tiJ&lItsa'a-luller) Monday. Maxims of I7 ' More Mani ' stitch in time saves .1 14 IN!!! P-I-snlflrirogrem To Boost lobster fishing Industry In Testing Ground In N. B. MONGION. N. as. (OP) -- An education am to bolster the lobster fish industry which pos- ses si.eoo.ooo annually for nearly 2,000 fishermen in Westmorland. Albert and Kent counties will be launched by the federal fisheries department this month. The three counties will be a Canadian testing d for a con- servation educa onal P up. which" will get under way at Point. sapin. Kent county. July is. it will continue through the balance of the month in other communities. The educational program. first of its type in Canada. is designed Coming Events "I-lope River Picnic. July nth. --st. Teresa's Picnic. Wednesday, July 21st. ' . "Rollo Bay Picnic. Wednesday, July 28th. I "Dance, Fortune Hall, every NMGIJ night. "Regular Dance, Bonsbaw Inn, Tuesday night. "Regular Dance Crapaud Rink, Wednesday night. "Reserve Tuesday, July 20th. for Brae Parish Picnic. July t 'Re.serve 21st, Tignilh Parish Picnic. "Dance at Richard Kelly's barn lfcnday night cancelled. "Dnce Pembroke school. Net lay, July 13. Good music. "Dance in Watervsle School, every Monday. Fraser's Orchestra. "Dance, Fort Augustus Hall. Wednesday. Burke's orchestra "Don't miss Vernon Eirver par- lst tea party, Wednesday, July 14. Dance Wednesday night. "Opening dance in lillictt I-Iall, Friday, July 19, newly decorated. Tools orchestra. "Dance. Caledonia Hall. Tuesday evening. July lath. Fraser's Orch- estra. "Its coming! What? North Wilt- shirs Jamboree. Where? been Ice Cream- in Mlllview Hal . Monday. July 12th. Millview Women's Institute. "Annual meeting of the West River Telephone Co. will be held gn Long Creek hall Tuesday even- Tl . ' EBIIIV B "See Georgetown Players ire- sent "Betty the Girl 0' My Heart", Brglgetown I-Iall, July lath. Curtain 8.3 . , "Meeting of New Glasgow Rink will be held Tuesday. July ll, to settle accounts pertaining to funds on hand. "Lower Montague Regatta, July 14. Entertainment for all the family. Chicken and ham supper. Big dance at night. "West Covehead Tea. Wednn- day, July 14th. Friends and visitors are invited to our annual tea. luv- ing 4 p. m. standard 'I'ime.. "The sale at Mr. 1'ran.k Roche's, Kelly's Cross, which was to have been held Monday. July 11, post- poned until Tuesday, July is. . "Dance, West Royalty l-isll, Wednesday. Rollie )lacKensis's Orchestra. Canteen Service l0-1.00 Daylight Saving. --isms Purim Calf starter- nme better. Get your tickets on Winaloe Roberts Beautena at Gil Henry's Purina Feed Store. "A meeting of the Wheatley School District will be held in the School Monday night. July nth, to discuss the proposed regional High school. "Ice Cream and strawberry Pes- tival. Tuesday. July lath. Marsh- Held Presbyterian Manse grounds. Also sandwiches. cake and tea. 5.00 P. in. standard 'rime. "Reserve Wednesdayyauly iith, for strawberry and Ice Cream les- tival at Bristol United Church. "Dance. Iona Hall. Tuesday, July 132: Morriasey-MacDonald Orch- es "Kelly's Oross 'Iles Party, Wed- Mldly. July 14th. Bingo. various allies and forms of amusement, refreshments. supper served from I o'clock. Dan ' at night. "The Menu Community Hall Co. will hold their big Dance t. Three door prises will be given way. Don't miss it. You will have I lood time at this Dance. "Chicken salad su Dance i in Mt. lteanmifallm 1 Hill. Su comm , . Standard” Time. '3."3.'m:' 133. Pres&"sOrehestra. Tolicngd Pee val is toeaeolir suceemfui it extmsded to include other types of timing. Volcano in Iceland Threatens lruprlon IIIIIKJAVIK. Iceland, (neut- ers)-aesthing thunder beneath Europe's dgcreatest ice-cap ast- urday in ates that alnsvotn volcano may be heading toward a new fiery eruption through its coating of snow and ice. The also-foot volcanic mount. sin last erupted in 1034. when molten laval melted so much surrounding ice that a huge river poured down from the peak. Grinsvctn. most motive of Ice- land's numerous volcsncs, lies in the middle of Europe's largest M ....2”:"Q."i&”;.iZi;;”;'i2 Showdown On Indo-China Issue Will Not Seek N. S. LUNENBURG. N.a., (OP)-Ron crt H. winters. federal public works minister, said lundsy he plans to remain in federal politics and will not be a candidate for leadership of Nova Bcctia's Lib- eral party. At his summer home here. the By BIIBSII. BEINES