MAXIMS OFA. MERE MAN No play 1| iefti likewise e. speech or g e rent la l starts to work size! tns’nt|'sl:l.'¢','l,.,'§ Charlottetown Guardian Two Oente. Iornllll Uuerdl: 1.. Founded 1M1. Covers Prince Edward I Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY, MARCH 28. 1940 {é 10 PAGES i thlt lie whole mooning of the Oroes ls blood in eeorlflclal lovo for men. MAXIMG OIL MERE MAN there the Slnleeu One shod His Annual Beheeelpelee Delivered 06.00 Ily lull-HILL $0.0m Chanda eel l7.!. @490 FRITISH $1100 T 1) 0 WN FIVE ENEMY PLANES umu Pmus umrsslill wrluoscuw Red Ambassador Charged With In- sulting Allies With Message. (By Roy Porter, Associated Press "Staff fer PARIS March 27—(AP)-.Pos- sibiltty oi’ a rupture in diplomatic rt- tfons between France and Rus- Sill developed today as n. result of Rizsslzfs recall of the Soviet Am- bnswldor to Paris, Jakob Surlts, r. the request of France. A French press campaign for Paris to out diplomatic ties with Moscow gained momen- tum in the wake of the recall, which the French Government mqucsted because it felt tho envoy had “lnsulied" the allies. The well-informed newspaper Le Temps sold:- "The friend of our enemies, Rus- tin. ls our enemy, whether we wish it or not. She should be treated as such. Why should we put up anv longer with a fiction which everything denies and contra- diets?" The move for n, break with RdFSla began as long ago as Jun. l4, when Philippe Henriot filed a resolution in the Chamber of De- puties demanding such net-ion. France and Russia are still linked by a mutual assistance pact. A French official spokesman rimmed that surlts "insulted the Allies" in sending to Josef Stalin l: telegram on the Finnish peace which, instead of beinlr filed in the usual diplomatic code lmder rrplometic immunity. was sent in precise French and dispatch through normal French post of- [ice facilities. The censor stopped the telegram. and the government took the view that dispatch of such a message -"Brltish - French wnrmongers" ivcre mentioned in it—~uot only was ilrstllting but was a deliberate at- l'-'ll\Dl. to use French communica- tions syrs-tfms for "Communist prspagnhde)” Surits tlllls become "persona non griltll" with the French Govern- ment. He was exlrrclcd lo leave Paris within a fcw (lays. The Frcuch ambassador" to Moscow, Paul lilmlle Nlvrglar. has brcn in France on "sick lcuvc" for severul \\'_‘l'l<5, m neither country will be r-prcscnted by on Alulxirsurloi- at the others capital for the time bt-Lng. Sir Richard Squires Buried Yesterday ST. JOHN'S, Nfld., March 2'l~-- (C? Cablelfifiir Richard Squircs. the second to lost premier during Nl- rcunzilnncrs percd as a Do- miltfc-u. was burird today. (iuvernor Sir Humohrry‘ Walivyn uismbcrs of the Judiciary and of lilo commission of government at- nriod the fuuern‘. r-i Sir Rich- u I, who died Afnudlw night. He \'»l.< buried in the gcucrul Protes- luut cemetery. S‘r Richard was premier in l~"l‘l-?3 and 1928-32. At ti‘. lllll. oi his death he “'11s Wt w. ("F-l‘ Nlwtcr rt the (‘tr-v Or- i-lllé ficdge of British Anlcrico. Coming Events 1-9- lfato for Notices in this column 3 cents per word. ‘fldluiter River ‘Shipping Club humus flog; Tuesday. Alllll 2nd. L-l4li-3-28-3l. "Buying! llve hugs at Albany March 28 . Friday, March 29th at bmereid. until noon. Signed G_ C. sreen. ‘Um Horse Me t 6c. Beer Trl Pluck; alga. Island Company, “Baecckieloéestbryear prices while Meats-Ground Meat Se. 35cc. H08 ld 57.01189 vlll‘ s ooder stoves lost- Order now Yo-o rativo Hatchery. Box 360. QllB-l‘ otte n. 14-119-3-27-28-80. "B Li H t miereld nmltlffudt. bird‘ the um- uoon. Arthur Hashim. 