1:v'. Free delivery 20 miles. We also have Cedar Posts. 3. A. Mac- Phail at son, New Haven. ‘_'Dinner and dance at sa.ndy'a “idly. May 21st 3:30 p. in. sandy’: Ramblers, Dunstaffnage Bombers. \'0l'k Rangers and friends. Collect tickets at Sandy's or phone 7412 lint later than Thursday evening. "urns Orchestra. ems per person. Admittance by ticket only. - _"Si>ectiru, hayaced 'io—1s—n. mixture. 18% cents a lb.: also No. 1 Timothy. Alslke, red and Alfalfa. Laurentian turnip seed, registered N0. 1 at 03 cents a lb. Mangle at-ed ‘5 cents per lb. seeds at Ellis Bros. Central Royalty and Royal Peed ‘Wu-ehouls. Grafton Street East l'QI‘l'n|. m"DIbat.ins finale: "Resolved that H e tesching of music in the pub- 1:" dwmgd cg. triage ldwar1f.°rIs- _ ma e ootrtpu y" will be held at Birch court Ixperi- mental Parm. May 25th at 0.15. The iiubun is invited to hear two rural clubs. lmerald vs. Mt. aton- “N debate this current topic. \ the Founded 1872 CHABLOTTEIOWN, CANADA, THURSDAY, MAY 20. IBM Charged With Theft Of Municipal Funds OTTAWA. (CP) — A charge of stealing $7,507 in municipal funds was laid Wednesday against Jean Paul Bcaulieu. 36-year-old rentals administrator at the Roclncliffe emergency shelter. The charge was laid by police after consultations -with Crown Attorney Raoul Mercier and a special audit team named by board of control to look into shortages in the shelter'a funds. Beaulleu appeared before Magis- trate Glenn Strike and elected to take his case before a high court judge and jury. Hall was set at Peakes Station; Anne Mccormack. Souris East; Joan Kel ly, Florence Callaghan, Charlottetown. Standing, left to right, Theresa Mcisaac, Rockberra, Geraldine MacDonald, Cardi- gan; Martha 0'1-Iolloran. Greenfield; Alvire LeClair, North Rustico; Marie Monica. Charlottetown: Donna White, Emerald: Mary Morrison, Saint John, N. B.; Leona Devine, Peakcs Station: Helen Therlault, Halifax: Colleen McCarthy, Tig nish. l7 Nurses Receive Diplomas AlCity Hospital Graduation Last Evening seventeen nurses of the Char- .1’ Pictured above is the class of nurses which graduated front the Charlottetown Hospital school for nurses Pauline Stewart and Hon. 3. Earle Mac- Morrissey, lottetown Hospital were presented Donald, Minister of Health and with their diplomas and pins at Welfare. all of whom spoke briefly. ‘ bflumul K“‘d“5““K °9“‘m°"Y In the absence of his Excellency held at the Community Centre Buhop B°y1¢_ Monsignor ‘A_ _y_ “it” °V°“1“5- D"- w- -7- P- MM‘ Machellan. D.D.. presented the Millan, K.C.S.G.. chief of the diplomas. medical staff was chairman. The - . . The musical portion of the pro- Valedictorran was Miss Florence gmmrm consisted of I dcngmml Jean Callaghan and the address to the graduates was delivered by Dr. John C. Therlault, Present for the graduation were Lieutenant Governor T. . I. Prowse and Mrs. Prowse; Prem- ier A. W. Matheson, Mayor J. D. By AIDCII MICKENZIE IDNDON, (CP)—Babotage has not been ruled out as the cause of the troubles of Britain's ailing Comet jetllncr but the head of the British Overseas Airways Corpora- tion said today it is difficult to see what sort of sabotage could have taken place. BOAC president Sir Miles Thom- as reviewed the Comet‘s tragic history Wednesday and said in- tensive investigations are continu- ing into the three separate but similar air disasters involving the aircraft. Sir Miles told a luncheon meet- int: he has unbounded confidence that the comet will fly again. It might develop that the crashes‘ were due to something as simple as the tire blowouts that used to mystify the a- tomobile industry. OTHER. DETAILS He mentioned these other tails: The condition of the recovered bodies made it difficult to see what type of sabotage could have been inflicted. There was no evi- dence of bleeding and none of burning. Other tests being conducted in- volved tho "bursting" of the pres- surised comet cabin by forcing in