WASHINGTON, (AP)-The bat- tle over admitting Red China to the United Nations cculd- deter- mine the fate of western Asia and the future of the Big Three al- liance. This is the consensus of Ameri- can military and diplomatic. onio- tale in Asia, and congressmen who have visited there. no real issue is not the moral question of whether Red China should be recognised. It is the hard-boiled choice of methods to keep the Red Chinese in check. MANY ADVANTAGES A UN seat means this for Red 1. Withdrawal of recognition from the Phinese Nationalist and technical elimination oi their in- ternational rights to wage any further warfare against the main- land. With that might go the al- legiance of most of i2,000,000 in-. ilu tial and wealthy Chinese who ui.'i...u scopoxiaicrilfa in free I. A springboard for a new legal demand in hand Formosa over to the Peiping government. This is- land fortress. with siriields 100 miles from the U8. base on Okin- awa, could outilank American de- fence positions in the Far East. 8. World recognition as a major power which doubtlus would con- vince many free Asians there is no longer any use in opposing con- stant Chinese Communist pressure. RISK BBIAXUP But some American diplomats abroad, while prod ting thus re- sults, say that the choice is be- twaen accepting it China or eventually risking a breakup of the Big Three all ee. The basic Brit -Indian posit. ion ls that the w t is incapable of blocking the Redxohinese by force, so an effort to win their co-op- eration must be made. OPINION OODOIID '"I'he Chinese now want time to build up their country," Indian Prime Minister Nehru said to me last December in New Delhi. "If you give them some trade, you will be surprised how they will come out of their shells. I admit it is a gamble, but what else can you do?" British opinion is colored strongly by Nehru. Britain sees its future dependent upon perpet- uating s strong Commonwealth which would tba much weaker without India. But Britain also has its own in- tensified worries over Malaya. It expects warfare there to acceler- ate ii Indo-China falls or a truce is reached. DRAIN 0l'l' POWID Neither lritain nor France wants to see the United States bogged down in another ,Asian war. because they fear it would drain American power away from "RQOIVI Jilly 10111 for Cardigan IV! Party. "Ice Cream rasti l in Wheat- ley River l-Iall, July 1 th. "Low or Montague - . Wednesday. July 14. "Dance lurhmervilie school. July ll. Doildrllllllt ONIIHNI. "Mauve Wednesday, July sent, for Obieksn awe: and BI-Issr. louin itnstioo I. "Weekly dance Winsloe Station Hall Vsvery Tuesday. Dolron Bros. Orchestra. Canteen. ttl. July 12. Turners Orchestra. Aus- plces C.Y.C. "Lot I6 Kali. evry Thursday. ilth. Dolren bros. Wybance ending July Ill! 350”- name Over Admitting China To un May Winters To Remain In Federal Politics; Liberal leadership Premier Angus L. Macdonald said: "As I believe that there are other people better equipped than I to be Premier of Nova Bcotla, I have been unable to convince my- self that I could render the most useful service to my province by seeking the oiIlce of premier the glacier, the 8,000-square-mile Lunenburg native who has been I can in my present role." A Vstnajokuil. It has erupted prominently mentioned as a con- Nova Scotia's Liberals meet in over the big ice mass to times tender for the party ' h p September to name a successor to in its recorded history. left vacant by the death oi former Mr. Mscdonald and Mr. Winters had been considered a top candi- date. THREE TOSP CANDIDATES l-iis withdrawal left three mem- Deiermine Future Of Big Three Alliance a Europe still under the Commu- lf Red China gets into the UN, most American ouicials-believe it will eliminate the last chance for an Asian defensive alliance to stop Red Chins either in south- port east Asia or by striking directly at the mainland. The security of Asia then will depend upon whether Peipipg reform. if the United states keeps Red Chins out of the UN, it is inevit- able that an intensified sli'ort will be made to break apart the west- The UN battle has become a major part of the military war. Rebels Build Up Pressure Around Hanoi bers of the present cabinet con- sidered the top candidates for the post: Premier Municipal Affairs Minister Ronald speculation of a dark-horse candi- date with considerable party sup- suggested he seek the post and