11-180-3-31-21. " Whestley River in Hall, Friday, March 29th. If not flue, Saturday. L-lfli-S-fl-ii. "Concert in Brookfleld Hell. March 20th by Oyster Bed 689 Women's Institute. If not fine Tlluredey come Friday. IrlM-S-IO-fll. “Variety Concert in Wood mend Church Hall March 30th, 8.15 P. lil- Sale of lu . A - [and Yo P3P 1e ioesetglfood ll .. _ m“ LrIM-l-SS-fli. Veteran Liberal Defeated In North Battleford Parliament Likely To ' Meet Early In May. Yesterday's late results included the defeat in line federal election O! the veteran Llbem-l. O. R. Moln. tosh, in Nortlh Bettleford when the winner was Mm. . W. N George Black, former Conservative Speakerwmitlhe Yukonsee/tforthe National Government. As returns approached conrple- tion in the West, the Liberal Party's sweep extended deep into every province. By provinces, me govern- ment won as follows:- Prinoo Edward Island-All seats. Nova. Bcotlar-Ll out of l2. New Brunswick-o out Q1 1o, Quebec-cl out of 64 (three lin- dependent Liberals also won). Ontario-65 out of l2 (Two Lib- eral» won l'l (One Lib- four Progressives also Manltoba.—I3 out of erad-Progremve also won). Saskatchewan-Al out o1 21. Albelrta-‘l out of 1'1. British Columbia-ll) out of 16. Out of 8B9 candidates who con- tested the 244 sears, it was estimat- ed 157 would forfeit the W00 they put up on nomination day. They were the losers who failed to poll one-half of the total obtained by the winners ‘n their constituencies. With three western seats still in doubt and Three Rivers w hold its election later, the Liberals found liamentary history, The opposltzon included 38 National Government. eight Clo-operative Commonwealth Federation, eight New Democracy, one United Reform, One Indfipeu- dent, one Unity Of the thftie doubtful seats, two were in Alberta and one Sas- kctchewan-wmd Liberal candidates were either leading or making e close fight of it at lest reports. Prime Minister MocKenzie King is expected to mret the new House of Commons in early May. The Prime Minister could count last night on the support o1 1B3 mem- bers, including three Librral-Pro- girsslvcs and three Independent LLDBPiIl-S. In the Libeml colunm alone were 1'18 member; While this total was based on the e‘.v.1ion vote, it was regardzd as unlikely that the ballots of s01- dfcrs, slllirs and airmen would cause more than a few turnovers when they are added nrxt week. _€_______. Speculation ,With Regard To iilabinetllhanges Enlargement Of Min- istry As War Meas- ure Expected At Ot- tawa. OTTAWA, March 21—(CP)—- speculation over P955151“ “PM!” in the Dominion os-biret hes! the rmu on of observers h" lflllllll“ Minister MacKenzie Kin‘? fllll‘ . t lliti-‘lmgtlytgrmorilfqmsiznlnfl end being "iiwiftticvea the Prme iffll-‘W not only will fill the "M" Secretary of Blete but U80 folio metungnlam “Gena? mourn-e V! 01'" Munlflmll uld Sulmll- Film“ m‘ :-'.-"‘-“ '-= ‘tioiitlniidfin page 9. 001' 9 Manitoba To Nav Election? " narrowest-assessor l- ranch V0 screen for It was n happy landing for these island 0f Sylt, Pica To Buy Horses In Canada OTTAWA, March 27—-(CP)--'I‘he Domlnion Agriculture Deptutment hfls been advised by l.".pl‘€5(3lllli- tires of the French Govcrluuent that they expected. to purchase horses in CBJIRUB. for c.l'.':1.ry pur- poses and of the ii 2:. uraug-lit type with inspections tlkitig plow the middle of May, it Was learned here tonight. Actual purchasing likely will be done through French purchasing bvturds opera-ting at the railroad centres iu eastern and western Canada. Department olll- cizils did not know tne exact num- ber of horses requested but it, was learned from other ' sources that it likely will be several thousand of each class. Buyers Will seek horses of the (loyalty tyre between five and. l0 years, standing l5 hands one mg]; W 13 blinds and weighing from 970 t0 1.100 pounds. Light draught requirements will be horses from "V9 i0 10 years old. standing 15 hands to 15 hands twu irwhps and weighing from 1.100 to 1,200 pounds, Deslkd °D0rtlon of the two lyllos is per oenl. cavalry and 40 Der cent light draught“ 0m- 018-1! indicated little difficulty is anticipated in Obtaining .11 1101-555 liiqllllod from Canadian forms. Admiralty ‘Disturbed By Many Refugees LONDON, March 27~(CP Cable) E. Altllam. representa- live of the Naval lul... gcnce Div- ision disclosed today iilut the Ad- miralty is disturbed fryer the largo umber of German and Austrian refugees at large in Great Britain and the difficulty of detecting espionage among them. There are 74,000 enemy eliens in different parts of this country, the vast majority of them subject only to nominal restrictions. Sir John Anderson, Home Secretary, already as started a general review of the whole problem and the views of the Ad-mlralt may prompt him to tighten he reg-u ions; Captain Altham said he had. no doubt e. large percentage of re- rugees are quite 86mm"? find Del‘- fectly harmless but their presence lu Britain “has provided the enemy with the most marvellous smoke insinuating agents into this coimtry ." SEND! SYMPATHY IDNDON, March 2'1 -(CP) - Prime Minister Chamberlain to- night sent a message of sympathy to the Government and people of New Zoaland on the death Prime Minister Michael J. Savage. "In Mr. Savage, New Zenland has lost a leader whose selfless de- =1 S’ t Brlcken-votion to the cause ofprogress woe J an inspiration and en example," - Mr, Chamberlain said. Heroes Return From Reid lax-qr r , not.» Jubilant British aviators. They n," leaving their plane alter sniily returning to their English bases from the ltoyal AlrI-‘oroo’: recent all-night bmnblng of the German s: :_-_—_.——+_; :12: Social redit Nears Majority In Alberta EDMONTON. March 27_—(Cl’)_ - Soclal Credit moved to within ‘tour seats of e. majority in the Al - legislature with the election ot S, A, Borg today on the second count m Alexandra. The victory increased to 25 the number of Social cretll‘ 1e liflliillflfi llcuullurr Manuel Members Will Be Sworn In At 2:30 lports that the plant mode machine 41c FIERBEFIRE ilLAZESiN llzlgllll Observers B e 1 i e v e Powder Stores Are Burning At Berlin. BERLIN March 2R _-('1'hursday) —(AP) —A fivrcelv blazing fire n a. closely guarded military supply plant continued to redden the skies of the thltiiv-mlinblted outskirts of Norm Berlin eztiny today. Starting late last night 1n o. wood- en \\. ohouse of on industrial plant ill. W _ln1sru_l1, stx miles from the "'11" Berlin. the blaze persisted this in rnlng though apparently Wllilllwi _l>v a great ulobilization oi ‘lrc ltllll-lllg apparatus to the one building. D. N. 13.. German news agency, in Wuortuis the blaze did not mention the plant. Observers, _ it was the Bertrmann ‘llv WOYRS. which is under- lo have been converted to tot luunllfaciure of war materials, 'I‘hc intense red reflection of the 73317’? Hilltmst the clouds and the lllfillllfl‘ in which it flared up fierce- l’ front time to time caused obscr. w believe powder stores were but 11mg, Police secrecy intensified m}; be. licf. D W- 3-. without confirming re- Sink’ LONDON. lxfarrh 2'l-~~(CPt—Brl- tntn tvdziy shot five German nir- craft from the skxcs and -nnk a German ntivul patrol vcA-el in the North Son, but on the otti- r side of the piflurc- she couzvcti the s o! h and tun ll'll mor- s. and one pl. ‘ n fl'<>lill.ll‘f‘ Cometa. . torperloid in the i North son. lmt for from the orn- trnbnnd control bwe at Kirktvu it was suatwl. open bouts h e beu taken to a nowhonst. Scnttxsh port. Sinking o.’ the Comets. WhlCh was en route from B rucn. Norwttv, to BUPYTOS Airos, rfnnnxrd ths new list or $l1‘.'ll.