puma MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Charlottetown Guardian, Two Canto, Ioruln; Gun-dian, Iouudod ill! \\i. 277/’ The People's Paper y-w-w- 11/ V/QIF" Q“ '--_ “"--__... \ Read b (lovers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Everybody MAxlm ' " or A ‘ MERE MAN The "titration and function of lLl- moral law is a fact of history, CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1941 8 PAGll-EKSN *RTnJunE CNEDEAD. Crlm Nazi moves Against residents 0f Bohemia-Moravia ‘W, Oat. 1—(Wedneeda/y)— ' --Grim and bl00dy Nazi re- toliablou for an attempt to throw off German "protection" and re- gain independence for Bohemia- Moravia continued Tuesday as an- other 58 Czech revolutionaries fell before German firing squads. The total number of Czechs ad- mitted in have been victims of Gestapo troubleshooter Reinhard Heydriohb drumhead justice thus rose to 88 as the third anniversary of the dlsmemberment of the Czechoslovak state was being celebrated in the Reich. Observers who have been watch- ing the restless course of the Czech people wondered whether the outbreak had been planned for this day of the anniversary on which the post-first great war re- public lost the first segments of its territory after a two-decade existence. Like day before Christmas in ll. S. retail stores Millions Rush To Buy Luxury Goods Be- fore New Taxes Take Effect. WASHINGTON, Sept. 30-—(AP)—- like the day before Christmas in United States retail stores. Millions oi people rushed to goods before sweeping new tax- es took effect at midnight. At that hour all of the excise tax- es contained in the recently enacted revenue hill became effective, except for the increased tax in night clubs. Just so nobody would leave a. party when lttwaseglagilmir: up,‘ the times; my‘ pcn - e me or pu th my into effect until 10 o'clock tomcrrow morning. (Of course, the new income taxes wcllr. have to be paid until next March l5.) The big rush today was on liquor furs, jewelry, toilet preparations an automobile tires and tubes. 0n furs, jewelry an toilet preparations, the new Lair-l per cerlt of retail rlrrce (Continued on page, 8, col. 1) Milk prices in ll. B. cities increase SAINT JOHN_ N. 3.. Ph-Milk in Saint John. Monctorl and Fredericton will cost one cent glare per quart starting tomorrow. r New Brunswick Da y Products Board, announced here today. This raises the retail rice to 13 cents and the wholesale 11 cell s. The price of a pint remains un- chsnged-eix cents wholesale and seven retail. On a cash and carry basis from pasteurization plants the quart price will stay at l2 cents _ The increase. said Dr. Donovan. had been approved by the Maritime Priors and ‘Fade Board and S0 oer ill no to the producers. 45 Der 10" oi’ butter fat. The cream price received by the producer has been increased five cents nor pound of butter fat. with wd~~'~-~‘= "*1 retail prices remain- ing the same. Coming Events Into ill» Notices In this ooiumu I out: uor sued _ a . "smw “mm” ‘ifdziilfiill-l-al "m‘°"m1mm ‘nril-ldddfoy-‘ao-al. v Frid . ‘drew-Canoe Cove Lwaigmlkm --_._.. "IICW-—CI-!_IOO Cove Pride?- er»- "llow-Mt. Stewart Baturdo . L-834-10- m. Chicken lb 1 "w “ltétafl t-alll-r-o-"f "Bingc, ice ream end dance at Johnston's Rifver school, Friday. Oct. l. 1P1 - "The loci l Club of Borden Protestant Church will hold a chicken supper in the Town Hall, October 1st from 4 nm. to a fir}: Sept. so-lc P‘ L. A. Donovan, (illiliflflflll of the. r Il-Ml-lil-bfl; Describes still holds initiative beri Bunnelle, borne position to g out two thirds in t e nave the Hi ously and with great merit through which ran at once a restrained exultlarloe at the course of the battle of the Atlantic and o. clear feeling of concern at the situation in Russia, the Prime Min- ister said plainly that only the greatest of sacrifices by the British people and s. tremendous upsurge of production in the United States could keep the Red armies indefin- itely in the field. And even then. he declared while reporting that British and Ameri- can