said "it is difficult for a Nova Section to conceive a higher hon- or, partly because of the character imparted to the office by our late premier and also because of the regard in which we Nova Bcotlans hold this old province of ours.... "I presume any public servant seeks the position in which he be- lieves he can be oi the most value to those he serves. "I personally find it dinicult to serve first, my constituency, sec- ' ondly, Nova Ecotia' generally, and thirdly, Canada." Mr. Winters recalled he only re- cently had been given the public works portfolio "and I do feel that I have not yet fully discharged my Harold Connolly, ; Fielding, and Education Minister Henry Hicks. There also has been I Mr. Winters thanked those who - decide in which role 1 could best t ' rt. .. .r: 5.5;, V fence unity august, leaving trance as the last Mmmu.. -- lar Danes, stsnio bridge I: ainrmau -ru loc . --...'.'f.":ii.'i'.ii' Music. Rollie in an Ir l'0l.ll:l'i.'. ., wanna .. ' 'ff'ANCi.' mamaiga Ikfh-iVle6 minh mils squeezing their fingers on Hanoi built up Pressure on A northwest and northeast sundsy. hitting the French union defenders in scores of small fights. 'llhs Communists - led rebels smashed a Viet Namese militia poet less than a mile from sun Tay, important garrison town only 25 miles northwest of Hanoi. French union forces scored some gains on the .-orthessteru sector. They reopened rceds between Sept Pagodes, Phu long 'Ilhuong, and Bac Ninh, 30 miles from I-Ialnoi, re- connecting time towns. Those towns mm a plvtective triangle French planes unloaded nearly I50 tons of.hIgh explosives on rebel guerrilla bases inside the shrinking Red river delta defences Saturday. Alomic Workers Return To Jobs OAK RIDGE, Tenn. - (AP) - Workers at two plants which pro- duce the entire 11.8. supply of fis- slonable uranium-285. com, t of atomic and hydrogen bombs. returned to their jobs Saturday at Oak Ridge, 'Ilenn., and Paduceh. Ky. Pmsldent.Eisenthov'cI' immediate- ly dropped plans to seek a court injunction which would have fore ed thorn in return to their Jobs for s cooling-off period. The decision oi 8,600 workers to go back to work at oak Ridge was on condition that union leaders approve a new walkout if further nogotiati fall. Expect ROMI. (AP)-A so-osued "pro- visional" division of the long-die- putod Trieste free territory between ely is sxpsoted s. This would knock down'the 8. Italy probably would ruab hc ratification of tha De- by the and of "hold-out" nation. , 4. Itslrs thin-msicrity centre I would .rosrnngibilitipg, with, res doctors palace staff." the Daily News says the Buhl room, place of princes and princesses oi the Royal Family, was renovated recently," the news ditpatch eon- tlnues. that forthcoming engagements is sur- prisingly light." last barriers to link Communist but vi "Dance Cardigan hall. Monday. . A u I 4 I. test over land south and city.-with Mm ptjulatlon and ill Illlrs xaatarean of the acne! frontier. in in favor of Yugoslavia. and ..:.ar.--main-9-.-4-more: ,.. ma; to Report Queen Expecting Third Baby Next Year NEW YORK, (AP)-The New York Daily News Sunday night quoted "Buckingham Palace sourc- es" as saying the Queen is expbct- ing her third baby early next year. "only last week two additional were appointed to the "amt vmmmh "em". mymd in a copyrighted story from Lon- ' don. Jun norm of an "at "On the Queen's instructions, traditional birth- "In this historic room, the royal bed is placed beneath the crown. "Bolstering the report is the fact Queen Elizabeth's list oi A growing number of official engagements is being announced for other women household, including Mother and Princess Margaret. oi the royal the Queen "Princess Margaret was reported delighted with the news," the dis- patch adds. ' "The birth oi another royal child would make her fourth in the line oi succession. Margaret's hope. the source said, was to fall far enough back that she may re- ceive permission to marry Group Capt. moner." Peter Townsend, a com- The news says the Queerx "idea of a family is six children." YUGOSLAVIA, ITALY 1'0 GE! SHARE Division Yugoslavia has accepted a com- prosnhe worked cut'in conferences with Britain and thevnlted states, and Italy is expected to agree. Within 5 10' den countries will call the div- Immediate results will be: ion "provisional." since both claim 1- Italy will be invited all the disputed ares, taly as