n. m,‘ "lg-pl beauty In moral >‘/W/’ The People's Paper Covers Prince EdwarcPIsland Like the Dew ____ ‘ awn", Founded l!" t, n" Guardian. 5 "I £35; Axis Raven ank M“; devastating att by single Squadron. t. 30—(CP)—R. A. I. strmen flying Hudson icicle ' 0c Axtl l-hlpl at Alcsund, Norway, an im- pply base for the north Russian front, left u fish til . “glam”. and machine-gunned troop barracks, the Air Minis- ughtsarik or damaged seven l German i" awfliolllinywries sweeping over northern France tonight attacked ship- _ “lupus and Le llnvre. and fired hangars at Morlaix nirdrome. ., ‘l Mei were attacked hst nkht. m,“ hich no planes were lost. was described as denaturing shipping attack over mode by s single squad- - |lf5° m u rsld. in w mt rqgmm losses were listed ll g liii icft in flames, s sixth’: superstructure and upper deck M, c air, and an escort rmer General perintendcnt C. P. injured [By Ross lllunro) d. (flan Pros-s Will‘ C0110!- pondcnt) in‘ am; 1N ENGLAND- Il-(CP Cubic)—Cnpt. Qiiill hiblic Relations Officer of pnsdlnn Corps, suffered the [part of his lcft log when he mg by a supply canister ... from a pinne while on man- .. yesterday. ll; hospital this morning, doc- bscrihed his condition as “real- . nt.” explaining "he is out woods now and making a. rc- .. recovery.“ doctor in attendance said he lllver sccn “any man come r anything like that the way Purcell has done." me on manoeuvres watching being droppcd by para- vhen one broke away and ... down to tho spot where hirccll was holping two pho- n s on a hillside. t Purcell turned and tried to the fiiliiilg canister. As he u: explained inter. "Like l» a I forgot to duck". His loft sevcrcd at thc knee. He - no other inlury. - Charles Lctonrncau. medical v of a Nova Scotia regiment. lithe scone and after admin- ‘. first aid had the injured Med bv ' ‘Flilflillllfillfie blinded on page 9. Col 4) light aid lilies to ixed cars iTlWA. Oct. IIl-(CPF- "me lineal‘: new freight assist- illliitll under which the Dom- lliays the c-nlire freight rate litmus and mlllieeds from ltd of the lakcs eastward, ap- ltomlxcd cru-s originating in in Canada. the agriculture Iiment announced tonight the original arrangement. irscuidoci, under which the Wat paid only one-third of itiiiht rates. mixed cars were for assistance, Iii assistance now is permit. iiomured corsl because it is him il-nt incl-c exist. many kiervcd from vim-stern Canada. lit ls unlv practical to makvb lflk in_ the form of mixed Iii to distribution points.” tho that said in a statement. iRiBht assistance policy if. ‘Irma wheat, oats. barley -l and No. 2 feed screen- ifliili brim. shorts and mid- ua Scotians " it at sea this Mali.’ on. ao-(cm-somc mfiumntzmtllcs received offic- ulm u {gdfiy of the deaths h, m. I e result of enemy lbodrdt swriiiscrgehliiiiiledahimy ‘Wilma included: m “mew. 1o Aura-u m nhmjflil’. member of l): . 011 I Inercbant WWII. Picwu. micron. *.-—-—- “mlflg Events ~0- "V Non ' ~"rlp.'h|".rl:ll IOIIII I u, to n ' “Btimriili-rflfl} ‘Micr q tlefi°iio3f“i°fr."tlfi.°h“ih M‘ g nt-io-ao-at thaand Chicken supper 1n I Novunbcz-“Aetixlil agngngt-hwm $_ L-s-ro-zo-si "Minn ‘Pm i‘ even Tuud Neill, gm mnmlr. lllfl-n-is-u-mor-u. " Nazi anti-aircraft posts also were silenced, n wireless station and pow- _ Two CHI”: ack ever made four supply ships Iunk or left sink- vessel of the corvette type severely or plant blasted construction and repair works net on fire. and a Ger- man transport truck driven off a mountal An eighth Axis strip. a supply vessel, was reported hit off Sta landet, a. ninsula south of Alcsund. and ocks were attacked at: Bergen. One pilot said: "We flew through l. snowstorm, but conditions were perfect over Alesund. I saw five ships lying close together north