air. Dyed fuel had been used to see whether hasty refuelling methods might have deposited enough fuel on a wing‘a trailing edge to start a fire or explosion. PIIIONAI: HUNG]!!! sir Miles had three "personal" huncl-ics—ell virtually ruled out now—wt-rich centered on the fail- ure of the rotor on one of the four engines. on overcharging of batteries in the equipment bay do- BOAC President Declares Causes Of Jetliner Crashes Remain Mystery and on a fuel leak. The Comet crash off Elba Jan. it) happened so suddenly that the radio operator broke off in mid- message. Suggestions about crash causes had been arriving by lctter at the rate of 160 a day up to three weeks ago. Theories ranged from the mingling of Bikini A-bomb dust with volcanic gases from Vesuvius to death rays sent by ‘solo rendered by Miss Florence ‘lAtin Cameron and two songs by .tlie student nurses who combined lio give a pleasing rendition. of "Au Revoir" and "Ava Marla". Two little flower girls Jean Mc- Cormack and Betty Anne Morri- son wnn the hearts of the audi- ence with the cute curtsies they made as each graduate was handed her bouquet. A prize to the graduate who has shown the greatest promise of professional development dur- lng her period of tralninc. award- ed by "The Canadlan Nurse" was won by Miss Martha Ollollornn, Greenfield. A bursary for post graduate study in sur'ger'y, don- ated by The Saint Charles Auxi- liary was merited by Misses Joan Kclly, Alviro Leclair and Gerald- ine MacDonald. A bursary for post graduate study in obstetrical nurs- ing. donated by the Junior Lea- guc. was awarded to Miss Mary Communist-controlled fishing boats. (Continued on Page 15 ml. ii last at night's ceremonies. They are: seated, front row, left to right. Roma Cavaiiagh, Charlottetown; Maureen Curran. Fort Augustus: Beatrice Doucetie, North Rustico; East Royalty; Sister Barter’s Film Lab. Says Atomic Engine For Planes Ready D£.'I‘ROI'!‘, (OP)-The De- troit News said Wednesday it has learned from ofiicials of the National Association of Manufacturers that"the world's first known atomic aircraft engine is in production or at least in a prodtictlon stage" It also says it learncd that an atomic railroad engine is ready for production now. The newspaper says the at- omic aircraft engine is being worked on by North American Aviation Inc., at its plant in Douncy, Calif. Vefer;—N. S. Lawyer Dies Af Sydney SYDNEY, <CP)——Coliri Mcl(rn7.;: '13. one of Nova Scotia‘s olrlrst practising lawyers and a prom ltient Liberal party supporter, Cll"fi \l.'edneada_v at St. Rita's Hf)Spli4ll after an illness of several da;.s. 52 SUEZ AT'l‘A(.‘KS LONDON fAP)—Thc govcriimcnt reported Wcdnc-sda_v there have been 52 attacks on British subjects in the Suez canal 1.nne in the last six weeks. One British soldlnr \\'.'is hillcd and four scriousl_v injurccl. Foreign Underrecrctrtry A r t h it r Dodds-Parker told a Cniiscrvativc .,.__,§,___,..~.._ . DUBLIN. '(CP)——Prime Minister Eamon De Va1era's Fianna Fail men of destiny party fell slowly behind early today in Irish Republic's general election. The counting of ballots from Tuesday's voting had not reached the halfway mark before it was apparent opposi- iion leader John Costello had a good chance of winningl a majority in the Dail Eireann. Political observers said that about all the gaunt, nearly blind Dc Valera could hope for was to gain enough seats to allow him to exercise the same kind of slim par- liamentary control he had had for the last three years. Both De Valera and Crislolln won rc-election to the Datl, De Valera by acclamatinn. The popular vote for the 71-year- old prime minister was not as large as usual, lmivever. Fianna Fail was running against lieport Little Hope'At Geneva tit: entire field. It lostgtiirce seats to Cnstelln‘s Fine Gael tUnited Ire- iandi party and two to Labor. i The count thus far completed showed the parties had returned the following number of members to the l47-scat Dail: Fianna Fail 40 Coalition 45 tincltiding Fine Gael 30; Labor 12. Clann Na Talmhan tfarmcrsi 2; Clann Na Pnblachta ‘rcptihlrcansi l. lndependcnt‘ 3. l l l \ Prince Edward Island Like The Dew , (Knt).