- .Vru'cinbcr MAXIMS 0? A MERE MAN 11-1- 11,”. ui-got have ever had Ill0&Us .j I, cu.-mt Ciiarlottotofiln liuncneraldo 315.00 per annuna. Elaewiiero H, p, 1. I. 89.00. Other Provlaoea lnd ll. 8. A. ll2.00 per annum. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew" CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 19, 1951 An ocean steamer in the next wont thing to I PIIICO at Youth. MAXIMS , OIL MERE MAN 14 PAGES mu. Guardian. live Cents. T Morning Daily rounded nu. ELEVEN RED JETS CAUGHT ON GROUND IN NORTH KOREA 200,000 Italians Driven From Homes By Floods Reds Expected T 0 Agree To Truce Plan; Would End War By Christmas By William Jordon hli'.VSAN, Korea. Nov. 19 - igmnd.-iy) .- (AP) m Communist cease-fire delegates were expected to ;;;vc at least a. provisional "yes" today to a dramatic United Nat- ions plan for ending the Korean fz." rug brfore Christmas. Tile Red Reply was anticipated gt the 26th sub-committee session, sclit-tliilcd at Panmunjom for 11 a. m.. if) p. in. Sunday. E.S.T.) Advance indications were that the llttls would agree to the Al- ilP(i iniir-point proposal to com- plete an armistice within 30 days The proposal was submitted Sat- urdalh On Sunday the Communists A-kcrl clarification on a number of points. The United Nations spa:-ttr.innli. Lt.-Col. Howard S. Leila. said the Reds "appeared mi-:.Lied with the answers they received." Outside the drab green confer- entc tent. at Panmunjom Com- nrlnisl correspondents said they fr” their side would offer no scr- inv..- opposition to the U. N. pro l-ivwcver, the Communist cor- respondents indicated some re- phrnsiiig might be suggested, par- t.r' at-iv to clarify point 4. ' four Allied points were: lloslllltles to continue un- til an armistice is signed; 1'. The present battleline to ho a provisional cease-fire 1..-,.: . This line to become final i' :1 full armistice is reached irmzii 30 days; and 4. If the armistice in not rr-nched within 30 days. negoti- Rflnlls will draw a new cease- t:rt-. line based on whatever the battle line may be at that llmd. The fourth point went on to say that a new cease-fire would "be eil('C'.ll'e under such conditions as will he at that time mutually nsrcrd to by the delegations of in-:9: sides" The Communists apparently Coming Events ”l"lH)'iniz goo-d quality oats and irzrmi grain daily. Oil cake in stock. Dillon and Splllett. "Come to the Regular Dance at Punsltaw every Tuegday night. ix...-.Veill's Orchestra. "Come in and talk over our P irzna Finance Plan for your hogs 5"-'l Poultry. Dillon and Splliett. "For snapshots that will ' not fade mail your Film: and Nega- iw-Ws in Garnhum Photo Btudloa Lltrtrlctt-etown. "iNlli not be buying poultry nr.'.. further notice. R. D. Dickie- Silil. ”Mu.smieradi-. Dance, Comm lfllm Hail. Monday. November it'll. Burke's Orchestra. '"SiiiPDinK last car Timothy. Minmhcvr 22nd. Macoulxan and ll": 1”. Hunter River. "North River 1-loll. Monday. 19th. National Film Eoird. Sale of candy. Admission "llcar Alexander MncLenn st--nk over CFCY Tuesday. No- Vmhvr min. 8.25 to 8.30 p.m. for ill" C.C.F. Party. . d ,'Bu.ving ilva fowl and chicken V3”-lH We welsh and pay at nm. rite or phone collect for pick up service. smith BroI., Pownai. H"!-"ford Time: Dance. Rustico 8”" Friday. Nov. uni. Pris. "til!!! dances. Music by the Cliarlotwtonllnl. I "Come to the Orokinolo Party (3 Hampshire School. Monday. ;r"V0mbcr 19th. in aid of Hockey cm. 8 o'clock. Admission In oonts. l"EuyInl potatoes all variation. :5” Wrnlnl. our warehouse. Cnraflon Street East. Phone 2102. entral Farmers. "Emerald Hall. Monagy, nw. ;f"b!r 19th. Auction rbrty-five. S”?-0!. Admission and Lunch ace. ”""30"d by O. W. L P"l-fear Deraonally Radio Paator horry ilockwood. Truro. Monday itht nrookiicid. Tuuday George- ," - Wednesday Iturgoon. Liston similar: 0. r. o. x. 3.10 r. 11. want clarlflcutlon'as to just what that means. The Reds also asked when the 30-day period would begin. Allied sub-delegates referred them to the text of the proposal, which says the provisional cease- fire line will be the permanent line "in any armistice signed with- in 30 days after this agreement is accepted by the two delegations in plenary session." The U. N. command issued its new plan Saturday in an effort to break the deadlock on when to set the ccase-fire buffer zone in oper- atlon. Quebec Piloi , And Son Killed QUEBEC, Nov. 18 -(CP)- A veteran Quebec pilot and his 16- y-ar-old son were killed Saturday -vhcn their sea-plane crashed in nearby St. Augustin Lake. Rosalre Fleet. 