representatives now in MOSCOW were prepared to give Russia. the most. specific commitments as to what supplies she could expect, “it may be that transportation rath- er than willingness or ability to give will prove in the end the limit- ing factor." Position Improved Prime Minister Churchill warns Hitler air; Danger of invasion not past. (B Bo Associa. LONDO , Se t. iiil-lfll-Winlton Churchill deoorihod Britain's as enormously improved, with her shipping losses last three months, but warned that in ev tier still held the initbtivo and could strike aim tone- In o. war review be ole Perils-l l-fe took notice of the olllaum hiifgiosdlan witgi $4,000 a year in- in some quarters that Britain should come earns an extra $1.000 B- Yeflik invade the contmfnta to ‘take some t? x315; ray $448 or "is “cw-W o: the pressure c f uss a. pm a,- "r uloula be kulltll o: no indls- I! d m“ l“ "l9, m,,§,"§,,y :r w the tax (continued on peas ‘l. C01 1) collect»!- Britain ’s l in all except ted Press Stiff Writer) hi’!!! Take profit Cut of war msrlmou Sept. 30 — (C?) — Sir e ‘ t. z "W v Ekfiifiqw’ ma tldfilxgfiproiit emit“ of war. must be an exceeding lucky man who can rnake a fortune .. Bilykingeley gave forth these na- Z—- l A man earning as much as c400.- 000 a has to pa. a traction mot: e r 94 cents taxes from every dollar he makes. For the man in the $30.00" a Ye" class who claims exelnpliim 1°!‘ W" children ule tax ls so oer cent v1 Will Speak llcre y Wood. Chan llor of tne ' MR. GORDON GRAYDON M. P. National Chaignrxn. Conservative ar y Will plan for Reserves of food German. .£!¢ llote Churchill Greatest living PRINCETON. N. J-. Bent. 80- rArp-Hitlers two-year term as the “world's greatest living per. eon" in the eyes of the Princeton freshman classes ended today when the class of i945 ElGVB-ifid W!!!‘ stun Churchill to annual poll. ‘Ifhc collected 110 votes to Hitler's ‘l3. President Roosevelt, ranked third on the world list, was labelled the "greatest living American" for the third straight year. leading Wen- dell wlllkie 101 to 39. Charles A Lindbergh polled l8 votes for third ac e. Eighty-nine r cent of the clan believed a vie ry over Germany more important than staying out of the war. and 36 per cent fav- ored an immediate declaration cf war against the Reich Eigh _two Der cent avowed WiYillRTlBSl go ov_e_l_r_s_e;a.s_if the need arose. In to Report slight gain a (By llenry C. Cassldy. Associated Press Staff Writer) MOSCOW, Oct. i-(Wednesday) —(A.P)~'i‘he Russians acknow- ledged for the first time today a Red army retreat into the rich Donets asln after abandoning Poltava. but dispatches from the north said that waves of cheering Red infantrymen had won back a. city on the approaches to Lenin. grad and enererrched themselves BERLIN. Sept. 80-451‘)- Cennnn new: and prollllluda dispatches from the front will! told of hsnd-to-haud combats with, bayonet: in the south and “fir; quarters“!!! the c o pared w e on tho hilllyld front. of dials veri- fied press reports that. the Noll armies must winter in Russia. A military spokesman said there would be little nlwl from the bottle front for the “not: few days" for "certain reasons which he did not disclose. ,______.________..___.__ m a new, advanced lino befocolhe besi ed metropolis. ‘new: German nigh command had claimed capture of Poll“ N miles southwest o! the chief industrial city of Khnrkoa . la along wlul um. Kiev t today’: Elillilit oom- muniquo indicated the rut por- "Dsnce and Bin o 8t. Andrew's trons of the town were sbsn mu 1mm . October , ‘mesdo. la r1 u. Goodymusio. L-‘l-IO-l-li °“§,Y,,,,,,,, “flog 151g mam stealth’; "B81100. B!!!" ‘"14 lg M atladmglnfides which weroglnimed lunches, Flat River Hall, day. u, my. t, “w” w; 9g 0° "5 9 P- M- P‘°°°*d' m’ Marshal semeon ludsnnrs UL 5°" 71'1"“ 39¢ 0"“- raine defenders. IrBSS-IO-l-li. w.‘ "m. mum“, "cowl-a n - w“ we timid“ "i$.“£.l.’.i‘.i‘.1't"a“ "We"! films" M" “"52: new m he defence of the '°“' “°“' "l9...'i.i..t“°..?