1,51,; llolldod I001. 5-5. 0uar:i.aa.m hue (Joan CHAR!-0T'l13T0WN. CANADA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 11. 1950 UNIONS REJECT FINAL TERMS or CANADAIS RAILWAYS Eornmaanislis 'EnleIrPoIaang In Surprise Airliack Severe Electrical Storm in Prince County Area Thanksgiving Day October 9 OTTAWA. Aug. 10-(CP)-The second Monday in October-Oct. 9 4..., been set as the date for Tlianksgiving Day this year. it was learned tonight Thankagivinl Day 1; one of the statutory holidays which is fixed each year by order- in-council. New Glasgow Man Charged With Minder NEW GEASGOW. N. 5.. Aug. 10 --(CP) - The mothe of a crippled (Negro) truck driver charged with murder testified today he told her Tuesday he had killed his wife. Mrs. Lem Mills. mother of 42- year-old Thomas Mills. was one of 13 witnesses called at the inquest into the death of Mrs. Mills. found dead in her bed early Tuesday. Mills, held on a charge of at- tempted aulcido after being res- cued from the East River, was charged with the murder yester- day. lie will be arraigned Aug. 1'! Dr. .1. W. Aibbiss. provincial path- ologist. said Mrs. Mills' body show- ed several scratches and bruises and had died of asphyxia. The coroner's jury: found she had met death by "natural strangu- lation." Prince County was visited yes- terday afternoon and evening by one of the severest electrical storms for some years. The storm was accompanied by heavy gusts of wind and pelting hail about four-thirty in summenaide and vicinity. several large trees were damaged in ” merside but there was no report of any building be- ing struck. Telephone communication with Tignish and Alberton was dis- rupted and no report on the severity of the storm in those districts was available. At Lot ii a large barn owned by Lowell Clements was struck and burned to the ground along with seven pigs and at Spring- field West another barn owned by Mrs. Inn Ricks was reported to be burned but fuller details could not be gathered due to faulty telephone communication. The storm in the o'I.eary sec- tion was reported to be very ae- vcre and returned three times during the. afternoon and eye- nin . No report of any damage was received from the Kenain-gton area but there, too. it was said M oneiina Of Front Yanks , Drive Ahead TOKYO. Aug. 11 - (Friday) -- (AP) - Gen. MacArthur's headquarters reported today that North Korean Communists are musing four - possibly five - diviaiona along the flam- ing Naktong River line on the central Korean front. It was not clear whether the Reds planned an'iInmediate attack to relieve an estimated 1.000 North Koreans trapped east of the river defence line. TOKYO. Aug. 11 - (Friday) - (AP) - North Korean Communists smashed into Pohang in a surprise night attack and today threatened an American east coast fighter strip six miles to the southeast. At the opposite end of the 140- mile battle line, U.S. troops drove steadily toward tottering Chinju on the southwest front. In this sector the Americana moved ahead 13 miles and trapped an estimatecl 1,000 cncmy troops. A front-line dispatch said fight- 'ing was under way at the Pohang railroad station at 3 A. M., (1 P. M. E.D.T. Thursday). The American airstrip -was not under attack and to be unusually severe.-S. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 8) SOMEWHERE IN KOREA - Coming Eveiits” "Mail Your--FU-ms to Garnhum Photo Studio. Charlottetown. "Dance in lriatol school. I-riday. August 11th. ” between 15.000 and 20,000 miles in "Festival and Dance in Oansvoy school on Friday. August 11th "Abegweit R. B. P. Kilxeton August 11th. "Dance. New Iona East. School. Priday, August Iith. "Reserve August 23rd. Harrington Hall. "Ice Cream. Dance. Little Pond Hall. Monday. August 14th. "Pie social and Dance. Chap- Iiow school. August 14th. "show "Corsican Brothers" at Hunter River tonight at 830. Tea in "We will be buying live Fowl Tuesday. 9 A. M. to 1 P. M. R. L. Diclrieson. "L. O. B. A. Pantry Sale in Wood's store. Crapaud. Saturday evening. August 12th. "Ice Cream social on 1tose.Val- icy church grounds. Friday. Aug- ust llth. "Buying any quantity Timothy Seed. Consult in before selling Cedric Ballem. Marahdeid. "Regular Dance. East Royaltv Rink Hall, rriday. Bus leaving Bus Terminal 9.45. "Dance Slnnoit Road School. Monday, Aug. 14. Good music. Hall game. "Notice: Any lumber coming in after this date must positively wait in lumber yard for its turn. Row 34111. Bridgetown. - "Pantry Sale at Keir oluira Note. Saturday evening. August. . starting at 1.30 ptclock. sprint Why Women's Institute. "H ohm nail. Friday. August In Party and Dance Mac- Orcheatra. Women's Insti- ll . Neiil's lute. u "1 organ Jecial oom- mgigg, 1011. wt X'.T”5i:.l-"T ujgn , '.' club. . . -A 115- ' p t wetness”-V 5'.