44, owner and uferntor of Ancienne Loretta Air- ways Limited. ad his son, Gaston. had completed escort duty for a helicopter bringing Santa Clause to Quebec's exhibition grounds when the crash occurred. They were found Saturday night. when relatives went to search the lake after the Flsets were overdue at the lake base. They found the plane in about seien feet of water. its pontoons iihowinu above the water. Both bodies were found in the cabin. 13AL'i'1M.0R.ll3. Nov. 18 -(AP)- William (Billy) Mnyjew, who wrote the hit tune "It's A Sin To Tell A Lie." died in hospital Sat- urday. He was 62. Wall of V-Idler Rolls Down Po Riverlalley ROVIGO. Italy. Nov. 18 -(CP) -- A wall of flood water five miles wide rolled slowly down the Po River toward the Adriatic today. engulfing the city of Adria and driving the 36.000 people of Cavarzere and Loreo from their homes. ' . The worst flood disaster in Italy's modern history is driving an army of nearly 200,000 rei- uizces before it, and already has taken a death toll ofyat least 100. Hundreds of thousands of 8Cl.'l'.'l lie under the brown devastation. Damage amounts to uncounted millions of dollars. Together with storms which hit Southern Italy and Sicily last month and took 110 lives, the flood is the worst natural dis- aster for Italy since the Mcssina earthquake of l9m. Every village between the Po and Adlge Rivers' was, ordered evacuated. At Roviga. however. the sil- uallori eased somewhat with a lull in the heavy rainfall. and upstream at Mantova and Parma the river was falling. But the crack San Marco battalion of the Italian army still battled to plug a 32-foot break in the Adigetto River dike above the city. The worst fears were felt for Adria. Thousands of boats were nos- ing their way through the peril- ous, fog-bound flood vvaterg in it desperate effort to reach the city Where 20.000 D90Dle are marooned in rising water. fn the city. cut off on all sides by water, the marooncd have clustered on high ground in and around the cathedral to pray and await rescue. Adria's last land the outside was con tact with out yesterday VATICAN CITY, Nov. 1'! - (Reuters) - Thirteen scientists from seven countries will meet here Monday as guests of the Pope to discuss what shakes the world. They are geophyslclsts and meteorolozists and they will ex- amine tho microseisms, or tiny, unfelt earthquakes that keep the earth --continually vibrating. have a special bearing on weather forecasting and the charting of storms. They will meet to exchange notes in the 10th century Villa of Pope Pius lV. seat of the Pontif- ical Academy of Sciences - old- est institution of its kind-in the Gardens of the Vatican. The meeting will be private but its conclusions will be pub- lished in is collective paper by the Pontifical Academy. Countries represented are Den- mark. Germany. Britain. France. Sweden. Italy and tho United States. Scientists Torr Discuss What Shakes The World A seismograph or any other instrument recording vibrations never comes to complete rest, even if put in the most isolated soot in the ocean. fhis proves that the earth's crust is always in motion. These movements. following each other in tiny waves of one hun- dredth or one thousandth of a second may be cauecl by the ex-I . I l f ' , ' . Microseinms. amoral other i.hinSs.'p0s on O mmes ordinary maul and rail traffic. and many kinds: of machines. But mlcroseismologists are in- iulcrested in other movements which have waves of from one to 10 or 12 seconds each. These movements are closely linked with meteorology. but their Origin is disputed. One school says the shocks are due to pulsations occurring at the centre of cyclones on the high seas. These travel through the water to the sea bed and magic, from there. Another school says sen waves striking against the wnrldls coasts are the mun nu” of microseisms. By Doug Ilow HANNOVER. Germany. Nov. 13 -(OP)-Britain's massive Cent- urion tank is expected to be a major exception to the general rule that the Canadian army comoo back to Europe with the some weapons it used in the sec- ond World War. The centurion ia a 52-ton giant with I long-borrellod. 