s 10 10in Via. Greece and of the first Worl War and N! in their imitated Balkan mil- gcsiavia so a prise of the sec- itary alliance. on World war. In brief. dI:- I. Italy will take over Trieste lone miles with a popula- MN. including the port eats. occupied for nine years British t-W018 and 4,000 Yugelavia will continue con- sone D. a farming hinter- east of the port the compromise pro- tllis. when her troops hesoguardssleeniaeyeen. Illloihllllhmtts The compromise cells for minor .r4-s 7 Prince By JOSEPH good faith at the Indo-Chma The French leader rounded out a day of intensive preparation for the renewal of the conierenc by r,ceiving Pham Van Dong. foreign minister of the Ho Chi Minh gov- ernment, which has fought French armies for eight years in Vlet Nam, Cambodia and Laos. Heads Firemen M ' , -M Ni: Mr. Leslie G. Glllupie (above) of the Charlottetown Fire Depart- ment was elected President of,the Maritime Fireman's Association at their annual meeting held in Truro. N.s,, on Saturday. Two other Char- lottetown men, (William B. Bevans use--hob Tilfllkzdvlfd elected to the Executive. Considerable enthusiasm was s- roused at the meeting when the amembly agreed to come here for the fl'iireinen's Tournament no in year as a feature event in connec- tion with the Charlottetown Cen- tennial Celebration. The dates set for the Tournament are July 25-31. An additional incentive to elabor- ate plans for a large attevndance next year was the lack of a fire- men's tournam-.'nt in the Mari- times this year. local Man Escapes In Car Collision numb, (op) - Two persons suffered fractures Sunday in a head-on collision between two cars on the Truro-New Glasgow high- way. Helen Irving of Kemptown was taken to hospital in Halifax with a fractured skull and Cecil Perkin of Tturo, driver of one car is in hos- pital here with a fractured knee and bruises. Alvin Hastings of Charlottetown, driver of the other car, was not in- lured. Maine-Pb-per Loses Building In Fire RULCPVORD, Me, (AP) - Fire Sunday destroyed the Rumford Daily Times building. the studios oi radio station WRUM pnd a large lumber company. The fire started in a wooden building on the property of the Rumford Lum- ber Company and spread across an alley to the Times building which houses the newspaper and radio station. GENEVA, (AP) - French Premier Pierre Mendoc- France, with nine days left before his Indo-China peace deadline, Sunday conferred for the first time with repre- sentatives of the Communist-led Vietminh regime. At the same time, U. S. State Secretary Dulles in- formed Mendes-France he will not consider returning to Geneva until he sees some manifestation of Communist .3 5 ii 'Covers Edward Island: Like, The Dow. FRIOESO Preparing For E. DYNAN conference here. :1?'Z'j" in tlking directly with Donit. Mendes-France fulfilled one of the key planks oi the P1'08l'3m 0” which he took office last month He called then for direct talks with the "enemy" and said he would terminate the fighting in Indo-China by July 20 or reelin- NOT SURE OF GOOD FAITH Dulles told Mcndes-Plrence in friendly and cordial terms. accord- ing to s well-informed source, that neither he nor undersecretary of State Walter Bedeil Smith Will come back to Geneva "for the time being" because he is not ompletely sure of the good faith of the "other side" and will await some sign of it before deciding whether to return. This message, brought here by C. Douglas Dillon, American am- bassador to France. was in reply to the premiers append for more authcritativ American representa- tion at the conference in the com- ing fortnight. A well-informed American source said later there is a better chance now than before Sunday after- noon's meeting that someone might come from Washington. one unconfirmed report last week said the French might agree to a partition of Vlet Nam at tho lath parallel, with at least three French enclaves north of the line and an equal number of Vietminh areas south of the line. LUNCIIING WITH EDEN The premier lntendsie. day with British Foreign Secretary Eden, who arrives by plane from London shortly before noon. A French official said Mendoc- France also hopes to see V. K. Krishna Menon, special envoy of Indian Prime Minister Nehru, who has been trying to mediate East- West conference conflicts. The nlneparty conference re- mained in recess during the ween- end. It is expected that Eden and Soviet