wliiiiireddilirflfiideyiilm“ MAXIMS ‘ OIL MERE MAN ' would shun unto the contrary creme have run. 0ft men who one ertnvigllco Q‘- The Guardian. Three Cents. lla ' _ ‘Daily Founded llfl. ll EAV Y VOTE PLEASES ANTI - COMMUNISTS Read by Everybody ' Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Devi ~ CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, APRIL stiff nwked than headed of the wicked. MAXIMS BIA i MERE MAN The eobeseet saints are oft more the hottest PAGES “Ginger Group” To Provide Fire U. N. Delegates Are Pessimistic Over Palestine Solution Italian Munitions Dumps liaided (By The Associated Press) norm Apr. i9—(Monday)-Two unsuccessful attempts to attack munitions dumps during Italy’s fateful Sunday election do)’ We" reported early today. The report of a second unsuc- éesslul attempt to blast e Govem- ment supply was received several ‘hours after the polls closed in the Sunday phase of the election in which Italians thronged to the voting places to make their choice between east and west. An unofficial but reliable source said an attempt was made to blow up an army dump at Pavia, a town in Lombardy south orMllan in Italy's heavily populated "red north." Police would neither con- firm nor deny the report. In the only other maJor incid- ent of violence Sunday, so young soldiers guarding an. ammunition dump t San Rocco e1 Porto near Milan vere reported to have en- gaged in a two-hour gun fight with a group of unknown attack- ers. The attackers were driven ofl. There were no casualties. ll. S.‘ Man Fatally MIDDLETON. N. IS». April l6- iCPi-Vernon McLeod. 20. die: in hospital here Saturday from in- Jilrits received in an automobile accident Friday night. Three other persons, two of them members 0! the R. C. A. F. ivere in hospital in serious condi- lion and l0 other Air Force men revolved hospital treatment hi- lowinfl ihe accident The accident occurred on tiu i-ialn highway east of here when LhE car in which McLeod was a passenger collided with a truck bringing the R. C. A. F. men irorn. the station at nearby Greenwood io their homes-here. Coming Events “Ploy. Tracadie Hall. Wednes- day April 21st. Dance after. "Dance in Waiter Counters. Fllllkolfl. Tuesday night, April 20th. "Card Party, Credit Union Hall, Sguunerfieid. Monday night, April "Klnkors llall. Monday. April QQQYI- Carri Party and Dance. Door rim "Place your orders for grass grad. Booking now. Vernon J. ‘oyc. "National Film Board in New Perth School Monday, April 19th. Isle oi cske end candy. “Unloading pressed hay at Breadalbane Monday and Tuesday. Walto- o. Mackenzie. "Dance. Flat River Hall Wednesday. ant. In no of V91‘ W. I. ._._._ . "Bl. Andrew's Dramatic Oiub present their Plsy. 5t. Peter's Bsv. Wednesday. my 21st. us. ma- pices 5t. Peter's. Petlsh. \ “Ulllaldloe-Moncsy and ‘Ines- gly. oer cement; also buying pots- Wl and turnips every day. P. J. Nov. Hunter River. "cltllwilnk end trucking hogs a" Canada Packers every Thurs- al? from Osnoe Cove. aloe Paine. n2: Ions Creek. Archie McKin- ‘on Flat u“ t‘. - n llllillue’ end vicinity farin- ,5?! “ll-l mo more min - sgeln M, "If by having their seed ‘ ""1! alums end graded. We "a cleaning every day. - l": A: Phil Service. m, u ._..... m cfoglifi-lfl-Dserlo.» s three- Gmil Club- Cliuroli at 1hr Iii-h at 3.1g p_ a it the abognlt om Wm“? PM More. NEW YORK. April la- (CP)-- The United Nations General As- sembly faces another fight Monday on the apparently lost cause of a peaceful partition of Palestine. While a United States spokesman said there ls a possibility no solu- tion can be found to end the Holy Land bloodshed unless several countries agree on joint action backers of the U. N. plan to divide Palestine into Jewish and Arab states were reported rallying their forces. delegates was that the U. N. would be ineffective in dealing with the problem to be brought before the spscial_scssion of- the assembly which opened Friday. The American spokesman ~sald the United States will not try to solve the problem by itself. TN? United stares would insist that other countries bear their part of any Palestine solution. These comments modified ille- vious indications that the United Slates, vihioh has withdrawn sup- port of partition voted last Nov. 29 by the Assembly - would 01MB before the special assembly a def- inite plan or temporary trustee- ship over ‘the Holy Land. The Assembly was convened by the Security Council on