20-pounder anti-tank gun. It emerged too late to (at into the int war but its performance in Korea has led many exports to think it is the but in the world. It appears it'wlll be the tank for the squadron of Royal Canadian Dragoons which form the armor- ad elomant of the with Brigade. ' The Centurion accentuates a paradox. The Canadian army lane yeara ago decided to adopt U. 8. arm. Now it la back overseas with traditional British arms. The Centurion extends this paradox because in the last war the Can- adians used the American sher- man tank. ror a long time. the 27th was ex, A f to demonstrate the real- ityofthoswitohtoU.sarmsby bringi than to Europe. It may dua switch over to them our. not It had conic aarooa with- out than which apparently. moan: thg switch is not nearly complete. Tliioroaroaclooot throomaln tho Centurian Tank Is Only New Canadian Weapon reasons why the army is in Ger- many with the Lee-Enfleld rifle, the Bren gun. Iten gun. two-a.nd- three-inch mortars. 17-pounder anti-tank gun. the plat anti-tank ' A and " k T d ' By Bill Baoo la - (CP) - Fisheries Minister Mayhew got a warm reception on the Korean front Saturday - in fact, a mighty hot one. He came under enemy shellfire several times. One cluster land- ed 25 yards away. When he goes back to Canada after a two-day visit to Canadian troops he'll carry a shrapnel splinter picked up by Brig. J. M. Buckingham, the Canadian commander. Officers commented on the 71- ycar-old Minister's cool manner under fire. Muyhew arrived from Japan Saturday morning and had just finished lunch when the first shells landed. "What? Only four?" he asked. "Surely they could give me I 21- gun salute!" Before the day was out. they did. Sees Artillery Duel Brig. Rocklnghamr took May- hew on a tour of the Canadian front. It included a visit to an observation post where the Min- Two Victims Of” a Monoxide Found Dead In for WOODSTOCK. N. 3.. Nov. 18 - CP) Two York County men. victims of carbon monoxide pola- oning, were found dead Saturday night in a car on the roadside be- tween Boulton Lake and Canter- bury. The bodies of Charles Morrell, 22. of St. Croix. and Wesley Far- rell. 55, Fostcrvllle. were slumped over the front seat. Morrell had been driving. The ignition was on but the motor had stopped run- nlng. Farrell owned the car. The victims had been employed as woodsmen at Bouiton Lake. Three young men, passing by. discovered the double fatality. Af- ter medical examination and police investigation, Glen F. Foster, Woodstock coroner, said the deaths were caused by carbon monoxide poisoning and no inquest would be necessary. Mother Of Five Killed By Car GLACE BAY. N.S.. Nov. 18 - (CP) En route to visit her daughter in hospital, Mrs. Mur- doch Macsween. 35-year-old moth- er of-five. was struck by a car and killed tonight. Henry Muir. 19. driver of the Icar. said he was blinded by the lights of an incoming vehicle. I-lls car climbed the sidewalk and hit Mrs. Macswecen who was walk- ing with her husband in front of st. Joseph's Hospital. Among aur- vivors are her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Archie Maclntyre and a brother James. Sydney. Coroner A.D. Muggah ordered an inquest. Police said the driver, ” t of nearby New water- ... . .;- a . truck: ford. was 1. With the main ception of the Garand rifle. eliveriea of U. S. Inna to Canada have been relatively small; 2. The U. B.-U. K. rift -on choice of a uniform rifle for their forces: 8. Gen. !:iaenhower'a decision to group the Canadians with the British army of the Rhine. The second development capped the first. Canada has thousands of Garanda now but the government has said Adoption of this .300- callbre weapon depanda on the outcome of efforil to get Britain and the U. S. to agree on I com- mon rifle or at least a common bullet for different rifles. The army'a whole small-arms policy ride: on this issue since the calibre of the rifle normally sets the calibre for another small arms. 'i'hia has brought confusing momenta for the 27th. its infantry unite, for instance. were using the aorand at Valcattior. Qua, until the first advance troop: called, being detained. Parents lilo While Son Visiting Home IRISH VALE. N. 8.. Ulov. 18- (CP)-Picrca Elliott drove home alone and lonely tonight. Vllitlng his parents here from Halifax. he took them for a drive today. As he helped his mother into the car. In: com- plained of a headache. He took her homai at once. but the died before a doctor could get there. Pierce then drove his father to a funeral parlor at nearby St. Peter's. While William Elliott. as. was picking out a coffin for his wife. he dropped dead from a heart attack. The Elllotll came from Now- foundland to Sydney, N. 8.. 