MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN pIghIIICSS. Ifow forcible are the words of up- Read by Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew The prilcc of knowledge l; nbov; rubles, MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN in} gnsl-foltstowu Guardian. ‘PR0 0""!- Iomln; llunrulun, Founded Hill’! CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, JUNE 9, A1942 s PAGJES B! llullv P. I’ l L z Annual liulsu-rlptlaul ll-llverou I600 - HJIH In other Pmvluouu Ind OJ. II.“ iifaval Aviatorfi Battered Jap Ffeet Retires To Home Area May be preparing for another “face-saving” ‘Slash at U. S. Defences. PEARL HARBOR, Julie 8—-(A.P) "Stung desperately by the hornets’ nest. it uncovered at Midway Is- land, niint was luft. of a powerful Jupmygc tic-ct sought hiding near home waters today to lick wounds and probably prepare for nnother “face savlng" smash at the United States defence in the Pacific Ocean. new many of the enemy war- ships may have been able w with- draw to safe waters was not def- miwly known. Official reports of the battle that begun last Thurs- day, however, said at least. three warships were sunk, l1 badly dani- ngcd and the accompanying air arm virtually wiped out. Against, this liquidation of Japa- nese scnpower known American losses were the sinking of a de- stroyci‘, damage of an airplane car- rier and destruction of some planes. Contact with the enemy was lost Saturday night, said Admiral Ches- tér W. Nimitz, C0lllllltlllllQl' of the Pacific fleet, At that time tllc force that launched the all-out. attack on Midway appeared to be with- (raving. E Brings Victory Nearer The victory off Midway, ranking ' t_in__ldlncrical_i_ fill (Continued on page 7, Col 6) Wedding of interest To iiany llere lliONCTON, N. 8.. June 8—(CP) _-A\\‘L(i(iil1f{ oi interest to IiiLIiiCiS lii tlu- Maritiines and Montreal was stlcznnlzcd in illc First Bul>1155 Church here Saturday‘ afternoon when Aliss Ncrlnzi Arbutus Ityrlcr, rlailgiitci‘ of M1". and Mrs. Frank Rvdt Moncton, biCilllli: the bride Covey, son 0 and Mrs. '1‘. 1.. Covey‘. Mont- . Dr. Brice i). Knott of- oi‘ Dulizlld Verdun M1‘. l. Augusta Humphrey, Mone- tcn, and Miss Charlotte Quinlan, Neulmvliic, Mass, were bride..- malti. and Hurry Richards, Hali- iax groumsnlail. .1 reception at. n local hotel iii". and Mrs. Covey luit on a wed- ding trip to Prince Edward Island. T like is a gifi-Liiiilt? of Acadia y and Mr. Covey is u memurl of of The Cnnadan Press . at Montreal. Covey was stationed at ‘town for some time, llc _ s bride arrived hcrc Satur- flfil’ (“fflllillg and expect to leave W111i‘ for the mainland.) v Shortage 0f Ships To Move N. S. Coal OTTAWA. June B - (CPI - Rm- iiucrd iJIOLLUCLiOIl of N ‘u Scotia coal lnllirs is nlade necessary by ol ships for St. Lzuvrenco River transport. Labor Minister Mitchell said ill the House oi Commons to- dilf- answering a qucstion bv Clar- encl- Giilis v0.0.1“. Cope Brcton Southr Ml‘. uiiils said Nova Scoiia mines lit on half time and asked what ‘it'll-s are being taken by the gov- " Einmcnt to deal with the situation inn viuiv of n. reported shortage of m1 supplies. Coming Events PO~ lite for Neill-u In this column I cont: per word "mu 0:1. Readi . 112 Prince. m y‘ ma-o-zl "Show and Dance, Bradulbane "odor. c-e-zl. "Show-Maipeque Wcdncsdéiy. “Reserve the date Thursday. “m! 1B for the Legion Dance at 0 Armour-lea. 8-0-1i. "Collecting hogs very Prlda . £21m list wlul beselie McDowefi. dericton. 5-19-20-twtf. “Danes in so. Juno; Hall, sum- llteriicld. Friday June 12th. Au!- WI o. w. 1.. o-o-lo. “glance vcmon River Hall Wed- “Y- J1me 10th, Millview Or- °""i"- o-s-al. "Wiltshire players present The RM 0f the Earth" in Whentley ml’. Wednesday night, in aid of new!