the demand of the United States. The issue before the, Assembly which sits again at 10:30 a.m. (EST) Monday. will be whether so approve the recommendation of the iii-member steering committee to send the partition issue immed- commlttee without general debate on the Assembly floor. . French delegate Alexander Porocii confirmed Saturday that a move was under way to persuade Britain to continue her Palestine mandate after May l5. He sold that the was little hope the special assemb iy could do much before that date. In the firstpubllc reference i-o a move reported under way for some time among the big powers. Parodi termed important the "suggest- ions to extend the time limit 0! the ‘British man-date." supervision oi the truce which calls for Snmiedlabe cessation of strife and a-political "standstill." is thrust unon Britain by the Security Council's order Soturiloy- The British delegation here indicated that the probable course would be for Sir Alan Cunningham, Pales- tine High Commissioner, to get Jews and Arabs together for new talks in the Holy Lond- Safcerackcrs Oped Safelt Wolfvillc WOLFVILLE. N.s., April 1B — (op), _ safecrackers busted open the strong-box of the Acadia Theatre here early today and made off with an undisclosed am- ount of money. Manager William Clamp declined to confirm the re- ulttwmltllbfllfl port that $500 had been taken. FAMOUS SWORDS STOLEN LONDON‘. April lll-(APF-Bur- glars today stole two gold-billed. iewel-scabberd swords. that once belonged to the Duke of Welling- ton from, the Victoria and Albert Museum. The swords are valued by the museum st 11.000 (MM). t....._ (By Alton L. Blskeelse) . CHICAGO. April 18 -- (Ari- inks of water that turn bebies bue, sometimes killing them, were described tonight to the Americas. Chemical society. This water. taken from some wells, is crystal clear and looks innocent. But even smell smounuv. es e straight wstcl- drink or in milk formulas. can meke babies start turning blue. It dose this bsceuss it oontsl too much nitrogen, in a form that affects the babies’ blood. ‘rheir hood hemoglobin is altered so it doesn't carry oxygen as it should The blood becomes a chocolna oolor and their skin turnrbluich or sletesgrey. They look like the olu babies when trouble is due to me armed nesrfl; end which often con be corrected by operations The blue disease, or cyencsic. Mo: water wee first discovered w. the disease hive some from Canada, es well. ‘tonight. Jeinee Ct. Isert. sent‘ engineer ,of the Illinois De- psr out of Public Health. report- The glllm outlook held by many b iltoly TB the 'B’FI'TIETI1'B'€FWDO‘IICR:'EI' Find Strange Water . > Turns Babies Blue Federal Budget Expected In May ~ OTTAWA, April 17 - (C?) — With the symptoms of crisis apparently drained out of the freight rates issue. Parliament is heading into several weeks which promise to be e. relatively un- spectacular prelude to budget day. Finance Minister Abbott's budget, now anticipated sometime in May, is the most immediate major de- velopment on the Ottawa political horizon. Its contents have already been the subject of onsldersble speculation. with the chief interest ccntrlng on the possibilities o! large income tax cuts. There have been predictions both ways, that there will be and that there won't e ‘Mr. Abbott has rejected any attempts ln tho Cconnwns to deter- mine Jusi. when his budget will come down. The week immediately ahead will see fihe freight rates issue - touch- ed off by the decision of the Board of Transport Commissioners to gran-t tho-railways a Zl-per-csnt increase‘ in rates probably brought-rte‘ arheerlkwwesday ~in Commons‘ vote; on two Opposition amendments which amount to non- conlidencc motions. Any threat that the Government would be overthrown by recalcitrant Maritimes and‘ Western Liberals was wiped away this week when Prime Minister Mackenzie King flatly told a. party caucus that the rates question was hardly one or: w-iilch to fight a. Federal election The week will also be note- worthy for the annual meeting of the Progressive Conservative Association. expected to draw 1,000 delegates to lzhe Capital. Olerk Of House Mr. '1‘. R. Cullen. former Speaker of the Provincial Legislature and defeated candidate for 2nd King's in the last General Provincial election, has been appointed Clerk of the Legislative Assembly. The appointment was announced over 'l.ife"""iiv'éek-end by Premier J; Waiter