< lost:— Bri l.a.~~ltr~:- Dnrzhc tan . 5.742 ‘i tons, . mk Sumlnv in the North Sea with her cnpmln and ‘hree of the crew: rau=e unducnsed. lzun ammunition. only said the fire storied ln "highly inflammable ma- v tonal." ' Rrhorters were refused details b? gmriggrlon of tiali-llnlled military Slrllll-‘fent wartime laws against the ropnrtins of nevs of any mil- ilrlry value likewise hampered ef- forts f0 obtain information. Reporters driving through black- ed-out sire. . to the fire found the lust. hnf mile e. mass of fire eq- uipmcnt. Police placed a. cordon about the ares, and army guards pelted newspapermen at the walls of the plant with the abrupt explanation: "No lPfUrYTVlllOfl available." Unofficial information was to the effort that the plant. made only F"l.'lll arms ammunition. There was no evidence of casual. clot-Luci lill rial Credlters and threg ~~on of the 44th. I deny; _ l ' L-Esla- . Berg was reelected to the legislat- g .ure of the PYCVJlUB w ll be lolm- ‘ ure by a majority of llil on the ‘ally oprnozi at 3 or ock this alter- 3 second count. with ;..1l i ‘ms com- noon by H15 Hanan" B, w, LgPpgvg, -1 pared with 1,953 for Chris Gnu-us. Lieutenant Govepnm; rCo-operative Commonwealth Ful- whiie “mm o; m, "admmmn ‘; eration. On the first. count Berg military (“Spiny mu be msswg ha“ . received 2.207, Calms Lgilfl end A. PIIUSe of the war, a Guard of Hon- i pgéersoxi.’ Qiseqendenlt; 11]‘ :8‘ 3,, 0nd cur utll be in attendance. It will (zhniccrcgs OCT?‘¥§£Ul'5O?£L‘lX\l:Flq picnic Ibqcléirlluvi from ihgn-‘lsiolhal Ca xuran i second count coiupairtl uili 6115 for ma olun-ccr e.v cl —‘ t. btli." .l.l. lei matldrd by Lirulcncxtt ‘: giqolwllgd lllm] toklryili,‘llllgcirdlxi-tlrc . There will be no Artillely solute, "plum oars" i_u Peterson's 1.24.’; rul- Merubcrs of the legislature, lots w o lndr-wtcd no second choice, meeting frr the first time since the l‘. cosiyliiticgnmofs Lina:- G , i o _ "cs n t _ rr . - , ‘\l(l‘qltyer"“%illhbl\nvgguzglfii 15kg? ggo m“: creased tl an l‘(’l)l‘£'.\‘€l'll.'ll10ll in the f)y"ljlml_ J: Mamlesm ‘ house t0 T16 Iwiililthei iglvcrllfln of smsfiml as “ted by Mr‘ Juxtrm A. Geolge 1\ no .101 up n cm xnn. on Ll o second unt. E. Arscnuult. The cercmony w.ll I co plaice in the legislative Cham- I I - o» l». my, l Allies Wlll Discuss Nazi ‘ Safety Laue the sgvsccli from the lhr.n moved by B. W. ROiIiXlTH, Coun- czllnl‘ freon the Ffih District. o1 Pl‘1ll"" and rcrendcli by Mr. Peter A, hlcfsauc. Councillor for Kuigis. llCIll committees tospend more hfll] PARIS, ltfurch 21 -(CP Hnvasl S.t.ll".tl.000 cnch in anv election cnm- ~Authorltutive quartrrs said pniyru was added to the Hatch anll- night that the Alllrd Wu; coimt-il, poll vies b.1195 that senate-amvsovrrl at its next mccling, will discuss uiczgure ‘wast taken uptb th HOUR! the problem created l: Gcrmm use c cprescn olives 0 a . 1936, - ., _. i. Y the ltopublicnrls disburscdy 833565.524 f‘--g‘}§‘§ye“11,;§L--“}jf”‘"‘.,,Y“‘$§js,§§ and the Democrat's $5,030,848, bound for me Rom, ‘ “ that ‘ ' “-, The Allies have charged TAGS WIFE S CAB lemfl“ Norway has bren too ROCHESTER“ mun" Mam,‘ n__ in dealing with ‘violations by the (AP) —Ofl'icer Guy Barnes a 1m-"' . v“ “l “m-‘i E‘=!