3 year: ago and he got a no at the, steel plant there. He retired several years ago and opened a then got order: to witch back to a. ..pmaIi store in this village. wiisr sncroa. KOREA. Nov.' Fisheries Minister Gets Hot Reception At Front HON. MR. MAYHEW istcr watched a duel-"between Enemy Runs and a moriar taken on by Commonwealth artillery. A -S90?-ting aircraft reported one (Continued on i:3;?ia”c.3iT”4F Potato Shipments To U. S. Far Below Currenlliuota Shipments of potatoes from Canada to the United Slates un- der quota to Nov. .'ird were 15,- 611 bushels for ”iahle stock and 6,826 bushels for cording to the figures contained in the Potato Market. ju-port. re- leased on Nov. 15th hy the Mur- kcting Service of the Depart- ment of Agriculture. The normal quota for iablc stock entering the i'. S. from Canada is one million hushcls, but this was increased ihis year by the amount the latest U. S. crop figures fnll below the Sept. estimate of 3M million bushels. The quota as it stands now is 4.160.000 bushels. The seed quota for the '51-'52 season commencing Sept. 15th'ls 2.500.000 bushels. It was learned last night that while it is early in the scnsnn, it is doubtful if exports to the U. S. will even approach the quota figures. due in the drop in the estimate Cnnndian production and the currently strong domestic- market. The scasoiini summnry. rail and water in curlols, coninincd in the report for P. E. l. are ns fol- lows: for the '51-'52 snnson, with '50-'51. figures in brnckcls: ox- poris, table stock, U S. 13. (All; Others. 17. (77): st-ed, l'. s.. 54, (175); Others. 0. (ill. Total ox- porls, table rind seed. 84. (304). Domestic. table and nerd. 2452, M360). Total Domestic and Export, 329, (66-1). llrgeswfmihfer Of Commonwealth Troops To Malaya SINGAPORE. Nov. 15! ---(AP)-- Transfer of Commomvcuith troops from Korea to Malaya was urged today by the Conservative Straits Time: after "the bluckcsf of black weeks" reported in fighting Red guerrillas. it laid the 25.000 Brllish. Can- ndinn, Australian and New Zea- land ground troops now on the Korean battlefront north of Seoul are needed to fight Communist uprising: in Malaya, dntlng from 1948. The newspaper contended edi- torially ihe stakes in the anti- Red campaign are greater in Malaya 1 an in Koren. Sixty cashcs between the Bri- tish security forces nnd the Tit-i-ls were reported for the last. week In the tin and rubber producing peninsula. biggest dollar r-urncr in the British sterling pool. The terrorist problem will be taken up at the annual gathering of British governors. military commanders and diplomats in Southeast AIla- Nov. 23-27. B. C. A. F. APPOINTMENT OTTAWA. Nov. 18 -(GP) -Air Commodore rt-ederlck 5. Car- penter. 37, of Toronto. has been appointed chief of training at air force headquarters announced Soturday. aonior staff officer at Ont. he will be directing and co-ordinating phlscs of the air force air and ground training. seed stock, ac- here. it was rbrmerly training command headquarters, Trenton. responalbio folrl Ii Allies PTIder New Move By Enemy lurinen By Sam Summerlln SEOUL. Korea. Nov. 19 - (Mon- day) (AP) Eleven Com- munist jet planes. caught on the ground in Korea for the first time in the war, were smashed Sunday by Unlled Nations raid- crs. Seven other Migs were hit in three air flights over North Ko- rea. in sharpening land warfare, an Allied division gained almost an- other mile on the central front. making almost three since its limited offensive began Saturday. The division commander said his dead sol ar. There were heavy engagements elsewhere along lli front while Allied officers assayed the omin- inovc into Korea. The pilots of two F-86 Sabre .jcis reported they destroyed two lllusslan-built Mig jets which (blow up. demolished four others, fund badly damaged five on the iU:ju airstrip. Three other Migs lesflaped by making quick take- ? If.. i This field is on the south bank lof Ihc Yalu River inside North Korea. First Time "This is the first