Jones. - Three Children-Burn To Death In Ontario PENETANGUISHENE. Ont, Ap- ril l8—~'I'hree small children were burned to death ivhen fire swept their frame dwelling Saturday. Victims were three-year-old Di- .jY1E GilbankHtwo-year-old Donald Jack Gilbank had left Petetang- ulshene Friday to join ills Lake freighter. Mrs. Gllbank had gone 100 yards distant to get a. pail of water. When she returned she saw lier own houselon fire. When firemen arrived it was impossible to rescue the three children. Mackenzie King (By The Canadian Press) orraW-i. April iii-Defeated in one bid for a Government hear- ing of their price complaints. o. big consumer group yesterday took its grievances to Prime Minister luackenzie King. - . A spokesman at Laurier House, the Prime Minister's residence. said a messenger delivered a letter and some "bundles". They were from the! 300 men and women who Fri- day izried unsuccessfully to meet the cabinet. The spokesman said n0 delegation went to Laurie: House. where Mr. King is confined with a cold. The group. from all parts of Canada. is described by the Gov- ernment as Communist-led. Meet- ing in a high school auditorium Friday night, they called the Communist tag a "false brand”. Oanadian Letters In Italian Oampaign MONTREAL. April l8 - (GP) -- Local ltalo-Cnnadion sources said irriorc‘ than 100.000 letters from Canada are serving as ammunition for democratic forces in today's Italian elections. Local organizations are doing their share and Roman Catholic priests in parishes where there are many Italians have encouraged parishioners to make letters to their homeland democratic propaganda. Rev. Pierre Benoit Mail-empi said he personally has averaged three or four letters a day since Christmas. De Gaulle Balls For immediate Election , MARS-EILLE. April 18 —lAP)- Death Sentence ls commuted To Llfa OTTAWA, April l7—(CP)—-Jani- es William St. Pierre of Chathnm. Ont. taxi driver sentenced to 0-. hanged April 21 for the shotgun slaying of his father-in-law. has had his sentence commuted to life imprisonment, E. J-I. Coleman. Ulld" Willem’? °i 5138"» Bmlulm" Gen. Charles De Gaulie today cali- "4 “d53- sil- PM?" w" “"9"” ed for an immediate general elec- “4 7'0 5""! l°u°wml m! "will" tiou which. lie said. would oiiililc m“ Jim- w. “i cmmm‘ bin; to head a strong government capable of facing the peril of Rus- e. st Almost simultaneously. Premier Robert Schuman. a De Gauilc political rival. announced that he would ask Parliament to adopt new military reorganization laws be- cause of the unsettled internation- al situatlon. Schuman gave no details but said the plan would cost the country "the indispensable minimum inlmonsy and men." His Cabinet recently discussed increasing the required military training period from one year to i8 months. m Caulle. lecder o! the ngnuiit Rassemblement do Peuple Fran». cais (R.P.F.), charged that the present Cabinet is dividing France at e time of great danger. ed new studies showing that this kind or wear is fairly widespread. particularly in . shallow wells of the mid-west. In Illinois elonc last year. he said. at least as bebiee got e dis- ease from the water. and ive of them died. - The bed effect comes from nitro gen in the form o! nitrate. lven es little,se 2-l.000tha cf one per cent. of nitrate in the water may be dangerous, Wcert ssld. But. it sp- perently is bed only for very young babies. he asld. A simple remedy is to switch u: water that doesn't have the nit- rate. This oftAn works, if the dis- eue hasn't gone loo far. There is no practical way to take the nit- rsta out of water containing ‘t. Wesrt. eeld. Weert said more sod lnore rs- ports of blue bebies from nitrate water lied been received from rcwe. lenses. Cldshorns. Texas. Nebreiks. Missouri. Minnesota. end lllohken. and elm in Oenede end Belgium. Nitrate water elao has been reported in Soslobd. C fl N i Sivrfifafi v 1 K F‘MM’MMMAW§%LS“T M: "d M: ‘ I ren .0 . an s. ac G - Take Grievances To t... - . [0530 I Young Members Work Way Into Resolutions Group (By D'Arcy O'Donnell) OTTAWA, April l’! — (CPL-A "ginger group" composed of young men with political ambitions is ex- pected to provide the fireworks at the annual meeting of the Progres- sive Conservative Association o.