of the harbor. I dived on one and re- leased bombs from 30 feet and know that I scored a hit, Later I saw it in flames." This pilot dld not wait to see the (Continued on page 9. Col 6) Axis tactics seen Aimed at blocking Aid to Russians LONDON. Oct. 30—(C'Pl—-The increasing German pressure in the Russian south was seen mciay in informed quarters 85 u ilfelllde by Hitler to intimidate Tulkey and u; qpcn in the winter a. battle- front from the Caucasus to lifti- lan Lib a in Africa. A mlitary informant usizested these probable German objectives: . To cut off Russia's main Black Sea operating base of Se- vasiopol with the hope of making u; Sslble 10l- me German armies to Bpernte along the eastern shore of the Black Sea. during the win- To seize bhe Russian oil fields near Krasnodar which are about equal in product-ion to Rurnanias belle.- known Plcest-i urea. 3. To cut the supply i119 it" American and British materials through Iran through the Cauca- sus to ill-lad - “The Germans," this airthorlty suggested “are dvllffliiini; 01" Japan in close Vladivostok (the Rilssin Pacific pol-ti and ‘the ice to block Archangel. 1f this comes b9 pass, it is going to. bo virtually impossible for the M1105 t0 hell? the Soviet." Reporter checks on Slot machines; Faces court charge OFITAWA. Oct. 30- (CP) - A reporter for the Ottawa Journal wag assipned today to check up on reports ilegnl cash paying 510i ma‘ chines were in operation in nearby Efastvlew and wound up $1 PM?" and ohm-god with bcing an inmate of s. disorderly house- l-Ie was freed on boil oi $25. 1n m; story the reporter snld he visited the office of MHYOI‘ D001" Grandmaitre to hull"? Wheih" i‘ was known stores in Enstview were operating the illegal machines and the ma- "Thgtfg m yo Iant," shouted the Mayor. telepho the police chief. “We'll lay an in ormatlon n- galnst you for gambling." later. said the reporter 1n his story, ho returned to Ottawa and was waiting for a. street car when the Mayor and i116 WW9 chit?‘ drove up and engaged him in 60ft- versntion. lie got into the Mayors car and the next think hi‘ KmW he was enroutc to Eastvlew where the charge was laid. 14 killed in Plano crash ‘dust dropped five" on chines. official investigators what hm?- ned during onizing moment-s ay in the feta , flaming crash 01 all: Northrweat Airlines transport one. Physicians declined to permit Oapt Olurence Bates 4-1. s 0.000- air-hour filer to talk gbout the urn-morning disaster that killed itl-"Bveryme on the liner but t-hc D 0. Victims were l2 passengers, the atowsrdess and oo- 0t. Whether. o; un flcial observers beloved, the ship gathered ice puiclcly in slipping down throuvzh 0c and milt to (reciting round n road. the Ministry suld.‘ offered the information he had - temperatures will not be nowu until Bates talks. Cl-iARLOITETOWhl. CANADA, IililDAY, “COMMANDOS” Everybody These tough, rough and ready troops of Britain's spectacular new army unit. the “Commandos? rush up a steep and brur-hy crxisillne after landing in a preview 0f llflnlillelli-ill illvilfiiitll- 550951111)’ trained in modern gucrilla warfare, these picked men would be the advance striking force of any attempt to create a new western front. Berlin Admits Fierce Resistance At Moscow Illcpkins tels 0f Stalin’s hate For Nazi Fuchrer Russia Does Not Want U. S. Army Or Navy But Asks For Huge Quantities Of War . Materials. NEW YORK. Oct. 80~iAP)-— "fillho battle line will remain west of Moscow." Thus spoke Joseph Stalin to Harry L. Hopkins. President Roose- velt‘s special rcprtuscuintivc, who described his (lrumutlc and his- toric meeting with the Russian lender in an ar ‘ole in the current Asuoiicun Mu c. “We u. ' is shall win the war," licpk sn’d Stalin told him. “The bllttlc line will remain west of lvlosccw Russia will not fall. Rilssa is big. Russia is inex- orable. Russia is fighting-for Russia. she will not. be enslaved. Once wn trusted this mnu—" And thou Hopkins commented:- “l hope I shall ncvor be hated as Stalin halos Hitler." When stnlin spoke cf Hitler. Hopkins said, “his manner" was‘ more eloquent than hi; words Then i his body grow tense. He didn’tt raise his voice: rather it went fis- cold as his cyr-s. and the mellow hnrshxroas of it became grating _"Ot‘ Hitler’ ho spfkcr slowly.