time that 1 know of that the Migs have land- ed in North Korea." said a Fifth liam S. Altman. The Reds are building other all-fields 50 miles inside Korea, at Namsl. Taechon and Saamacham, but have been pre- vented from using them by night- ly B-29 raids. in the Sunday air fights. t.he Fifth Air Force reported one 'Mig was shot down, one probably shot down and five were damaged. One U. S. F-B4 Thunderjei was reported lost but its pilot was rescued. -Seventy-six Migs were in the air against 28 U. N. planes. In the ground war. an un- identified Allied division gained nearly another mile and seized some new heights in the sec- ond clay of a limited nine-mile- wide offensive called ”Operation P.E.l. Exhibitor Wins Wiih Geese TORONTO. NOV. 18 -(CP)- Almon Boswell of Charlotte- lnwn broke into the wlnners' circle at the royal Winter Fair here Saturday. His toulouse geese won the third and the fourth prizes for young males. three ST. JOHNS. Nfld. Nov. ill - tCPl.-in R. move believed unique in Canadian politics. Progressive Conservatives will not name a new leader until after the New- foundland gt-ncral election, Gordon Higgins. P. C. Federal member of parliament for this capital. said tonight. Mr. Higgins, taking part in the provincial. campaign. said that until after the voting there will be no lender to succeed an active WASHINGTON. Nov. l7 - (CF) - speculation that President Tru- man won't run for re-election in 1952 has been strengthened by his statement that the new Democrat- ic platform will re-emphasize the "fair deal" regardless of who is the candidate. Home Democrats in Washington think the President expects the party to make defence of the Tru- man admlnistratlon its chief dom- esllc issue and will be satisfied to seek this sort of vindication with- out running again himself. senator A. Wlllla Robertson. 'a Democrat from Virginia. for one predicts publicly- that Truman won't be a candidate in the Nov- ember elections. while Truman": intentions re- main the subject of speculation. a few other developments in the United States political scene are more definite. California's Governor. Earl War- ren, last week announced that he will try for the Republican presid- entlal nomination. He joins Sena- tor Robert Tail (1 Ohio in that men had counted 932 Chinese Red I ous significance of the Red air! Air Force spokesman, Maj. Wil- l LONDON. Nov. 18 --(CP) - London gave a royal welcome to Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh Saturday-but at fair- halrecl three-year-old boy stole the jshorw. There. was no holding ”Prlnce Charles. Back from their six-week tour of Canada. the Royal Couple land- ed at Liverpool, then took a spec- lal train to London's Euston Stat- ion. l Prince Charles, who celebrated liils third birthday last week. was .waiting before the traln,arrived. gills grandmother, the Queen, had decided at the last minute to take iliim to the station. while Dana Wilgrcss. Canadian ghigh commissioner, chatted with, lthe Quecn and Princess Margarct,' make .Cha-rles headed off down the plat-iU. ' lreplacing the present U. N. Can- i form. ”Where's your sword?" he de- imanded of a stiffly correct colonel inf the Guards. Barely moving, the lcoloncl shifted his overcoat. The lsword hilt apeared. Charles moved off again. , He didn't even look when a bar- 'rage of flash bulb were fired off by photographers taking his pict- ure. Questions Station Master His interest was with the station pmaster and he fired question after question at him. , As the train bearing his mother land father approached, Charles ,bccame excited. ills eyes glcamed land the questions came faster. ' As the train pulled in. Charles 'rat-ed down the platform. Princess lliliznbeili kissed her mother. lgreeted her sister and then knelt Ito hug Charles. Prince Philip, grinning in I manner now familiar to Canad- ,ians, leaned over and ruffled his son's. carefully briulied hair. The huge crowd in the station cheered, the V.I.P.'s moved in, the official automobiles drew up, photographersi bulbs flashed. But Charles was a match for them. He got father aside and (Continued on Page i3 Cbl.