‘ Canada, opening today. Approximately 1.000 delegates from various parts of Canada are expected at the three-clay sessions. Some representatives of the "gin- ger group" arrived in time to at- tend closed meetings of the resold tions committee Friday and sat- lurday. Ordinarily the committee is made up of veteran supporters of the party. said an official. As a result resolutions from the yoiuiger ele- ments of the party have usually been steered aside. This year the younger element. worked its way into the committee sittings and urged. that the party “go on record in favorof-a-natlonal social security program. Veteran members o! the com- mittee suggested the party should not go so far. because a national health insurance plan would prove costly. The youngsters disagreed and said if the older supporters of the party were not prepared to support a progressive social security pra- gram they should move out and make room for "new blood." Another party supporter said that as a result of the showing by the younger members the resolu- tions coming out or the annual meeting would be “more progr VH7, -_ A _'_I‘he question of organization, he said, would be one"of the major items on the agenda. A serious effort is underway to draft Hon. Earl Rowe iPC-Dufferin-Simco) for the presidency of the Assoc- iation. J. M. Macdonnell (PC-iiiuskoka- Ontario) has been president for the last two years. Some members believe a general ecction may come this year. A Lib- eral convention will be held in August to choose a. successor to Prime Minister Mackenzie King as leader of the Liberal Party. The new leader might seek an early mandate from the people, although the lire of Parliament does not ex- pire until August. gPetain- 92, Hopes ‘For New Trial ILE DYEU, OFF‘ THE COAST CF‘ WESTERN FRANCE, April lo -lRsuters)—On this little island. lo miles out in the Atlantic. Henri- Philippe Petain, Marshal of France and former head oi the Vichy state. will spend his 92nd birth- day next iveek-end hoping for o retrial of his case. _He has lived here in the sun zen fortress since Nov. l5. i045. when he arrived from Fort Pour-Talet in the Pyrenees in the autumn after his trial. Petaln, then 89. was sentenced .0 death and loss of civic rights on charges 0f plotting against the se- curity of the state and intelligence with the enemy. But the jury rc- commended mercy on aooount of his age. His mind is still as ‘active as ever and though he ls cut off from the world in a six-mlle-long is.and, 40 miles from the mouth of the River Loire, he takes a keen inwrest in French and world affairs. career‘ m rnacrons PARIS, April i8—(R.euters)—A tractor equipped with two plows to avoid the necessity of turning is one of the latest inventions on show at the 90th salon of agricul- tural machinery here. With one plow in front and one at the rec-r, the farmer only has to pull e lever to lift clear the one which he does not want to use. ADA FLOUR Move To llnilesiraliles From Europe To Dominion OTTAWA. April 18 - (Special) V With Mines and Resources Minister Glen who supervises Can. Mia's irrun-iigration policy absent recovering free-n a heart ailment, official Ottawa. was deeply dis. turbed this week-end ct reports that mounting numbers of "an. deslrables" were coming into cm. ada. from Europe's displaced per. sons camps, Some weeks ago seven Jews who had entered Canada with forged British Pflssports were rounded up ln Toronto and deported. Now it is said that many persons with subversive tendencies have got by the immigration and labor de- partment's "screening teams" in Europe and are a menace to peace and security in this country. A double check is being made on a number of persons whose previous records are under question and dr- portatlon proceedings may be launched ii‘ it can be proved they entered this country by making false representations. It is even claimed here that among those who passed Canada's screening officers are former merm- bers of the Germ-an Gestapo and SS. who destroyed all tihel-r ident- ification paperrand sought refuge gionaires Oust A ll Subversive Members; MONTREAL. APPII. l8 - lCP) —Direct action to eliminate sub- lan Legion was taken Saturday by the Quebec Provincial Command in closing its three-day conven- iion. Delegates also voted to fldflll! to memberthip men called up under the National Resources Mobiliza- tion Act who served in an actual theatre of war. A move to accept veterans with three years’ service in the non- permanent active militia was de- fasted, Steps to eradicate Communists, anarchists and Fascists came in the form of three