$lt.fwilu we“... Will“ "d" - - iivtilliffi OFGNQII and o. o (ooultouodaooblbdoifl. u st At Britain Red Army Retreats Donets besieging lseningrsld. A Raiders Stung to action by R. A. F. LONDON, Oct. 1—(Wednesday) ._(cp);st.rong formations of Ger- man planes heavily assaulted northeast coastal areas for hours uring the night and rescue par. lee brlnlzl 11K th debris o! wrecked buildirelgs. Five towns were raid by the Nazis, using heavy explosive and And raw materials (By l. F. Sanderson, Canadian Press Staff Writer) WASHINGTON, Sept. 30—(CP) -Three-way conversations among Canada, Britain and the United States will be held on the estab- lishment of reserve stocks of food and raw materials when Sir Fred- crlck Ielth-Ross, chief economic adviser to the British Government, arrives in the United States with- '.n the next few days. As president of the newly-form- ed intenallled raw materials bur- eau. to which he was appointed in London last week, Sir Freder- ick is concerned with the collec- rehabilitation of post-war Europe. He will ‘h lace. chairman of the defence board of the U nomic adviser to ference called by partment. The conference attend- (Contlnlled on page '1. Col 4) fire bombs. the latter including ed that casualties would be heavy. Large fires were started by the German raiders. They knifed through anti-aircraft fire and , Rgyal Air Force night flghtersl w flashes were however. quickly controlled. (Continued 0n P880 ‘l, Col S) Basin gainst German forces Reveal llirmen Protected before Re Troop Ships UITAWA. Be t. 80—(CP)—The recent incident which a number of Canadian airmen refused to sail from an eastern Canadian port on a ship which. they considered, offered unsui le accommodsfltinrn .... t... l . Last July, it was learned, a. sim- ilar but lesser incident, involved l. party of Australian airmen who were travelling to Great Britain by way of Canada. The airmen are saidtobaverefusedtouilouo In the of Air ilinister Power in Montreal officials do- gged to disclose details of the in- "rnero was some smoke but not much fire," lclal said. IAILWAYMAN KIM-m , n. B. Bert. ao- (O? 4min Sleeves, an employee in s brilhe and building do ment of the Canadian Nat onsl Roll , was killed instantly to- day w l. locomotive backing into the railway roundhouse lllinst some "screamers", and it was fear- l ch roared to the challenge. The _ Interpreting The War News‘ (By Klrke L. Simpson) (Associatf Press Staff Writer) In some respects, Prime Mill- ister Churchill; most recent ac- Wlmilnk to Parliament is a new "ugh-water mark in British nu- ..imlsm. It contained two start- ing statements: that Hitler now is suffering from "a very serious shortage of air power; and that British sea losses have been cut to a. new low in the last three months. Obviously, the British author- ities belicve that the Nazi war in Russia is wearing Hitler down somewhat, and forcing him to let up in the Atlantic struggle. If that is true, the possibl ity that Hitler might call a halt soon ill Russia and again turn either erlstlvard against Egypt or westward against Britain i; very real. _ _ ' v It is beyond lkzliiiofiilblt? belief, however, that Hitler could stop short in Russia of what seems his prime goal in launching two- front war, Russia's oil life lines. Nor could he abandon the siege 0f Iieningrad, of Odusn. or of threatened Kharkov now with- out bllffeflallfi the worst kind of blow to N military prestige. It ls questionable how even German giublic opinion would react t.o s failure to press the war against Russia. Only from EA a concrete {San on which be had been work- tion of reserves to he used in the discussions her-z with Vice-President Henry Wai- economic rlited states, and will g0 to Ottawa for discussions with Canadian Gov- ernment officials. ' Canada. is primarily. concerned with the question of wheat reserves the and the visit of the British eco- Wushington is expected to coincide with the ad- journed session of the wheat con_ the state‘ De- Cl 5 To vvin war Only issue in Canada today Re-building Of Con- servative Party Na- tional Wartime Ser- vice, “There i; only