-1i- New Clashes I Suez Canal Zone CAIRO. Egypt, Nov. 18 - (CF) - Clashes between Egyptian police and British troops occurred today in Ismallla in the wake of a gun- fight last night in which a Brit- lsh officer was killed. Additional casualties were reported by both sides. Ismallia is in the Suez Canal zone about 40 miles south of Port Said. The trouble was renewed today vhen Egyptian police fired on a British army patrol. Nfld. Conservatives Face Election Without Leader John G. Higgins, who resigned the position recently. John lligglns became llousc loader after H. G. R. Mews. Pro- gressive Conservatlvo leader in N:-wfntindiand's first provincial election in 1949. met personal dc- foat at the polls. Premier Joseph R. .Smallwood's Liberals have nominated candl- idatcs for all 28 seats for the Nov. '26 snap election. The Progressive Conservatives are contesting 22 and there are seven Independents. Speculate Truman Will Not Seek Re-election regard. However. the Republi in picture is still obscured by the silence of General Dwight D. Eisenhower on whether he will run. Eisenhower supporters have push- ed senator Cabot Lodge of Massa- chusetts to the forefront'as their campaign manager. but it appar- entiy remains for Lodge and Sena- tor James Duff of Pennsylvania to get some direct word from the General that can be translated into assurance of his availability for the Republican nomination. Among the persons more than passively interested in Truman! statements are the Bouthem Dem- ocrats - or more particularly the Dlxlecrats who sharply oppose the "fair deal" attempts at reducing racial segregation. The states rightera from Dixie could assume that Truman's re- marks vere a signal that the Dem- ocratic Party won't accept any of their demands for I new place in the party. nor will it aoften its stand on the politically-explosive civil rights issues. Prince Charlie Steals Show At Royal Homecomhgw Move To Reopen Atomic Talks With Russia PARIJS. Nov. 18 - (CP) -Bril.- aln. France and the United States moved tonight to reopen atomic talks with Russia by offering a plan for a new United Nations disarmament body and a subse- quent worid-wide arms reduction conference. Canada and the ll members of the U. N. Security Council would up a proposed 12-member disarmament commission ventlonai Arms and Atomic En- ergy Commissions. Canada is included in the group because of her contribution to de- vclopmcnt of atomic energy. L. 8. Pearson. Canada's Ex. ternal Affairs Minister. who was consulted on the new Western proposal. is expected to deliver a mayor address on the subject before the U. N. political com. miltee Tuesday. The plan, said by informed (Continued on Page 1Tcoi, 7;T Quits ARE Aiwmsn wiiimc. fo GNE ' BACK fur. HEAR-6 , Bur Nor--(H KRlNG.! . A HALIFAX. Nov. 18 -(OP)-I Oiflolal forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather office here and valid until mid- night Monday. " synopsis: A large area of high pressure extends from Hudson Pay southward to the Gulf of Mexico. To the east of this north- wcaterly winds are bringing cold air to the eastern part of the con- tlnent. Skies vary from clear to overcast and in many places there are snowflurries. There is no in- dlcatlon of any appreclabla change during the next two or three days Prince Edward island-Variable cloudiness with snowflurries. Continuing cold. Winds north- west 15. Low and high Monday at Charlottetown 20 and 36. . High tide today at 1258 A. M. and 259 P. M. Sun rises today at 1.16 A. M. and sols at 4.41 P. M. Bummerside tide eighteen mili- utes later than Charlottetown. WOOD ISLAN S - CABlB(l' FERRY SERVICE (Standard Time) Leave Wood Islands- Princo Novo-G A. M., 1 P. M. A. Dunning - 11 A. M. 8 P. M. lcavo Caribou- Chas. A. Dunning - I A. M. 1 P. M. Prince Nova - 11 A.M.. I EM. MCA AIR SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY nave Charlottetown for Moneton 5:80 A.M.: 11:20 A.lll.: Izlfo EM. Ar. Charlottetown frorr: Monciol 1:25 A.M.; 1:35 l'.M.: 0:55 PM; Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow - Halifax 7:40 AM. New Glasgow 1:50 P.M. New Glasgow A Halifax. Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and llalifax 11:00 AM. from New Glasgow 4:35 PM. from New Glasgow all Halifax. . MONDAY, waoriasnar. rnmaa 0 Y NL 0:10 A.M. Arrive Sydney from New Glasgow. v 10:15 AM. Arrive New Ghagod from Sydney. ' SUNDAY ONLY mm Charlottetown for Mancini 11:10 A.M. Arrive citorlottgsoown from Manolo: I: BOIIIIN - CAPE TOIMINTINI FERRY SEIVICI Dali! tloelnding Sunday) Leave Borden laav 0.10 A.M. 1.00 P.1d. l