‘ not (Continued on page 9. Col 4) interpreting The War (lfy Kirke l.. Simpson. Assoc- iated Prom Staff Writer) Slowed but not halted by bad weal-her and a Russian defence rivalllng Verdun. l-lilt. ler's armies appear to have forged another link in the steel siege chain they are drawing about Moscow. southward of the city 0n l Oil-mile semi-circle they have reached the 0k». river line at a new point. Just below Ser- pnlrhov. That represents a 50. mils forward surge cstward in that, sector. lt widens one of the principal attack fronts to more than 100 miles. I ' from Volokolamsk vls the Mbzhalsk and Mil-WWW‘ slavets defence pivots. to tho lower Nara river which flows info the Oka at scroukhw- Because of stout Russian re- sistance and weather difficul- ties which have mid up or thrown back tho Nazi wed80 between Mozhnlsk and Maloy. srosluvcts the 06ml!!! 009m to be hunting s weaker sector for renewed assault. They may have found it along the Nora- Oko waterline bolstering Ber- TERHQ: on rim I. 0N 81 BERLIN, Oct. 31- (‘Fridayl-é (APl—Germnn meeting the stiffest kind of resistance in the fight for llloscolv, it was admitted in Berlin military quarters today. Since Oct» 23, when the high command said an armored vanguard got within 37 miles of the Russian capital, there has been no disclosure of dis- tances or the names of towns where the Germans are try- in; to blast through the bas- tions thrown around Moscow. MOSCOW. Oct. 3l—(1=‘rlday)- (AP)-—Red Troops defending Mos-, cow's approaches boat oil Gcrmziu attacks yesterday in another bit-> terly contested area. around the,‘ Tuln munitions centre, 100 miles to the south. the Soviet informa- t-ion bureau reported toaav I "Heavy i'.'SSC\" were suffered byj the Germans more and also in tho; Volokoinmsk. MOZililiSk, and Mflloy-, nroslavcts sectors. the Ezcucy Tass. sad in a broacLnst § ‘Iihose sectors vary from 5'7 to 65 miles in the rin before Moscow: rind the Rusdnus “have been fighting‘ tho Gcrmnns thorn now for weeks, The Gvrmnns used tanks nntl illlCfflfi l1c.1v'v in the nttcruflt to‘ take Titln whore Rilssizin workers fought. lwsidv sxviet soldiers, thc. communique said. '_ “Sang-uindry battles are bcinr, waxed for evovv town nudlvillag? a." it at the ‘ added. Red airmen dostroyvd 55 German tanks. 340 srxpily trucks. 2i fuel (Continued on page 9. Col 6)’ approaches to Tu Says solar heating Proves efficient PARIS, Oct. 30-(AP)—A French medical corps general, Edmond P135 teur. announced toduy the pert _. ion of a solnr heating instrument. so efficient. that several North African hospitals had adopted it. in ef- ererioe to normal heating me ods The relative of the famous French scientist, Louis Pasteur. sold that ill experiments carried out 1n the cold- er climate of continental Home his apparatus raised the temperature oi water to 14o degrees fahrenhelt while tho temperature outside the ma- chine was 57 degrees and the weath- er foggy. FALLS FROM TRAILER, IS KILLEI BRJDGEWATER. N5” 005- 30- (OlU-Richard Grouse. 