one issue in Caul- ada today and that is the winning of the war, and the reconstruction of l-lis Majesty's Lqyal Opposition, to be Justified in a war-time per- iod, must be related closely to-flrst. of all, the more effective prosecu- tion of the war and to the solu- tion of the post War problems which will follow at its close," Mr. Gor- don Giraydon, M. P., National Chairman of the Conservative Par- ty, Brampton, Ont. said in an in- terview at The Charlottetown Ho- tel last night shortly after arriv- ing here. He is i.rl the city to ad- dress the annual meeting of the Queen's County Conservative As- sociation Thursday night. Mr. Graydon, who is a member of the Federal Government repre- sentlng the Constituency of Peel in Ontario, is conducting a survey of the Dominion as the first step in re-bullding the Federal Conserva- tive Party. Already he has Via-ted the four western provinces and parts of Ontario and Quebec. lie will visit Nova Scott; and New Brunswick later. Since commencing the survey on June 23, he has cov- ered 83 Flederal constituencies and Visiting Editors Meet Churchill LONDON, Sept. 30—(CP)-Be- neat-h a crystal chandelier, the iu.. evitable cigar between his 1195. Prime Minister Churchill today received Canadian newspaper rep- resentatives visiting Great Britain and spoke to them confidently of war. ‘ hey particularly wanted to see you, Mr. Prime Minister." said Brendan Bracken. information minister. who arranged the inter- view. the largest journalistic gath- ering lyLr." Churchill has received since taking office. Mr. Churchill retorted with o. chuckle; "They want to see all the ruins." In this atmosphere of high spir- its snd good humor. the dozen papers grouped thenlselvm in a semi-circle about the Prime Min- ister, after each one had been lu- lroduced to him. Canon J. A. Chamberland of Quebec addressed Mr. Churchill in French, extending to him the greetings of French Canada. and Mr. Churchill replied "ie vous re- mercie" Bishop R. J. Renlson o; Tor-ohm told hinl "your voice and person- 232v’ are known throughout Can- “You signify courage and de- votion." Canon Chamberland said. "Weil. we're a. united country.” the Prime Minister replied. He paced the floor as he spoke. Then he gave his interviewers an off-the-record talk before leav- in: to fill another engagement. The editors heard lvfr. Churchill's address in the House of Commons. With them. both at the interview and in the Commons. were Hon. R. B. Hanson. Conservative f-fouse leader at Ottawa. his secretary, R, A- Bell. and Grote Stirling, former Minis“! 0f National Defence who sat in the Dominion: gallery, and A. C. Casselman. Leonard O'Brien and Maj. Alan Cockeram. Con- servative members of the Cana- dian House, who sat. in the press gallery together with the Cana,_ dian newspaper representatives. Leading Night F i g h t e r G e t s Third Decoration th "—““" wf§§",§°§fl;f‘i;,ff§,§ sent. so-(oPl-nn- line is there an opportunity for "M" 195411118 1118M llkhllel‘ glint. a more crushing blow ainst “this Wine Commander ohu the Russians than llssye fall- 0v nsham. has received ills ell, third decoration since the start cf I I a the YGlI-~l bar to the Dis - Yet there is am le evidence uished Flyi Cross. He also hol from many sources justif the the Distingu ed service order. Churchill re rt of a Naa sir The 24-year-old airman, meg- We!‘ B1101‘ 1'0!‘ 1100"" named “cat's eyes" because of his gin-front W941_.A.1_1'__lll£l._<2ll_ sikill in finding the enemy in his ' ""'» darkness. has destroyed 15 con- <_°2ntl_nwd__<>n=rua_'l_-J2,l=8=> Lrndm==1dm=at night. , Join the Host of Home Ba kel-s who - ////A[f / F I. U350 NADA u p I TC it srcorlcull representatives of Canadian nelws_l' (LC. AT DEBERT Brigadier A.M. Thoma; has bee“ Rilliolntrd commanding officer of Debert military camp in you Scotia. l-ic won his l‘ ‘ll 1,] R-A-F. in the inst vvdttgs w‘ I 1e Roosevelt, Hull confer on Neutrality act WASHINGION. 