Foreign Minister Molotov. conference co-chairmen, will meet this afternoon to fix a data for the next session. Mendes-France dined Saturday night with Molotov and reports of their conversation said it was "cordial". Another leading figure. Red Chinese Premier Chou In- Company And Union GLACE BAY, N.S. (CP)--Com- pany and union officers meet to- day to discuss the status of 1.300 miners suspended for throwing coal, spikes and insults at mine officials. Dominion Coal Company slapped on the suspension Friday against miners in two of its biggest pits, Nos. 1-1! and 26. General manager Harold Gordon said they will remain closed until the union amuru him the miners will no longer abuse mine officials. Tom Macltachian, president of l-B local who later this year be- came president of United Mine Workers (COL), district 28. said the matter was "not too difficult of solution." Any prolonged tie-up at the pits, however. would be serious as to- oi cool a day. NAMED EARLY QUIITIIIS began when an unidentified dis- patcher turned in names of day shift workers who quit ahead of time. The miners on the 4 p.m.-to- midnight shift last Tuesday tossed coal at the dispatcher as they went below in the pit cars. District Director Of N.B.-P.E.l Postal Services Dies . -IAIN? IJOIIN-,( N.D.-.r(GF);7-J-. tour 3. Ingraham. Ci.-. dtisndct di- rector of postal services for New Brunswick and Prince Edward Is- land. died Sunday at his home in nearby Kennebocasis Perk. He was a member of the paws commission of the city of Saint Jam and prominent. in many or- ganizations of humanitarian, pa.- triatic or fraternal character. lb- peoially interested In me Navy league of Canada, he was prai- dant of its New Brunswick divi- sion and had been national vica- resident and a. member of the national sea. cadet cosruniiatee. Mr. Ingrehem was an ardent sportsman and former president of the saint John Beavers hoche-y club. He once held a. Junior inter- Lal, is expected here today. By RICHARD 0'REGAN VIENNA, (AP)-Central Europe's flood disaster, the worst in hun- dreds of years for some areas, has left thousands more homeless in four countries. The four-day death toll rose to is Sunday. In Germany, Austria, Hungary and Czechoslovakia, rescue work- ers, including American and Rus- slan troops, struggled to reach vil- lages marooned by the flood wat- ers of the Danube and a dozen of its tributaries. Tens of thousands of farmers and city folk have been forced to flee their homes. In the Austrian city of Line alone. 24,000 persons have been evacuated. Moat Danube tributaries were reported subsiding Sunday, but Europe's greatest water artery it- OF Trieste Area ions of American dollars to help Yugoslavia develop her own part at cspodistris, south of Trieste. Nationalistlc Fascist forces and the big-muscled Italian communist party, strongest in Europe outside the Iron curtain. have promised to make any compromise a death- test for Premier Mario Scelbrs gov- ernment. - Communists already have started with port worked strikes in Trieste. 8celbs's foreign minister,Attllio Piccioni, told a paruamentsry for- eign affairs committee Friday "there is no reason to delay longer on the big test over I-IDC." ' There has been a tendency here to wait for settlement of the 'n'iaste bus before acting on lur- cpesn defence past ratification. CANCEL OIJIOTIONI alt!-'1a'.""””-o-no'"......'"'”..i.l.'i; tions to printing non-ausntic- Yugoslavia into defensive sili nee with NATO members Greece and Turkey. nin- I, A Mtcbpupgi the-Trieste quarrel today which has made Italy and Yugo- slavia bad Adriatic neighbors. prob- ably would bring an invitation for Rome to join the Bel-Athens-Istam bul alliance. . But for long-tried and new-pros- poring Trieste, the compromise posse new problems. with its economy jacked up by nine years of British and American foster-mothering, Trieste now is one of southern Europe's cleanest most modern port cities. its docks handle s.sso.ooo tons of goods in year. its steel mills, built with Marshall Plan dollars. and its modern oil refinariu financed by a 84,000,000 1!. 5. loan, are among the finest on the Mediterranean. In shops are jammed with low price good from all over the world. lut when its tar-free status as an international port ends, many fear a sharp reeomicn. Thu-a are no lane for the final withdraw of tech and U. 8. troops. louroea close to the mill ln.Tl'bte.