7, died - day of injuries suffered when he fell from a trailer attached to I. moyint truck. Smooihsciiiinq F0 Rumored Canadian Landing denied mmaou t cor- c bl >- " stauurcnmniiegioifrigif‘ déclihzéd e to- day to comment on a broadcast last night by the Moscow radio that it was rumored in France that British and Cnnhciiun troops recently made a landing on the FTench coast. They strtsscd how- ever, thut Moscow distinctly had said the story was a. "rumor." It is known authoritatively here that no Canadian troops were en. gagcd in any such landing. Tho Moscow rudio said excited Frenchmen wrecked headquarters of the German army near Amiens whcn the rumor spread through the countryside that the Britons and Catmdinns lmci landed. It ndn- a ed that the French demonstrators PTOdHCCd IOIIR-concealed nrms as soon as thcy hcnrrl the rumor. ll. S. army to. Take over air Plane factory WASIHNOETON. Oct. 3t]- ii\P)—Pl‘|.‘§l(ll'lll. Rnnsevelt to- night ordered the United State! army to tnlrc over the Bendix, N. J._ plant of Air Associates. Inc. The plant has been harassed by labor disputes sinr-c a strike of C. l. (L-Unitcd Automobile workers started on Supt. 30 The President directed Sco- rctnry of War llvnry Stimson to take over operation of the plant and retain control as lung as may be required in the interest of national defence. lllr. Roosevelt accompanied ‘the announccmen of the trik- ing over of the aircraft fac- tory with the terse statement that: "Our country ls in dan- gcr." It was the third time the nesiilent has resorted to such drastic action to deal with than-consuming disputes be- tween labor and management which have affected prorluc- tlon in defence industries. War-ZS Years Agolcday 00!‘. 31. mill-Fierce fighting de- veloped in Gollcia with Russians forced buck at one point Gennan merchant submarine Deuischisnd arrived st New Imidon, Conn. with coma of chemicals sir George Perlev atmointed Canada's Over- seas Nliniater» of Militia. rliil yourBokinq When you use BLPPSPMM ocroam a1, 1941 s. colic-ins AIR LINER CRASHES in Ships i Or Damaged i Expected from F..ll.R.-Kingtalks Canadian» P r e m i e r Will Be Back In Ot- tawa For Opening Of Parliament Mon- day. (By Frank Fllherty. Canadian Pres: Staff Writer) UITAWA, Oct. 30—<CP)-'I‘hc possibility of a closer integration of Canadian and United States economic policy lends special in- terest to Prime Minister Mac- kenzie King's visit with President and Mrs. Roosevelt at. Hyde Park this week-end, Mr. King expects to leave Ottawa tonight and to be back in time for thc ripening of Parliament Monday. Today he conferred with officials of the House of Commons on final dotnils for the re~opening o! the House. While spokesmen hi. Mr. King's office emphasized the pcrsonai charnctor of tho work-end visit other circles rcczillcd that after each of two previous meetings be. two-on the two lcndt 1's since the. outbreak of Will‘ important de- velopments were announced. The longstanding’ personal i friendship bcuvr-cn iii!‘ two men' is‘ in it;clf ample rcnson for Mr t King's trip but the common in-i tcrcsi of their two governmentsl ill ‘North American dcfonce and in assistance t0 the‘ nations iiglitirvr against the totalitarian powers l5, considered a still more important reason for a meeting. i Since their lost mccflng all Eastcr this year both Mr. Kind‘ and Mr. Roosevelt have conferred i with Prime Minister CllurchllL i The RoosrvcIt-Clurrchill _ _ x 4 con- frimce ‘on the Atlantic resulted m 9' Joint (l(‘Ci'.ll ion o‘ iv ~ aims. Mr. King's it l tl _ itcd Kingdom duilirg 3.1.122 U}; V(C0ntin1ierl on page 9, C91 5)’ Duke of Windsor i Secs defence Plants at work _DE'I"ROIT, Oct. lii)—~(AP)-——Ill an vlgilL-ilfliil‘ span-one w "ng shift ~Lhc Duke or Windsor lOLiZI) article u Willflllllld tour of Dctroiis ntigci ileleuce DiiilllS t0 see lor himself] how iustrunlcirts of warfare roll ulfl ussciuull‘ lincs. i Within a few minuics after‘ aiiszlituuz from u train that naiii brought him lrcnr New York and throuaii uurt of Ontario tho Unite was (lodging Ul/cfilgllfi Chiller; m; bobbing in uiul out 0i illiirs o; whirring machines and spiimilg wheels in Chrysler" Corporu lllil: $30fI0tL000 tuiik dist-uni. His (insures from one plant to an! other. fitting in uilh the iricn ol detour-o "spam-up, ‘ lcit. his cutout"- uizc utmost brmitiiicss, ' Puuslng only to suukc ihllltin‘ ',l,'l.