<jel Covers ‘ i!'B!OE5o a De Va|era’s Party, Lagging In Irish Election Vote Tabulation Graduating Class At City Hospital lPretty Teen-Ager Becomes l00.000th p-Dutch Immigrant By MEL MORRIS i Canadian Press Staff ‘‘‘r'D\Iu ‘ MONTREAL tCP.>—-A slim ll)- ycar-old girl Wednesday became the l00.t')0flth Dutch immigrant to arrive in Canada slncr‘. the end of ‘the Second World War and im- mcriiatcly began practising her English with top government and diplomatic officials. Pretty Jacobs G e r a r d in a Bol was greeted by im- migration l\lll'liSlL‘l' Harris and A. H. J. Lovink, Nctl‘.or'larids Ambas- sador to Canada. in a nitilti-lang- trage crcmony aboard the liner Groote Beer’. Shyly. the blue-eyed girl replied to their welcome in For Arranging Peace In lndo-China By Lynn Heinzerling GENEVA, (APi—l-lope of achiev- ing peace in the jungle war of Indo- China faded almost to the vanish- ing: point at the Geneva conference \\'edncsday night. . East and West suspcnded negot- iations for an armistice for one day after devoting more than three hours to wrangling over an old dis- pute-recognition of the so-called "phantom governments" of Laos and Cambodia. Pham Van Dong, the Vietminli fnrciizn niinistr-r, spent 1 1-2 hours tr_\-lug to persuade the West. to iri- vito dclcgations of the two "re- sistance" governments to Geneva. The West is unanimous in re- gardlng those grivci'nment.s as Com- munist inventions with no claims to conference seats. Delegates of the western-recognized govern- ments of Laos and Cambodia spoke Bill?!’ Dflllll. 8 conference SOUTCE said, and reiterated their opposi- tlon to Dong‘s proposals. BIDAIVLT PLAN REJECTED On Monday, Foreign Minister Bidault. of France presented it de- tailed armistice plan designed to bring about a quick end to the war. Apparently it has not even dented the Communist opposition. .\ cnrnmunique issued after Wed- nesday's meeting said only: “The nine delegations continued in re- stricirri session the discussion of Propose Pric‘e-—sef-ting Bun Be Lifted 0'i"l‘AWA (CPL--Tire Canadian Manufacturers’ Association pro- posed Wednesday that Parliament remove the ban against retail pl’l(‘l' - setting by suppliers of l)l‘:ll’it'lt“I‘l goods to eliminate the "evil" of loss leader selling. The association. in a submission lndo—Clima. A further pcace in session will meetuii; in restricted be held in May 21. Britain's Foreign Secretary Eden proposed the one-day "cooling off’ Mr. Harris, who described Miss But as "r'opi‘r‘sctrtati\"c of the fsinndiincss between the Nether- .lands and Canada", met. the chal- lenge with a brief speech in Dutch ’nn(l English. Mr. Lovink added it (C0llill'llll3Cl on Page 15 vol. 3) J5h°l't <’i‘l<‘1I'0SS in FI‘Cm‘ll- R. c. M. P. Close Narcotics Trap TORONTO (CPL-in simultan-I eous innvcs in Toronto and Mont-i Miss B01, 3 high-school graduate who tvorkcd as an apprentice li- br.1ri.".n before leaving Holland, was accompanied by her parents. a l7-year-old sister and two (Continued on Page 15 col. 3) New Propeller real Wednesday the RCMP cioseri-c|"'5 "059 N°i59 a rirug-peddling trap they said may smash a narcotics ring with Canada - wide and international cnnncciinns. Nine p e r s o n s, including two women. were arrested in raids in the two cities. Officers said other arrests are expected shortly. French Bombers Cut Highway HANOI. Indo-China. tReut4-rsi—— French bombers Wednesday cut viral hli:llWa_V at with a torrent of high explosives aimed at Commu- nist rebel spearheads advancing along the road link toward the Red river delta. They blasted the highway in de- fiance of rebel charges that the at- tacks \\'I‘l'e a agreement for evacuating wounded French prisoners from Dien Bren Phil. But more injured defenders of the. ('Rpilll'f'd stronghold arrived in Hanoi Wednesday night. bearing out rchcl promises to continue the ewicuntinn. violation of the questioner in the House of Com» mnns. Five other survivors of the for- tress‘ desperate stand re.