‘ W. I. -- -8-O-il. "m" forkct the barn dime at “lbbonsldli. Covehead, Wednes- ilz June 1o. a. I. s. Orchestra and c-o-zl. 3L Island Gas Situation- ln Maritimes ls Improving OTTAWA. June 8—(Cl’)-— Munitions Minister llnwe told the lluuse of Commons today that the gasoline situation in the itfarltllne Provinces ls im- proving with the aid of some tanker assistance obtained from the United Staten Mari- time Commission. He was replying to Conserv- ative House leader- Haulon who asked for some reassurance for the people of the Maritime! whose gasoline rationing cou- pons were reduced in value from five to two gallons each some weeks ago. Mr. Hanson said he thou ht he understood the nltuai. on but some in the Mlu-illmes were "playing the. old game of Stirr- ing lip antipathy against the central provinces." lle said the agitation in the Marltimes was bring stirred up by “one big dealer" who had been oil-HEM with a big supply of gasoline in store. Mr. Howe said he could give no assurance when, lf ever, the coupon value would be restored in the Maritime Provinces but that he could say it would be restored as soon ll condition! warrant if. Replying fo a question from J. J. Kinicv (Lib. Queens-Lun- cllhurzt. Mr. Howe said excess freight charges on oil going to the Maritime Provinces ls paid bv the government and that there will he nu shortage of oil in Nova Sfntln because of h'|h freight rates. Howe Comments On Fuel Oil Situation OTTAWA, Julie 8-—(CP) -- Mu- nitions Aiiliistel- Howe told ques- iiQllEfS in the House oi Commons today the oil situation might not demand such “drastic measures" re- Slfiiitlflg the use or oil we! in homes as he outlined in the House some days ago. lie .-.ud a complete statement \\'Olii(l be made Lil a few clays and added that. a careful survey of the whole situation has revealed that the situation regarding oil heating in homes may not be as serious as it appeared earlier, ilc was not ab.e to give any as- surance about. gas heating in west- ern Ontario, he told Kori Homuth, iUOll, Waterloo south) who asked the question. v Mr. Howe told the House last May 00 there would be no fuel oil a- vailable for furnaces in Canada next winter. "line following day he modi- lied this statement and explained to the House that an effort would be made to have oil available for furnaces irhlch could not be con- verted to other fuel. In his May 31 statement Mr. Howe said study of the fuel oil situation had not been completed but. it. appeared apparent that per- sons who had converted coal fur- naces to fuel oil would be required to change back. He mised l statement within a wee or two on the whole situation. Two Airmen Are Killed In Crash ~ (YITAWA, June 0—(OP)-'f‘wo nirm from No. 2 Service lflylfll Train g school at nearby Up- lands were killed today when their training plane crashcd on Indian in n--= Lake, l7 miles north of Montebello Que. Rnyul Canadian Air" Force heed- qiurtm-s said details of the soci- dent are not known. Names 0f the men were not disclosed llfldifll notification of next of kin. The plans wu a Harvard train- er. War-ZS Years Ago Today 1B1 The Canadian Pros!) JUNE 9, ION-Mlf-Gcn. John g‘. acrshlé: unifustslf of ‘the Units?‘ a s on: roe their my aura-snooty received l?! King George V of Buckingham Palace, Gen 5i: Jule: Byflgolel‘ command of the Canadian WI- ‘Saw Line 0f Burning Jap; Ships Pass Torpedo Plane Pilot Gives Amazing Eye- witness Account. (By Walter B. Clausen, Associated Press Staff Writer) PEARL. HARBOR, June iL-(AP) -'I‘he first eyewitness account of the battle of Midway came today from a naval aviator who, 11011988 in the sen, saw a line of burning Japanese ships pass by. The sail- or's story was revealed by Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, commander in chic: of the United States Pacific flee ' From a. 25-year-old torpedo plane pilot of the Pacific fleet came one of the amazing eyewitness accounts of a major naval engagement lll the history of sea. warfare. Fish Eye View The pilot had what veteran naval officers termed "a. fish eye view" of operations during an attack on three Japanese carriers participat- ing in the battle of Midway. For he watched the havoc wrought when American divebombers and torpedo planes blasted at these huge targets-observing from the surface of the sea imelf while clinging to his boat-bag and cov- ering his head with a seat from his plane. The pilot is Ensign G. H. Gay. son of Mr. and Mrs. G. H. Gay of Houston, Tex. Minor Wounds Gay is