56M. —Presldent Roosevelt tary of State Cordell Hull discuss- ed all phases of the international situation for nearly two hours to- day, preparatory to the Presi- dent's decision on how much oi the‘ Iéleutrality Act should be re- peffoerrlorrow, Mr. Roosevelt will re. ceive the recommendations of his congressional lieutenants, prob- ab to be based upon their judg- ment of how far Congress would be likely to go toward scrapping the law. Then. later in the week, the President may send. ConelrP-‘is B special message on the sublwl- revealing whether he wants the Ml repealed outright and in its en- Llrety, or feels that the nullifi- cntion of certain of its provisions would be sufficient. One thing ls considered clear: that he will surely ask for the re. (Continued on page ‘f, Col i) BULLETIN naanrlv, Oct. l-(lvpdnea- 3y) ._ AP) — Irullvrfluul bombers, described us Brltlslh “attemptcd" to attack Berlin during the night. and air-mid sirens sent the Population to shelters, but Nazs claimed all the raiders were turned bark by anti-aircraft. fire and that one plane was downed. PLAN WOODEN SHIPS VANCOUVER, Sept. 30—(CPl—-A two year plan to build between 150 and 200 sea-going wooden cargo shi of 3.000 tons each in Brltlsh Coumbia shipyards will be laid be- fore wartime production officials at Ottawa next week bi‘ Villlwuvel‘ shipyard representatives it was dis- closed eLtoda Convoy Is Describes how British off Fascist attack; By a Reuters Special Clu- pendent ABOARD H. M. S. ARK ROYAL. Sept. 30 —(CP -—Reulers) -Brit- iah warships and planes beat Off wave after wave of Italian torpedo bombers in a. furious battle lasting just an hour during which the bat- tleship Nelson was damaged. It was In‘ hour so Piwked with "k cident that it was hard to believe it all happened in co brief min- UONDON’, Sept. 30 ~10?)- The 33,950-ton battleship Nel- son was hit by an aerial torpedo in Saturday's Italian attack on s great convoy in the Mediter- ranean but her speed was only slightly reduced and there were no casualties. the admiralty an- nounced today. Thirteen Italian planes were shot down in the running en- gegemert, six of them by gun- fire of the fleet. Aside from slight damage to ' the Nelson, it was added, the British force lost only s single merchant ship. British losses were three nav- sl fighter aircraft, but tile crews of two were saved. Z;'“T_—LZZ__“I*~_. n utes. A sudden distant rumble oi‘ gun- fire was the first sign of the ap- proaching battle. fCoulllnuod on page ‘f, Col It ‘ljells Of Battle i slightly damzlgedjy YOYPQdfl-flm _..-.-.. Coaches Express Former Speake “Viper” near here tonight. a conch in the middle of the sirozlm. $2.2. R.C.A.F. ’ Men killed 0r miging OTTAWA, Sept. 30—(CP)-—'l‘l'lo Royal Canadian Air Force, in its 73rd casualty l t. late today re- ported seven en killed or miss- ing alter air operations overseas, raising tile total dead and missing since war started b0 812 R. C. A. F. members. Two were listed as killed on ac- tive service. five as miss after air operations and one as angel'- ollslv ill. Following is the latest casualty llftkyvith official numbers and next o n: Overseas:- Killed on active service: Anderson, Ronald Drugy, PO., Con. J5B79. Mrs. R. D. Anderson (wife) Weston, Ont. Colley, Robert. Charles, p0,, can. J5979 Mrs. F. W. Colley (mother) Denzil, Sask. Missing after air operations:- Burllnsoll, Robert Melville, P0., Can.J50'l6, M. A. Burlinson (fa- ther) St. Louis, Mo. Sutherland, Richard Gordon, 210., Gan. J3724, J. G. sutherland (father) seigrlioriy Club, Que. White, Charles Stewart, PO, Can. J5330, Mrs. C. white, (mo- ther) st. Marys, Ont. Evans, George Thomas Joseph. Sift“, Con. B65407. Mrs. K Evans llnotller) 52 1.2 Prince SL, Hali- fax. Taylor, George Gordon. Sgt... Can. 1260451, Mrs. o. o. Taylor (mo- ther) Calgary. Dangerously ill on RCUVP Sell/m? T‘lll'll\"i‘, Frank Georgi’. Bu» Can. R-SIZOS, Mrs. A. Tlllllel" (m°' lhelf- M‘)??? $1.