- however, say "it in likely we'll b eating Ad- riatic 'seafood two months ..irom More Thousands Are Forced To Hee As Central European Flood Disaster Spreads national speedskating title. ' self was still rising, sweeping crops. homes. bridges and human hopes into its swirling torrent. TWICE NORMAL HEIGHT The Danube at Regensburg was gather they hoist about s,ooo tons 7. The company said the incident I On Wednesday and Thursday , they tossed insults. But the night ' ' To Discuss Status Today Of 1.300 Suspended N. S. Miners crew Friday added truck spikes and chunks of coal and the com- pany promptly announced the sus- pensions. Mr. Gordon said "until definite assurances are given by the local union that there will be no recur- rence of such incidents, Nos. 1-1! and 26 coliierles will remain idle.” Prominent Editor. Publisher Dies LETHBRXDGE. Alta. (CP)-Sew ator William Asbury Buchanan, 78, editor. publisher and a lead- or in Canadian political life for a half-century. died Sunday alter a long illness. The publisher of the Lethhridge Herald underwent a serious op- .aosiin.n...ln . .Edmo.nt.on.'a. : ldaivassttv hospital last fall. He attended senate session in Ottawa during the winter but. became critically :11 three months ago. He died at s.m. yet been completed. A native of Fraserville. Ont. Senator Buchanan was one o Canada's best-Tcnown publisher! and one of the founders of the old Western Associated Press. the first newsgatherlng co-operative in Canada and forerunner of The Canadian Press. Haoserved as president of the t . ntinued on page 2, col. 3) ' I twice its normal height and base- ments were undcr water. Two dams at woertn and Deggendorf were threatened. Miles of rich agricultural land were under water and damage to wheat lands in Germany and Austria is estimated in the millions of dollars. Medieval Passau, surrounded by the Danube, Inn and lie rivers, braced itself for an expected new crest of the Danube. The Danube already is three times its normal height there. An estimated 1.000 are homeless, living in hotels and schools. Five thousand others are living in the upper stories and at- tics of their flooded homes. Between Passau and Line. scores of villages along the Danube and the Inn, were under water. , SHILTEB IN IOIIOOLI At Lins, where 1s.ooo persons had been told by police to leave their homes Saturday, another 9.- 000 were forced to seek shelter in schools and public buildings dur- ing the night and early Sunday. American troops at a nearby camp mobilised hundreds of trucks and boats and gave full assistance. Across the Danube, in l..lnz' twin city of Urfshr, Russian troops also were helping the needy. one of the hardest hit villages was Ooldwoerth, near Lina. More than we inhabitants spent so hours in streaming rain. without food or watar,on the roofs of their houses before rescue teams could evacuate them. They lost. 000 cat- tle. one child died in the flood and two others wcs missing there. In Vienna and its suburbs. rail freight lines along the Danube banks were under water. lvaous- tions have taken place in outskirts of the ct bordering the river. behind t 0 Iron Ourtsin. Onene- slevek and Hungarian farmers along the Danube valley Vere be- If IN ' TORONTO (CP)-Minimum and maximum temperature; MIN. .5122. Da wson 52 61 Vancouver 54 57 Victoria 51 51 Calgary 13 73 Edmonton 49 73 Saskatoon 5:; 79 Regina so 79 Winnipeg Q7 33 Toronto 57 70 Ottawa 53 go Quebec 51 73 Montreal 34 79 Saint John 53 73 Moncion so 75 Halifax 52 75 Fredericton 45 79 Charlottetown 63 7,1. Sydney 451 72 Yarmouth M 63 St. John's Nfid 50 70 HALIFAX (CP)-The Dominion weather office here says generally line weather is indicated for in- day. but widely scattered showers and thunderstorms threaten for most regions in the afternoon and evening. Regional forecasts: Prince Ed- ward Island. eastern N.B. conn- tlea: Clear with a few cloudy in- ervala: showers and thunder- storms in widely scattered locali- ties Monday afternoon and onen- Ing: not much change in tempera- ture: light winds: low-high as Charlottetown 55 and 15. Mane-ten IO and 1!. High tide today at Charlottaetdwlt at M4 a. m. end 8.50 p. in. High tide today at the North Shore at. 2.21 p. m. sun rises today at 4.9! a m. and sets at 7.50 p. m. .'.; I ins cvncuatod by Communist pol- Funersl arrangements have not ' i :5 1- was we-v.-.9-.' - - V- :,,,: ...-A-. , - .-...3-; -1 --I- -r.-.