recuperating today from minor wounds suffered when his squadron met hes. enemy fighter opposition while l-iving home a torpedo attack on one of the larg- est carriers in the enemy fleet early on June 4, the day the battle of Midway opened. Only Guy of the crew of three survived the crash of his plane shortly after he launched a tor- pedo at a. carrier of the Kaga class. What happened thereafter is a naval epic. Taking bf! from his fleet car- rier with his squadron, Gay ap- proached the objective in mid- morning. Visibility was unlimited. Below lay three Japanese carriers, less than l0 miles extending be- tween the first and last. of the enemy ships. which were screened by a considerable force of cruisers and destroyers. Gay took stock of the astound- ing drama below him, Two Kaga. class carriers had been taking on. their aircraft. Another smaller car- rier lay between them, also re- ceiving planes that were fighting the for-flung battle of Midway. Burning Ficrcely One of the larger carriers al- ready burned fiercely, while enemy cruisers and destroyers wheeled (Continued oxilafifll B) U. S. Likely To Ration Tea, Coffee, Cocoa WAS-HINGTCN, June 8—fAPl-— Consumer rationing qf ccffce, ‘ea and cocoa. is "quite likcly," Joseph L. Weiner, deputy director of the civilian supply d‘vi=.icn of the Un- ited states War Production Board, reported today. .1 Wliner said he could foresee no imflNVUmelt in the dhippirll lit- uation which would alleviate the coffee. tea lmd cocoa shortages. Coffee deliveries to stores now uretcut 36 per oent and tea 50 per gen . Nazis ilave New Anti - Aircraft Device In Ilse LONDON.’ Juno 0-(OP)—Th¢ B21111} correspondent of the Swiss news aper, Tot, reports that I- dol" '.?i“’““i“...h§“fi. ‘if?’ c es an I - W a latest. Nazi anti-ur- ii inc is tom mm unfldgdilrfliry nTzti-slicrm shell and u it explodes a cable about I90 yards long unfurh, held b a para- chute which opens at 0 oamo time. The correspondent, Reuters, reports, said the mobility tho barrage made it much more dau- serous than the fixed balloon bur- rage. An explosive charge ls suswnd- ed at. the end of the oe-ble. hen 3 plane gpflfllilllhis, its nirstreams an; the parachute forward and the explosive bursts against» tho mnmine. The device is cla. mrd to have been successful the frat time p, w“ nested durfng a Brit-‘sh raid on In industrial centre. War Situation Lasl Night Y-J (By KIRKE L. SIMPSON, Associated Press War Analyst] Whatever the tactical, strategic or psychological purposes of the Japanese attacks on Dutch Harbor and Midway Island, the blunt iucf. la that the enemy has received a blow that could revise the whole war pattern in the Pacific. Bit. by hit, navy disclosures from Washington and Pearl Harbor are . Coming enemy The afloat and in the air, gained by the and American naval requirements in the Atlantic, is being whittled to the vanishing point. it may already have been reversed, even against an American one-ocean navy m say piecing together a Japanese defeat of catastrophic proportions. on top of the punishment they suffered in the Coral Sea fight. losses in ships and planes must. have u sinister meaning for Zfokyu. margin of sea power superiority, infamous attack on Pearl Harbor nothing of two-ocean strength coming up. Q I U 3 U I There is warrant, also for the conclusion that the Japanese high command fell into a carefully baited American trap at Midway, fangld with far-ranging air bombers of the sister services. Land-lmscrl llir power turned the trick. Ii. presumably caught the heavily protected in- vading force hundreds of miles from its objective to send it limping westward again for refuge, shattered as an offensive weapon, While Japanese battleships formed part of the naval escort for transports and plane carriers, there is little reason yef. to believe that lho main fighting strength of the enemy fleet was directly engaged. Judging by the distance involved from the nearest Japanese island out- posts, ITWCVOI‘, if.