“! As Ra ided Warships, Planes beat Battleship Nelson Spent 10-minute ‘Eternity’ under Water in plane LONDON, Sopr. 30 —fAP) — A Royal Air Form squadron leader spent “an eternity" l0 feet under water ill the nose of a bomber which cmsllocl ill tho North Sea. How ire fought. lo frcodmn was r"- vealorl when the crew was wash- ed ashore after floating three davs in a dinghy. The aircraft, badly danlagcd dur- ing a raid over Oslend and nose- hPilV)’ alter the (‘row tossed every- tlllrlg detachable oycrboard, bollnc- ed lllld crushed illin the sea. Four airmen escaped through a break in the fuselage bur. the pilot and front gllnllor were trapped. The pilot was sprawled in the cockpit l0 feet beneath water. but t-llc gun- nor, wllo had managed to roach the observers scat, was allow- 1h.- wat- er love-l. "Mir a moment I ll-lve up," tile llllul salli. “lt ditllrt swirl Wsslble ilmi. l would gel away. '|!l~ ullole from of tile fill'(‘l'llll Wilrl l‘ "flu-io- ly lll1(i<‘l‘ water. I held ill‘ i‘.<‘lill\ ns long as I (‘0lli("1_5_flg thrill lwgan Annual Subscription Delivered, 5.1.00 B] Mull: P. E. l., “.00; Curmdu laud lJ-B. $5.00 5R lllR EC h 0f Pool Leave Rails, file Up’ T rainman meets death; r in House of Commons one of injured. AIASKINONGE, Que, Sept. 30—(CP)-—One person wag killed and 16 injured in the spectacular wreck of one of (fanzldzfs fastest trains, the Montreal-Quebec pool expresl 'l‘r:linmzlll J. A. Couture of Montreal was killed when‘ eight-car train left the rails, sending tile car behind it plunging upside-down into tho almost-dry bed of the Maskinonge river, and piling twd other coaches into twisted wreckage on the banks of the Hon. Maurice Dupre, member of the Privy Council and former Speaker of the House of Commons, was one of the injured, although the extent of his injuries was not The crack express was streak_ ing toward Maskinonge at “p-rob- ably about 76 miles an hour" ac- cording to railway officials, when. one fourtncsr jumped the track, "Ihe diner behind it also left the rails, broke away from the coach, and crashed down on its roof into tile river. There welt few passengers on the diner when it took its ‘plunge, but waiter George Onkel o Mon- treal was among the most serious- ly injured. Hours after the wreck, the diner broke illio flames in the river- bed, despite a. driving rain. Ii: was believed that the railway bridge across the river might also be de- stroyed. Everybody was out of the diner before it caught fire. The two parlor car behind the diner also left the rails, but. their momentum was lost before they reached the bank of the little river. The last car of the trail; another parlor car, remained on the rails. Ambulances rushed doctors uad nurses from Three Rivers to the scene of the wreck. A special train was made up in Montreal and doc- tors and nurses from Montreal hsopltais were aboard it. when it was found that the medical aid already at, the wreck was suffic- ient and the special was cancelled. l A Buucll o‘ Roses BY Aw o-tlllza NAME WOULD BE duel’ s ExPEnslvl-I (Canadian Press» TORONTO, Sept. ISO-Minimum and maximum temperatures:- Dawson 38 id Victoria. 4o u] Edmonton 46 4'! Regina. 42 :35 Winnipeg 7 53 Toronto 4r .31 Ottawa s2 5: ‘Montreal 38 .‘ ' Boston 40 59 Synopsts: Showers have occur- rvd in Ontario and wvstllm Qllel bcc. also in southern Mflflllflllfl. and the weather has been cool over the Prairie Provinces and the greater part of Ontario. BOSTON. Sept. 30—(AP)—.F'ore- cast. for northern New Erlglanci:-_ Occasional rain. followed by clear, llli! ill solltllrvcst portion in ‘he afternoon; warmer Weclncsdlrv, Thursday fnir with moderate tem- perature; fresh to strong south- west; shifting to weet winds Wed- nesday. High tide this morning at 8.55 and tonight al. 8.20. Sun sols this afternoon at. 5.42 gig‘? rises tomorrow morning at. - - - -‘. .1: Pull moon, Oct. 5. 4.32 am. Sunlmerside tide eighteen min- ules later than Charlottetown. BORDEN —- CAPE TORMENTINE QERVICE Iicavc Bordon 9.25 MW. 1.00 EM. 4.45 PM. 7.10 VIM. Louvr- (Klpe Tnrmcrltillo ll 00 A.M. 3.20 PM. 6. 0 i'..\‘i. 8.40 I'M. WOOD ISLANDS FERRY Leaves Wood island! 7.00 A31. il.00 AM. 3.00 PM. (Continued on P980 ‘I. Col b), Leaves Caribou 9.00 A.M. 1.00 PM. 0.00 EM. \<3?\G>