‘~*‘~*~ 1"“ . "my ___and brave‘ H15 Wm, move] ofiicltl cl les have outlined ihnt llle family cnr downtown and doub- . . . "‘*““'-“i °°l"lll'li‘5- ill- ie-parkcd. Along came officer Bnr- 11"" “W1 bl‘ tilt’? N 1' lnve clos- ncs who recognized the machine. 94 their eyes i0 Gel He tagged it saying: "1’ don't know ivhile voicln! loud lll‘0l sis over if I dare go home now or not." any Allied move in their waters. ~4 Oonserv: 1. ‘VOULD LIMIT SPENDING WASHINGTON March 27 -—(A1‘l —~A clause forhidllug: national )0ll' Tea At its Best "SALADK TIA I n Confederation n,» 1w 1'lr-~=~=->;.= Cllanlber %'i1§ltlge1ll)°£l1\1utl}l)til"8(l is ti» l("ll" I . in the other l5 ritlligz". are l2 stci: Illdcpsn- j to- i rs iBnltle Creek mine believed Adrift 0n Lake Ice LEANLINGTON, Ont., March 2'1 -(CPJ-Footory whistles blew and gunshots rung out in this Essex County town tonight in an effort to attract attention of four per- ..:ons believed stranded on treacher- ‘ous ice of Lake Erie in s. blinding Jnnunstorm after thclr airplane was ‘forced dovrn, l Aboard the mot-passenger plane ‘Wllfll it took off l."l‘ the mainland from Pelee Island. 15 miles out on L ' ~ F. lo. were Pilot Tom Higgins. l\ Mn ble Tissier of North Rm re, Essex County, and two maiden t iiictl ma le- pusson gers. The 1vlnuc was reported missing today when it was two hours overdue here on the riqht-miniltes flight fiClll the island. . Bcv Eris-woe. pilot, of a march ivintlsor. reported he . .. Jed vvlnt auperncd to ho n we of a inane four miles o iorc from here but said that the surhlirlg snow pmveutcd s clear i view. Ho Sllfl be believed he had soon three persons moving rtioout in (he vicinity of the p'ane but that thcre was no sign of a fourth. Number Wounded When Ambushed SOUTH PHTSBURG, 'Ilenn., March LlT-(AP) -—Tcn of l5 men were wounded today when ambush- ed gunmen fired on trucks carry- ing ~10 workers to the recently re- opened battle creek goal mine, The men were believed to have suffered minor flesh wounds and most of them were Nlllcldnt to dis- cuss the shooting “There was no record of any having received hos- pitlll treatment. The mine, g small one at near- hv Orme, reopened two days ago uder a. contract with the Progres- i Vt‘ British steamship Cnstlemoor. ll,- 574 tons. long overdue, crow of 40 feared ‘lost. British stramshilp Court. rammed and silni: by an un- ldcntiflr-d tanker in mifl-A laufxc. Mar-oh l3 Tlliflfl-Slx crew members l lauded today’. I Neillerlrlllris freighter Sllbl, 400 l“ tons, week owrtliw, and feared lost I with crew of scvon. Ancrher not '12‘. caruwlty. laid to l a. collslon with u Dlnish stvp of! England, was the Italian steamship Italo Balbo, 5.114 tons. She was damaged. Second Soviet Freighter Today also ' that a second . Vladimir Afryvako metal and builvri Statics to Vlad‘ taken to H11‘ band control in A fore In or“ spoke "man in g Nsbrvlso to a q tiou said that. g Soviet-British r. lotions lied not been svrnlved hy the svfzllres. "Anglo-Russian leftliunfl are nor-._ mal" thi. sppk/‘suian said. "M. Mai- sky (Sumo Anlliasutlorl has had several tad-i: uwlh the Mni-try of; Economic Warivnre about the de-t tsnfion of the ships. but flint is all," Royal Air Force sucoekws were described in glowing terms by "is inst}. ..;..‘."¢.'“ie;i*c1 Smuggling. lfiraf Spee’s Crew To ll. S.? BOSTON lVfurch 2:T——(APl—The u» ' montbem of » pocket ‘ possibility the sci ‘ ,. .