‘til an OII-SLRIlIlCCi workman or to to Cilllflflllll, workers, the Duke, with‘ ancngluoerurg background .;.nnca from tour yours us a llitvlli adet, fired questions at» laborers and‘ gultics ulike with iuucluiiu-giili J8- piuity. l Wncu he cunrc to the end oi Lin: assembly lino in thc titnk arsenal he climuuti inlo a LES-ton nit-chum tank. Sliukru, but grinning, he bumped his hcuii us he cirirruvd ai- tcr ll. IO-uunuic msput-liou in‘ The Duke also visited Lit- r Motors (Jorpurulituls Cuililluc (ll-l vision, whore airplane parts are oe-i lug made, and then spurt i-hc re- mainder of the uftcrirocir with Henry Ford. The muior nuugnzitc, who was host to tho Duke whorl he visited the city as Prince oi Wales in i094, "s- oorlcd him through the Ford Alla-l tor Company's airplane plant in‘ suburban Dcurbcrn and then toured! the company's $10,000,000 plant at: Willow Run where. at capacity ..p-; erntion. 60.000 workers will turn out four-motored consolidated Bl24l) blombers on it tulle-long assembly l ne. The Duke. who was not. accom- panied by the Duchess, left. fm- New or): early tonight. War On l l i By Gladys Arnold Canadian Press Stuff Writer NEW YORK, Oct. 30 -—(CP) — War on two fronts has the peoplv of Germany worried This is the infolgnatlon brought back from Ber- lin v Vifdinia Lane. onc of 12 members of the American enrbassy staff there who arrived buck in America this week. "But," she cautioned when talk- ing to The Canadian Press. “one must not. be deceived about Cler- man morale." from her observations Miss Lane said she did not think there was any dange of the Cle cm “crack- (Continued on page 0, Ool l) 10 PAGES Two Has Germans Worried A large lifo MAXI M6 OIL MERE MAN small place ls no obstacle to a .___.___._ .._.. . _¢w Annual Subscription Delivered, $5.00 l!) Mull! I’ It. l.. $4.00; Cunallu und nus. $5.” 9LT First Pictures of Britain's i lmpllflfllli IRCVCSi Pass enge TS, CTG U) New Invasion Force in Action RIO Killed, Reported i 2O Were 2n Board i Plane crashes in Flames prevent resc BUFFALO, N.Y.. Oct. 30—~ (APl-An American éir Lines i official reported tonight there were 17 pussl-ngers nnil n I crew of three nbonril the plane. l which crashed nczzr Si. Thom- 1 as, Ont. I ST. THOMAS. OnL, Oct.‘ 30——(CP)—-:\ big Douglas ship of tho American Air‘ Lines. flying through drizz- iing ruin from lfirffziln to Detroit crushed on a farm, near here tonight. All aboard tho plane were 110-, iicvcd killcri. |' The nilnlbcr of pusscng-l ers was not known. I Howe and burned fiercely. It was believed t0 have! >hecn on its usual run. Ruin was falling at the time and there was n slight mist. Rescuers who ran to the crush scene were unable to help because of the fire. 'l‘hcrc were unofficial re-| ports that l5 persons were j ililflflrfi the plane hut thcsei. could not he verified. i Iinwcfis ircinhhrlrs ran in; the scene and provincial ‘ police were culled. Officers from the nearby Royal (‘unzuiiun Air Force school at Finch] hurried i0 the crush scone. Flt. Li. Foster" said over the telephone he believed there were no survivors. He , said the pizmc was still‘ burning an hour after the ' crush. The time of the uccidcirt i was placed at about 11.30 p.m. Boat 1000 miles Nllll who t Atlzrulu- lll un i-pcu 1y .~'.ilill\\i't‘i‘i-lf‘ii laud rugttvri (‘oust of C0llllllll,2ili. 'l‘i1t',\‘ were .