-tchcd French outposts in northern Laos after plvrvllig Victmirrh linen and marching in days through rebel-in- fc-str-d jungles. in the restrictive trade practices commission, ma intalncd that though loss lender selling is a "dr-finite evil." it would he diffi- cult to define it satisfactorily for lcgislaiive cnnl.i'nl. |Emp|oyme,n|: Increase Seen OTTAWA, (CP)—Canadlan un- employment went down in April, but more slowly than in usual with the onset of warm weather. Government figures issued Wed- nesday indlcated employment was up from March but down from April of 1951. Unemployment was sharply higher than a yesr earlier. The figures produced renewed demands from Canada‘; two larg- eat union organiast.ions—the Trades and Labor congress of Canada and the Canadian Congrau of Labor-—-for federal action to stem unemployment or ease its effects. The government survey, issued Jointly by the labor department and the bureau of statistics, showed these figures: 1. At April 15. there were 840.02! persons looking for work through the government's national employ- nisnt ssrvloe .down 30,370 from a month earlier but up 170,508 from the same time in me. I. The number at work in the week ended April l1-on the DB5 estimate-wag 4.M5.0W. compare.-1 W“-II 4.06.000 about a month be- pondlng week of 1958. 3. The bureau eatimated—on the basis of a sampling of 30.000 house- holds—t.hat persona actually with- 0’I'I‘AWA. (CP)—The Canadian Congress of Labor said Wednesday latest. unemployment figures indi- cate Canada's unemployment prob- lem is more than seasonal. The government therefore has no fur- ther excuce for delaying assistance in creating more Jobs, it says. Apru's figures show that the government's belief that unem- ployment would pass is "unrealis- tic." Donald lilacoonald. CCL sec- retary-treesurer. said in a state- ment. The month's decline in unpiaced applicants at national employment 10” and 4.941.000 in the corres-tout work and looking for Jobs in the week ended April 11 totalled 303,000. This compared with 318.- 000 a month earlier and 165,000 in the same week or 1053. CCL Declares Unemployment Problem More Than Seasonal; Demands Action service offices was only 36 per cent. a drop to 549.028 on April 15 from senses on March is. Mr MacDonald said In the same per- iod last year the decline was 8.7 per cent—to 372,520 from 4flfl.03.'i. "We have repeatedly warned the government that this year's lin- empoiyrhent was not fictional or seasonal." Ilr. MacDonald added. "The government has no further excuse for delaying improvements in unemployn-tent insurrurce, de- veloping a large-scale public works‘ program and Joint govern- ment- labor- management planning for full employment." I [ LOUISVILLE. Ky, (AP) — Dr. August Raspet. a top American .aerod_\‘n:imicrst, said Wednesday ‘the use of propellers edged with suction-holes can reduce the noise and increase the thrust of air- planes. Arr suction. or boundary layer control, already has been used experimentally on the edges of airplane wings to reduce dra without increasing power. when ‘(NE Weir cones; lit at -{mi DOOR {HE . St’oRK usoitu F\.\Es ’m Afifar ‘MNDOW e TOR ONTO (CP.l»Minimum and maximum tcmperatures: ° M d Min Max Son t n D:-aw.-znn . . . . . . . . . ... 41 59 ancnuvcr .. . 50 68 Victoria 40 59 0f Storekeeper At North Sydney CRl[,‘i\l’_\' 52 78 NORTH SYDNEY. NS 4C?‘-—-;ln('kcrl the door behind him while 5-'l5kfli00n -'14 R9 Stnrekr~pcr Clarence Fiander. 'i'0.fihr- rilllrr kclll “'3lCll 0‘"5l'l"v ‘{lvC.