‘l' lulled bv customs and immi- gration lnsyyxgllTi-h, a ftuleml source disclosed today. The lllftllllllllli said that after federal authorities had received reports that, lll!'ll1l)t‘l‘.5 of the Grad spec's crew had been seen in the vicinity of lhe U. S. submarine bnso in New Lmndon, Conn, a widespread invcstiuulioli, ranging all along the Atidutlc coast, was set. in motion. As e result. the sourci- said, im- migffltlfin ailthorittea made eight arrests, but n-"rw involved munbcrs of German crews. international At A Giant . (By The Press) LONDON—R. A. F. scores. west- ern front nnrl North Sm air suc- .rc Mine Workers of America luluerican Federation of Labor) ...it'1' having been closed for l3 luuntlls during negotiations with the United Mine Workers (congress of industrial organizations). George R. Cain, Company Bu- perintcndcnt, blamed the trouble reset-s; more ships lost. PARIS-Soviet Russian relations flrfllllvd further; French destroyer explodes. MOSCOW-Kremlin good hum- ored about: Fronrh-rrqucstctl am- un miners from nearby Whitwell lmis-"dftr "Til"- icrated under C. I. O. contracm l-le said they had contributed llv- K°\'i‘\'"""‘"l' fflfllml <und Palmer, where mines are op- Ill-ILE l‘.\"Kl IIINlPI lug funds to the idle Battle Creek Drvmlff- urinals, most of whom later Joined The the rival A. F’. L nlon. lpinys about 60 men. u munition. G-erman A Naval Craft; Lose Three Ships Two Neutral Vessels Included In Day’s Loss At Sea—R.A.F. Planes Show SpiritWhen Outnumbered. ‘The snow how it. "earns lls iivzng." i Rossngton l ' ‘simply and accompanied b}: lpirlnrttion in 8'.'l?l“.’-('.€\" ' sundae-oi :_% ll. s. steel Corp. Seeks To Show Inside Workings NEW YORK, Nlarcll 2T‘--(.AP)-- United Slates i pulp, which counts its o_ ions 1n ilundreds of millions of (ll/Jars, adopted the lai:guage of the 111311 1n the street today and Lfitd to "Big steel" staid annual l cllielly- f0; sh. brignlly-liued '": .1. by the chairman for and employees." This year the report will go to the nearly 250.000 empl "eea as ' ioiders. scruppcd its usual ' ", des. lied firs, ior a of the y-ear stockholders observers as another indicazion of the Corporation's efforts to im- prove 11s employee and mlblic rein- ‘ons, s, phase of big business stressed by Edward kt. St-ettinlitx. Jr,_ the youthful chairman who took over the flnanc-lul reins two years ago. Previous annual report-t, replete with great arrays of statistics. 1'9- minded many Wuil Sirceisfs of a professional wrountnntfs statement to a board of directors. The 1939 "revier." has picomee, charts and fizurcs. {reserved as one 1.129. Likewise, a simp‘... sheet was presented. in lold lanmlllg! l! "We lit», paid" and had lone-term debt." The balance sheet of assets and liabilities -—dubbcd "what the Cl)!‘- pQrlYiFm had to work with ’- sl-llnved totol assets n? ti" 3T3!" end of $1 _7G8.5'l4.00fl compared vrith $l.7ll1l'79.006 fit the c?“ of 1°39- Gims sales of i?" 7343 mm" ivured with $500.5’? 303 in lilflil and total revenue rose to $“0i-351-3ll7 from $022,533,283. AN oPflMls-r" 1% A GUY WHO euvs fr“: RING. AND ‘Ti-tau PROPOSES mnolvmo. MAICh 27-40?) -2 Vim-mum and maxunum tempera» lllliSl Dauson 12 4B Vancouver 46 55 1; . 22 2s 1 Z3 Zero 36 25 34 9 86 20 32 16 33 lti 38 lizll Tux 25 3'7 Charlottetown 15 33 Maritime East: Moderate it fresh westerly winds: cent-rally full‘ with much tho Sdlllfl temperature. Bymopsis: Licht snow has fallen in S0lllllf‘l‘l’1 out‘. emlr-‘rn Ontario. ivhile it lur- Lovn lair in nonhem lrstllcts. ll‘ 1W er ltzls be- rnule a lll Mmitobe '.\'i‘h ‘ snowfall: ‘is Reconstruction same BERLIN-Fire rages in electrical normally em- Plant convrrird to mnkc small Lflll , m Saskatchcunn u High Jlld iol Sun so. RPS "‘lt.( as? q: x 122 P M. Silmmcrside tide cirhtmn min- '-.1'<~s live lhun (‘hi1"‘.i‘.'~to'.\'n. ‘UTE CAR FERRY ISATUNGS Leaves Border. 9 t‘! A.M.. 100 PM. Loaves Tormentine 11.00 A. M4 8.05 P M. ~i r | . I ""1427?! _ ~11 '