‘ is justifiable to assume that the best and biggest Jup- ancse pane carr ers were ussi ed to the task r suffered the heaviest damage. g“ h) cc and apparently O I I O I O Thus the enemy fleet has lost in a single operation both u consid- erable segment of its long-distance sirikin power and also had its vision impaired. Carrier-borne planes arc i c eyes nf any fleet as wrll as its longest range guns. Without quick replacements, the whole Jup- anese fleet LII the Pacific must be left groping blindly to meet Ameri. can follow-up attacks. French Urged To Quit Danger Area Big Allied Operations Coming Along Coast; Air- Attacks Continue. " i (By Drew Middleton, Associated Press Staff Writer) LONDON, Julie 8-(AP)—-Briiain urged the people of France today fn evacuate the Gennan-oceupled coastal areas from the Belgium fron- tier to the Pyrenees before those areas are engulfed by coming allied operations of "capital importance." The appeal was made in a French language broadcast by the BBC, which gave no indication that any major allied thrust ls imminent but at the same time plainly implied that one is sure to come. LONDON, June 8--(CP) —Bos- ton bombers took over today's R. A. F. assault upon the occupied con- tinental coast, concentrating on the Belgian canal city of Bruges in the heaviest of day-long raids in which hundreds of planes participated. Huge formations of Boswns con- voycd by droves 0f fighters swalln- ed ov-cr the coast in relays, some flying at 20,000 feet and visible only now and then through breaks in cloud formations. At one point on the Kent coast it took one mam- motfn relay a half hour to pass over. With the R. A. F. offensive going full blast around the close, it was announced that 86 German planes were bagged by British fighters in daylight operations alone in May, bringing the daylight total since the wars start to 4,365 enemy craft. House Extends Greetings To iiis Majesty (YPTAWA. June 8 —(CP) — The House of Commons today made pro- gress in clearing the decks for a. de- bate on the amendment to the na- tional resources mobilization act which would permit the government to impose conscription for overseas service. Approval was given a resolution covering a. bill to authorize the gov- ernment to raise $750,000,000 by loan, to meet loans or obligations, to purchase unmaturcd securities and for public works and general purposes. The bill was given first and second reading. A resolution approving a. conven- tion vdth the United states concern- ig rates of income taxes on non- resident individuals and corpora- MAYBE OX TO COME BACK PRETOR-IA - (CP) -The City council of this South African cap- ital has ordered an immediate in- vestigation into resources of animal transportation in view of possible acute motor tire shortage. (Continued on page '1 col 3) AVOID WASTE when you make TEA. You will gel Bu! results both in qualify and quantify if you carefully follow "rhuwninvplr" directions '“ ' " ' ' 1- Sclid out flue teapot lo warm It. 2- Uu a level teaspoon of tu for ucil cup of iu lo be served. 3- Ulc lhcmxlcl amount of FRESH wafer you require and an that ii |l BOILING FURIOUSLY before you pour If Info the pot ‘- Slap 5 minutes. "SALAIIA" Cf Red continuing Nazi attacks on Sevasto _ today. inflicted heavy losses on the Germans, the Russians oviets Beat Off Attacks 0h Sevastopmoli Salli Eépitw Baffle From Sea Toughwveterans Army In‘ Fierce Battle 1V0 Essential Changes Occur On Long Russian Front; Soviets Force River Crossing In Kalinin Sector ii MO5COW. Julio il——i'l'ucsduy|—(Al')-5ovici troops have beaten off pol for the fourth straight day and announced early (iarrisonrll by some. ol‘ the toughest veterans of the Red army and navy, the Crimrail srzlporl has held against recurring Null assaults for Latest British bigivig to v15“ seven months despite the Germans‘ seizure of the remainder of the these shores is Oliver Lytllefon, peninsula. Churchill's Production chief. The Monday midnight. communi- que said‘ "In the Scvastopol sector elny attacks, and inllictlng heavy J sscs." inentary colllinuillquc suiu iced troops nod lolccd u river crossing 01 ia-o populated illilccs, . troops and suppllcs. sank uiree en- LOMJON’ June 3_i0P)-'An e1“ elny patrol ships and one cutter. ails ily llg gr-at r allr ' i-- , . .. . -. , . bukuruiy lusnbslielviixéiltaniobflznilu nayls opclatlons. LllLs ccnununlquc deli. ' *3‘ ‘ grout ituiu" raids of we lasi- Wcok lng clouds ut airplanes and waves ‘;*gg“fi_g‘u°“ some i’! men’! "USWOK 111E Russians reported the only ‘l ‘ real oflensive thrust o1 the day, an PO. ltoucrt lcllieti. 