approved reso- lutions cailingwon the Dominion Command to amend the Legion constitution at the Dominion-wide convention in Saskatoon next month. One resolution would gil_fl.fi'€__l.i_i_§ constitution state specifically: ._ “No anarchist. Ctnfnmunist or P180131. avowed or proved, shall be permitted to became ‘or main s. marrtber; nor shall person who advocates the dg. struciion of organized govern- ment in Canada by force. or any Portion who advocates, encourages 01‘ Participates in subversive ac- tion or subversive prupflggndg b, permitted to become or remain a, member." A second resolution alters the Legion ritual so that affirmation of membership conforms fully With the revised article on anti. re- any in the displaced persons camps. When making application to come to Canada. these men, it is alleged. told Canadian officers they were Poles. citizens of Latvia, llisthonia and Lithuania. or that they were anti-communists who escaped across the frontiers of Hungary or Czechoslovakia. since few of the Canadian officials in Europe speak languages other than English and French. dealings with these supposedly displaced persons were carried on through interpreters, and the wily ex-nazis invented credible falsehoods about their antecedents and families which completely hoodwlnlced lihe Cam- dians, most of whom have ‘had little experience in unrnaskirtg liars. Evldfinoe 0f Bullet! American and British officials in displaced persons cations have uncovered evidence of all kinds o: "rackets" in these concentrations of Jlékfiréllllehssaufl ,_,__ ,,,, __,__ Under the third resolution sec-h Lesion branch would set up an investigating can-mission which. would file formal complaint against anyone violating the membership provisions. Al? Present the constitution, in "-9 llllllnctlons against undesir. versive elements frmn the Gained-- Subscription Delivered $6.00. < Mall 85.00. other Provinces its U. B. I100. IN ITALY WOEkS P. Final Returns Quebec Le Expected Late [On Tuesday By FRANK O'BRIEN ROME. April l8 —— (AP) Italians ihronged the heavily ‘iguarded polls today to make their choice between east. 5nd west, and the great outpouring heartened antl-Covmniunist leaders, Some supporters oi the Valle. ail-backed Christian Dampers: Pally had feared that the day's showers might keep their follow- ers at home, while Communists, under orders. flocked to the polls. Bu: these fears seemed ground- less _ in some precincts up ta 90 per cent of the voters cast bril- lots iviiiiin a few hour's, A total iof 21 hours. ending Monday, was allotted lor the election of a Par- liament. Communist leaders were silent. In contrast. a statement of con- fidence came from Premier Alcida de Gasperi. niio voted after PPBPers in Vatican City. “We will not fall democracy," he said. The weather was cloudy over most of the peninsula. rain fell in some places and the threat s: rain preiralledvin. cilhcrs. V“ _UP l0 tonight. there had been little need of the saoooo soldiers. policemen and finance gugrda mobilized by the Government to lYl-f-llfe order ilifllOllg ihe 29,0001)“; eligible voters. Al. Fi-asoaiii [ha Kuards were minding babies while their mothers voted. ....0l1ll’ Wvlehce reported has not at the polls. It was a, two-hour gunfight just after midnight be. {Ween unknown attackers 3nd 5o young soldiers guarding an 3m. "ummflll dumb at San Rocco ei P°"i»° Dell‘ Milan. There were no casualties, '55? "iYToTtance the cleclion out- “Tn? may have fol‘ Europe and w" “Wild. Millions of Italians got up “n? ti’ m"! llil before tlir 41.647 voting places and mark their choice between the Corn- munist-dominated Popular from. and the anti-Communist paying; ables. refers only broadly to avowed anarchists and Fascists, and. fixes on individuals the rg. sponsibllity for making a. com- PIE-ill 1n Writing against an anti- subversive member. Minor Riots Break Out In Ooiombia BOGOTA, April lS—(APi--Gp- lombian troops exchanged shots with snipers for more than an hour lost and forgotten men. It has (Continued on Page a Col. l) ' Plaii To Ilse “Talkies” In Ontario Election TORONTO, April 18 - (CF)- Premier Geoige Drew and his Cab- inet Saturday made "taikles" to be shown throughout the Province at political rallies and in theatrts. The Premier and his Ministers are shown discussing various topics of interest to the electors they hope to attract to the polls for the 0n- tario provincial election June '1. today in the centre of riot-scarred Bogota. . The snipers ‘apparently were lodged on an upper floor or roof of a building on Jimenez de Ques- ada Avenue. two blocks from the city's main street, Carrera Septime. A squad of troops in front oi the froze: Granada opened up with a. volley. The firing became in- tense as snipers’ shots were heard from several directions. El Tiempo. Bogota newspaper estimated today that 1.000 Persons were killed in the Colombian cap- ital's uprising oi April 9. Topping previous estimates oi 300 killed, El Tiempo said 400 were buried in Bogota cemeteries in one day alone. ' (By The Canadian Press) MONTREAL, April l8 - Three law-enforcement agencies-Pascal. Provincial and City Police-have to Ge-urped operations of Mont- rears 8M0 Communists snd fel- low-travellers that the Red move- ment is fast disappearing under- ground. directors of the co-oper- ative drive said today. . Reid after raid hes produced e ‘eslth of information. Police files filled with lists of individual names and organisations. docu- merits, leaflets and other publica- tions and a mess ’oi detail on Oomirnmiet rcmltlcetim-is. The files themselves tell tho story. 0f the 8.800 Reds and sym- pathlzers in the city. 1,800 are rs- . glstered members of the Commun- ist Party. Ringleaders, taking or- ders dirt-ct. from Moscow. number about 100. There ero 38 organizations "fronting" for the Reds under in- nocuous . Communist publi- cations tn 1o millions ere circu- lated in Mont-real from ell parts o.’ Canada. ‘I110 Communist ramifications have reached into l2 industrial councils and trade unions in Montreal Police Drive Reds Underground L ontreai alone. ' Toronto. not Montreal, is the body of the Red octopus. The latest Communist propa- ganda campaign in Quebec Prov- ince tAlls French-Canadians they will be conscripted for military service unless they take a determ- ined stand. The literature points to steps in the United States to- ward universal military training and says Oanade is ‘preparing to act accordingly. Police authorities said every branch is on the alert against sub- versive organizations. and more raids are in the making. Lieut. Louis Champagne. head oi the Montreal Police Depart- menus Anti-subversive Squadacts umier authority of Police Director Albert Lsngiols. Other officers cornbsttlng Communist operations are Corporal Paul Barret-to of the Royal Oensdlen Mounted Police and Special Officer Peui Benoit of the Quebec Provincial Police. There is close co-operstlon among ell three agencies. and Deputy Director Bilsirs Beaure- gard oft-he Provincial Police keeps the Attorney-General’: ofllce fully Paved by dc Gasperis 011.1511... Democrats. The new Parlicrncnt pain; 5,1. lContinued on Page 5 4 '~‘*-.- . _, 4laacsYN~ . Bit. MTFERENCE f _l Bunsen Brim‘ that litany All», ~ Tint-Romy v \'/_C) ' ' TORONTO. ADril lll-Jvliriimllill and maximum temperatures; Vancouver 4o. 60; Victoria 46, 57; Edmonton 3i, 3T; Calgary 31, 54; ivinnipeg 3'7, 59; Toronto 31, 52; Ottawa 2s, 54; Monti-eel so, 53; Quebec 23, 50; Saint John -. t2; Moncton 21, 44; Halifax 42, 50:_ Charlottetown 24, 34; Sydney 25. 33; Yarmoutb 29, 40. HALIFAX. April 1B -- (CP) ~- Wcather synopsis and official in. land forecasts issued by the Dom. inion Public West-her Office to- night‘. Synopsis: The weather was find over the Maritlcnes Sunday, Tum. peratures rose to the 40s in New Brunswick and Southwestern Nova scotla but in Prince Edward Island and Northern Nova Scotis after. noon temperatures were in tihs low 30s. A ridge of high pimssure is moving across the district and 1r Monday southerly wind; will mi“ milder air. A pouhlawegoer]; current of moist sir was caught‘ min in the Great Lakes ares Sun- day evening and cloud had spread eastward to the Lower 5t. Lawrence. On Monday this cloud will spread over the whole district. Rain and snow are forecast for the north- western part of the dlstrm. Forecasts. valid until Monday midnight: Prince Edward Island ,- cieh becoming overcast Monday evening. Mllder Monday. Light winds in- creasing Monday afternoon tn south l5. Low early Monday morn- _ing at Cherlottetownflb. hill-s in the afternoon 48. High tide this morning st 7.28 end tonight at Q53. Sun sets this evening at 6.50 and rises tomorrow morning st 5.08. Pull anon April 23rd. 9.8 A. M. Simimereide tide eighteen min- informed. uios later than Charlottetown, é =°lemll_._lifll&irie'_reilscrea~_