“'n"' " was savagely hcatcn with .1 black-l HiiIhwa.V ll-“l"‘l 0”I'<"‘rS Dill l|l"._I_n“:""7‘::”(:“‘ " L“ ;_ jack and robbed of $16,000 “'(‘(l-.l‘0.'i(lbl‘0(‘ks b(‘[\\‘t'_‘Cl’l lNni'tll S.Vdn*“Y,(m‘ v _I_ L; Msdny and police issued xv-m-mnt,x;:rnrl _(niisri strait to prevent tlw M -it I -in for tho arrest of his l6-year‘-oldjfilgiiivns front esoztpiniz tr) .illt‘ Q“"ll|"‘<| 4-‘ son and aimllior yntith. ilN't>\'n Srnlia inntnl.1tid_ frttnt (Jlp(‘ ‘W ‘ll ‘I I 1;’ pnh(»(. Said the fnbbpyy tnnk Breton island. Arilhnritics said they ~;l7"‘._- "lll - V place about 633!) pm. whr-n J-‘l.;wcrc, sr-ckimz n North Syrinoy taxi l\["]”;i'l’l 4:‘ ‘:4 aiirler was alone in his small r~on.‘drivcr~ who \\‘i‘tS misslnil fllfinil With ‘ ' ' ' ' " 4,‘ "3 fccliortcry store in dnvvntoivn North ill‘ mil 8,18” "_ 0 awn ' 3 fi S.\'rinc,v. One of his nssailaitts is’ P"“.”‘ fmmd H” ’"‘"""“"’l“ ‘Y3 no N‘ "R g0 b(.“e\.,.d 1,, h’-We ¢.mm-,_.d and‘blBf‘k_l-'l(‘k rill.illf‘ flnnv oi’ the .<l0i'(‘ §"'”;"‘,’“' - ~- 1 -9 Nncialr wlrro I'd|.'lndfTl' ‘lay wriltli )hlnr:*rl“ ‘ "‘-ll‘ ‘ - ~ - - - ‘ - ‘ - -~ 4 " N ‘ 1 Cl‘ ll S (WI L7 103 ‘ . . ll‘l(fi.<IpnitKnlmri‘ffirialr.i csairi his conrii-i l.““‘”’‘’‘ ‘"P’ " T“? “""”““°' . ‘firm was S(‘I'in\lS but not critical om” hp” 53*“ 8 d'.="”b’m” The uarrants obtained by police Smnhplfl "Y (‘RN CM‘ " m'“""E a l h _ d Rum” and whim” vovv .<|o\\l_v lll"l'll1f‘il=l. Another riis .0 "'d mp 0 W _ '5' W” ttiihaiwrr has frirni-‘rl in .\'i»rt|1 ‘ "9 ‘a1 r N9 " ' (‘ni-nlin:i and is moving nnrilM‘a.=l- ‘ncsscs. I-‘lander is a Nvvwfotirtrllanrlcr but" his home town was not given. The NES figures showed there sits a drop in the number looking- for work, between March and. April. in every region of Canada] and in all birt a dozen of the 43] Falls*60 Feet Port Arthur, Edmonton and Prince. George, B.C. i MON'I‘RF‘.Al., (CPl»~Al‘m.\‘ Sgt-.. In every one of the centres ex-‘Bill Whallcy. recovering ll’f‘::i a. cept Trols - Rtvierea. Quc,, iher'e‘fall off a fourth-storey ttrituow were more people looking for worloledge, says he is alive today be- tltis year than at the same time:cause he remembered the para- last. year. irhute acllnnl rhyme: “If I fall on "BAD SlTl'ATl0l\"' imy head I'll be dead." TLC president Bengnugh. com-l Whallr-y was wasliing the win- mrnting on the IIKUTFI in an inf?!‘-‘(iOVl'.1 ni hi: fourth-.stoi'c-y apart- view, said: merit last week when he flipped "It's a bad situation as but asland fell on mt in in cement walk we had figured previously. Manybclow. He broke both his ankle: or these. unemployed obvlouslyfand his wrists and cracked a won't be re-employed by June." couple of vertebrae. “They are going to have to out In his hospital bed, Whalley re- off immigration." he said, "though called that when he started to we realize they cannot do this im- fall he did not panic. He said he mcdiately and will have to do it put his arms over his head. curl- gradually. But there’; nothing ed up in a crouch and managed tvnrri to reinforce the first one. A: :4 result. little change. in tho weather nf the Maritime: is ex- pected Thtrr'.=dny. Regional fnrcrasts: communities ‘surveyed. The ex:-op-l Prince Edward Island. eastern trons included St. John's. Nfld.,l _ . B. counties, lower St. John S,vrlne_v. N. a. Saint John. N.B.,|A d S S river valley: Cloudy with nrrnalo- Slierbrnnke. Que. Fort williem- ll nnl rain: cooler; light wlnfla, 1,... high at Charlottetown and Monr- ¢"'| 45 Ind 60. Fredericton and Saint John 40 and 62. Upper St. John river vallr-_v, Ba)’ of Chair-ur: Cloudy with no rnsional rain; not much change in irmrierature; winds northeast is. Lnw - high at. I-Idmtindston anrl Campbclltr-in 40 and 62. R3)’ ‘ii F|lnfl.\" Light. uinrln; f'l"llf‘l.V with occasional rain: \'lIlb< flit)’ 10 miles lovverlnl to four miles in rain: not much change in tem- perature. High tide today at Charlottetown at 12.44 a. m. and ll.35 p. m. Bummer-side tide eighteen min- utea later than Cha.rlot.tri.own. sun rises today at 439 e. m. and else they can do.‘ to do a roll on landing. sets at 140 p. in.