0i. at. Boniface new, " " - - - _ w, _ _, - . y blow to the Utliilldilb. _ MAIL. o. navigator, DilL the Swim A single engagement in this light cis, Olla., whose navigator Wis 58L others were reported wiped out on left.‘ lullcen. lhe CfCvV of another raiding Hali- ' F ' A C. Werliliam and. Flt. Sgt. H, Olsen, t bum o1 Winnipeg. an. w. K6 - of Oil Oenter (Flt. Lt. MacLcan is a son of Mr. the University oi British Columbia) lands West Indies. June 8 —(AP)— The clubhouse oi the Logo Oil Com- today with loss estimated at $276,- nommeiuuismu- i-ialted By Artillery CAIRO, June 8 -(APl stubborn lglitlng continues, Our troops are sllcccssiully repulslilg en- . no cssclitlzll changes‘ occurred elsewhere lll Russia, Utll. a supple- ‘ in the isallillil sccnul" ll01'lil\\C5b O1. n m Moscow and urove the Germans out ‘file mus also destroyed or damaged oil Licrllian ifliClLS Wltll ecurlclil storm nus the only serious . v l -~ ~ . , , lUlQ ualllugcd ulloulu pauol slllp Ol-tlllmtloll Lncuunieled Dy Cd-llflfll- and n, transport vessel uurlng bun- . , _ Ulhpiiiliillfb" from the Black Sea Amne“ “h” £09k Ila-I'll 1-11 L119 port suio. the Germans were hurl- vvelc A01 ml to u» low on t . .. . , _ . ~. w me N3,“ “avglebase w ehlllzlie Wag filfnslillliillvlyllltll against the Russ "we didn't see a. single fighter - ~ i . . ~. . . assault by the Leningrad ainiy and “h? lilll- diun U bouler us. said wlliCil a communique sand dealt “a. was a. iloney. i . . -- ., _ was said to have cost the Germans bet. (‘Liv llalnlnond oi Fort Fran- more than 500 killed. l-‘our-ilundl-ed lulu-ill! rirmvil of fol-unto s‘ 1d -. l ~ ~ 1mm “£05.. were bummg when ‘inc gitiexlgliiigixlconieslcd battlefiont nest. fax piloted by 1"lt.l.lt.J,A,l\1'¢1,e of Lewes. P. E. 1-. included ‘i=0. “i? , ri Saskatoon and Flt. Sgt. G. B. Por- tel‘ of Cartier, Ont. and Mrs. George MacLczln, l-ie at- -——— l-ellded Mt. Allison University and ST. NICHOLAS, Aruba, Nether- pany burned to the ground in a. vio- lent conflagrntion last flight and 000. The fire began Sunday night and burned for 24 hours. There were no casualties. The reference to a "violent con- flagration" in the foregoing dis- at-ch was not explained, but oil nstallations and barracks on the _ Field refinery isle off Venezuela were fir- Marshal Erwin Rommel: main 54-- ed upon some time ago by Axis mored column was reported today submarines and several shallow to have been halted by devagtaLin/g draft Oil ships were sunk in the artillery fire in a new assault on the him”?- wa e secon me 1n two F ind Woman s I Body With Head Battered days that Rommel had attempted to_ break through toward Tobruk, 15 miles to the northwest. He threw in strong infantry forces followed by tanks. but the British artillery fire broke up the drive before it gained any ground, Two Planes BLACKS namaon, N-B» June 8—-tCP)—P0l.C8 revsa a tnlzm that the battered bod, oi M155 u Bernice Connors had been 1.11mi in woods hcre last nli-llli- The I young wculan, rcsidtna. of this Charlotte County iistiing vlllags. had been missing since she iolt B re Friday night. daélg; ggdy, with the head batter- SUDBURY, Ont, June 8-(0?) ed, was found in woods i)(l‘l nd tho -Two Royal Canadian Air Force dance hall and about. 30 fret from planes made crash landings with- the road. The corlzsr- had been zn two miles of sudbury at, noon nrtly covered wlth moss and tcduy when the pilots lost their rush, course and the machines ran out A Royal Canadian Mounted Po- of gasoline, The only injures suf- lice sergeant from F‘redri':f'icn was fered by the pilots were cuts and investigating the cesc and a dog bruises. from the RCMP. deachnxent at PO. D. W. Banting of QuZApple. Monet/on was used to assist» the Soak. crashed in l. field while work. Sgt-Mal. u n a. ncmn of The body was token w 8t- Truro....N.S.....crashed over a steep George. rock embankment while attempt- Dr. Arnold Branch, Sin! John. ing w land on the Budbury-Cop- provincial pniliologisl. polio-shod reol highway. an ailtcgsy. "We lost our course and ran out Miss onnors was o ddusblcr 0i of gasoline, so attempted to make Edwin Connors, Black's Harbor. an emergency landing," said PO. An inquest was opuled today hi’ Banting. the only comment. he coroner John B. Mchari and ad- .would make on tile double-crash. journcd until next Tuesday after Alfred Trottler of Budburglpgis- the Jury viewed the body. f.