~:1'.'cri uftcr lilrli‘ l5- fill)‘ orUr-ul at by the hrnvcrv of u Clidcn i!.<ill‘l'lll‘.lll_ P11 .- I V i Torpedocd men sail x who put nu‘ in >llift'11l' \' ti. and guided tho rxliuinlozl nun to‘ a safe luutitugg. ‘lio ship \\“.l$ sunk in rui-l-N-t (fnpt J W. Klcrnp oi Lou- ‘ "rl thori- vm‘ "Ii mvn in his 1_ Ho did know u. f rl to lhr r 20 i1l.t\\‘.)l'l'S ("'l’\\'. l1. 2 flllfifilNfi AT §F»\ MONTREAL OH. Mrs. Paul Smoi of .\1Ulli.l‘l‘l\1 has been notitivrl that htr two sous. Jacques urui Juan. are missing uL sea with a (Jaundinu nrcrchuu: ship considered lost through trntmy action." _ ‘The two young mcu joined til“ shin as cooks in September. The notification suui lll(‘l'(‘i\‘ that tin-y ‘were missing and that thou" ship "must be considered lost through Ieuemy action." Fran ts iltalians claim British ship sunk sources claimed tonight that the 10.000-ton steamship Anture Girli- mot, in British sorjcc. had been sunk in the Mediterranean by ltnl- . tan torpedo-carrying planes. The sinking was said to have been dis- closed when 20 British survivors were picked up Wednesday off the coast of Alqcrin. (The report was not confirmed by l ROME. Oct. 30 -—(AP) -Ita‘lan British sources.) ‘. scntrd bv farmer's field; u_e attempt ___._ Consider petition To increase milk Prices in City N ew_ Price Would Put Milk Price To 12 (Tents Per Quart. ‘ltc Milk Board nn-t lust mrght to consldvi" at petition of ihc- .\ 1k And Cream Producors (ind Vendors Ur an iticrtasc iii lll'l(' . R!‘}ll'r'.§l*lli.fl- . . li\'(‘5 of the c nsu ~ l 'lhc plane ilursi into and cllsvrjblllmL-Tq mm fillmos when it crushed 0n ,§‘>\1l‘1ll01~§i_ “"11 PH“- at out s. . . . t ' ' ..~;- r v .- n the farm of Thompson l “I ‘k i‘ H‘ l "m ‘“" i“ 100k P11039- M1‘: w. L. Brenton, I - . chairman of the Board IJTBSICVF‘ The other two menrhers 0f the B00111. Di‘. W. R. Carson. SPclv-Lury, CilZlFlOilCIOlVD, rel tsvnling the consumers and Mr. Clntlcic Smith. East Royalty, rclircscnti the pro- ciirccr... vcorv also prcscn is well as i r~ trnte K. M. ftfartln. and Coun. Henry Lnpthorn for the City Coirncil and Cflllflllllfn’. Mr. bros» Malleti. Union Road. for the producer and M2‘. Harold llcariz, East Rojsnlty i ‘ the iucc riors. ‘ ' -l rrllifFvll ' the distributor tvus .n nrv A loncrilrv brie’ waS recently pre- the- Milk and Cream Producers to the hoard which cio|~ 0d bl‘ 5u_\'il1[z "Wc submz: that the , llllik prociuccrs ncrd and should rc- ccivo 7C cents no:- prvr. or 1 3-4 ts psi‘ quart in vnsc in the pr. o of milk to brinz filo price rc- ceivcd for our product up to she (Contlnucd on page f). Col 5t 4hr: CoLtAR- SALESMAN IS 0M2 CAJY WHO Doesn't’ ggafusckipi \ ltuitullilli l'u\-.. ‘YUKON if) (JN. i» _ .\lll.12llllll\ llllii lllilXJWVilii Ikllll. “('5' Jl. l5 l‘! i3 1i H 33 i6 47 Synopsis: ‘Tho weather has boon li0—tOP)— cloudy and cool tiodav in Ontario with linilt min not‘ liu ill \Oll\-i_ . urul 1 illlti snow ll. wliilo in liiv Pr: IlOSTON. 0o‘ iii .‘:l~t im‘ uorthvrn ,' , clrluriy and W111‘ ‘nl liuht ruin rain foiituvvci by turning colclor by Satin Hiah irlt‘ ths nrorniug it 7.56 and tonight nt 8.33. Sun sets this afternoon n: 45o 22d rises gomnrroxv morning at . 8 Full moon Nov. S, i0 um. Summcrsirlc tide 1R minutes lat- er than Chnrlottcfotvn. BURDEN-FA PF TORMENTINI SER V IFE .- . nxcnm‘ SUNDAY! LLgi-Iliifvrdcn 9.25 A.l\l.. 1.00 IBM. 4.45 RM. have (‘n c Tnrmcnllno 11.00 A.M.. - 3.20 l'.M.. .20 PM. fiundluy service leave liordcn_9.00 AJL. and 4.45 PAL; lcnve Cape rur- mcnllne 10.05 A.M.. and 5-5" P-M- WOOD ISLANDS FERRY (DAILY. INPLFDING SUNDAYS) Leaves Wood Island 8.00 A.M., 0.00 A.M.. and 2.00 EM n leaves (‘arlimu 8.00 AM" l! n00! l i i a n 4.00 rm. igijillljlflntjjjjllljInljij515115331;j;14mg.-1-_@_ ... _... __ _ __. _ __ _ _ _ _ _ g