‘ it‘ lliiflil. Wtilillfil. hi’; ‘ " ‘ To Speak On Gas, Rubber Situation down 0,1 the highway, "1 was parked besde the food." he said, "and saw the plane com- ing. He put down his wheels and struck the highway just at the brow of the hill. He would have WASHINGTON. June 8 —tAPt-- mode it all right if his left wheel A committee of Congressmen learn- hadn‘t struck n. rock on the side 0f ed todav that President Roosevelt the road." is going to "give the people some "That threw him over and the facts and masons" on the rubber plane went over the embankment," shortage and the gasoline situation continued Trottier. "l jumped out as soon as he has assembled the of my car and ran over and gst. the facts himself. allot out. He only appeared to be And until Mr. Roosevelt mflkfis dfizlcd" his report, presumably in another The plane piloted by PO. Bant- fireside chat by radio. representa- ing circled a field near the Sudbury tlve Richard Klcberg tDem-Tcx.) rlwe track several times and the said the President uionoht. that "we undercarriage was mashed odf in sfiould not get too excited or wor- tbq landing. ried." Old Building On Longwortlli Ave. Burned Fire. which was discovered shom ly before two o'clock this mom- lng, destroyed an old ice-house on Ioongwvorth Avenue. opposite Lop‘ thorn Avenue. Origin of the blaze was unknown. It was owned by Mr. Harry Winchester. The wooden building had been unoccupied for the past two years and there was nothing stored in it. About half an hour after the file started the ice-house was nothing but a smoking ruin. The old milk factory separated by a. few yards from .he burning building, caught fire once but the flame was quick- l_v extinguished by the firemen. In this building four large trucks o! the railway cartage service were stored, Three of them were taken out but it was not considered ne- cessary to take the fourth, which proved difficult to start, to the outside. The ice-house was nothing but o wooden frame and it burned like tinder. Several streams of hose were played on it but these only kept the blaze from spreading. Two years ago it was used by Peter Qoles as a. storage place for ice but since then has been unoccupied. News Briefs PORT ARTHUR, Ont, Jung 8—tCP)—llelnz Eichlcr, 19. year-old German sailor, who escaped this morning from all internment camp at Neys, Ont, was captured tonight. OTTAWA. June B-(CPO-Ths battledress worn by Canada's sol- diers cost $11.18, the House 0f Commons was informed today in a reply tabled for Dr. Pierre Gauthier iLib. Portneui). The statement also set the price paid for the new walking-cut uni- foim at $14.30 and for summer un- iform at $5.56. WINNIPEG, June B—f(‘Pl—- Air Commodore A. B. Shearer, air officer commanding the No. 2 Training Command of the Royal Canadian Air Force hcrc. has been promoted to the rank of Air Vicr-lllursllall, the com- mand announced tndny. $0ME Woman REoARo A BROOM » MERELY As AN ORNAMENT <_<_ r NM g‘ \/\ High and tonight at 8.06. Sim sets this ovrning at 744 and rises tomorrow morning at 4.13. Last quarter moon, June l8. 4.01 p. m. Snmmerside tide eighteen min- lites inter than Charlottetown. CAR FERRY SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SFNDAY From Borden - Leave B30 n.m 0.25 n.m. 1.00 n.m. 4.45 n.m. 7.55 n.m Leave Cape Tnrmenline-‘MS n.m 11.00 n.m. 3.15 n.m 6.45 n.m. 0.10 n.m SUNDAY SERVICE (May 3 to Dec. 27 Inclusive) Leave Borden 9.00 n.m. 12.00 noel 4.45 n.m. 7.15 p. m. Leave Tormenllne 10.15 n.m. 23' n.m. .00 gun. 8.30 pm. /\ . l , l. tide this morning at. 7.10 w1§' i l i .