-:::. til. lama E11111 or-claqigg, Woman's In- "Sandra raaatre Under the IV. lif"33:"&u..mif"'i"5"::".h ml C - ... - . . I m to Tokyo. But when you get here You don't only have to have long legs to cover thiatwar-you need a pair of wings as well. The distance: a correspondent has to cover are staggering. I fig- uro that by the time I get back to Ottawa I will have travelled three weeks by air. It is 5,000 miles from Canada No Reason For Panic Buying OTTAWA. Aug. I0-(CP)-uow ernment officials said today there should be no reason for panic- buying in Canada. Commodities of all kinds are in plentifulsupply. especially of such products as sugar. coal, automobile tires and textiles. "Some business men are buying up-hoarding-in anticipation of a shortage." an omcial stated. "They are doing themselves a disservice. This may force allocations on in- dusiry." There were reports reaching here of a sharp increase in buy- ing of car tires, pushing prices higher. AGovernment official said rubber was in plentiful supply. Even should the supply of natural rubber be cut off, enough synthet- ic rubber could be produced in Canada to. more than meet re- quirements. Iurror Production Continues Decline OITAWA. Aug. 10-(CP)-Butter production ued to decline in July. while margarine output crept upward. Creamery butter production. the Bureau of Statistics reported today. totalled 30.020000 pounds. compared with last year's 80,010,000. Margar- ine production. however. gained from 0.53.000 pounds in July. 1040, to s.oo1.ooo. Reporters Need Long Legs To Cover Korean Conflict (Special in The Guardian by 3.... Munro) you find that Tokyo is just a start in your perambulationa. The front lies another six hours- by plane and 1.200 miles further on. You fly to southern Japan to an air haso. Then you hop acrosa the Sea of Japan to Pusan or In inland air base. After ten days of this long- ranue war corresponding. I found myself looking back tenderly on campaign; like that in Normandy where during the beachhead days one's travels could never run more than it dozen miles a day. even if you covered the whole area. Lots of Headaches At one point In this first trip to Asia, I found myself on the Ko- rean front taking a hard look around. with the R.C.A.F. airlift planca arriving in Tokyo for the first time and the R.C.N. destroy- era arriving at a naval base in southern Japan. All good stories. But how to bracket them all? There was a lot of frenzied planning. a lot of arguments with transportation people and lots of headaches and no sleep. Getting underway in Tokyo at the start. of such an assignment is itself a maior operation. In the first few wceks of the Korean war the situation for correspondents was mighty perilous. but there was no redtape to cut through. Re- porters could go where they want- od with the only limiting factor being ability to acrounge rides on airplanes or military transport. But then controls set in. This was inevitable when more than 200 correspondents from practically all over the world rushed to Tokyo and the war. . But. it took me two days to get all the necessary documents needed to move arouiid properly and avoid getting into the had graces of the authorities who could lose you out of the theatre if they found reason. 010 To lorsa At one point there was a rule that all r ortera had to pay 875 to fly to- area. This caused a (Continued on Page a col. 1) (Iy The Canadian Press) WINNIPIDG. Aug. 10 - Deputy- Premier lrriek Willis, Works Min- ister in Manitoba's Coalition Clov- smrnaat since it was formed in 1940. resigned today from the Cob- inet. - The resignation. to take effect Aug. 10, we; dolivared to Premier Douglas L. Campbell shortly be- fore noon. Mp,.wmig,'pr-ovineial leader of the Progressive Conservative Par- ty. said in a press statement that Kr. Campbell's attitude "is ates - uy undermining public confided in our Government.” v,.- p Re ernobulud that his roliflil-, tioa from the Coalition Ca dominated I97 theilalberal-Pro hub. is our!!! personal- IIO will Mnllniie 00 0 am PIN "W3 3'” c"”:&.A. Leader Of Conservatives Quits Manitoba Cabinet atituancy of Turue Mountain and as leader of the Progressive Con- Iervavtivea in Manitoba. Future position of the Party in Coaliiion.Oov0rnrncnt will be de- termined at a convention in Octo- bar. Tl-rare was no comment from the Premier. Mr. Wiliir misaatien la bound to complicate a Cabinet rcahuiile already under study by Mr.camp- ball. '1' no new are three Cabinet vacanc as. It was learned ilr. Wil- lili hll D000 It odds with the Pre- mic over the Ilpoioioieait of new ministers. ,, V , hm standing in the Masai laiaiioba 140 Villa Itwo Conservative rennin: for Pruriilive. I the ana- U. S. Calls North Korean Regime Russian Zombie Better Pay And Better Food For. Special Brigade By DOUGLAS HOW O'I'rAWA, Aug. 10- (CP)-It will be a new army in some lai- por-tanl. ways for the veterans who join up to serve in'Canada's new special force. But in a lot of other ways it will still be the same old army of big pants and sergeant- majors. The pay is better than it was in the Second World War. The army says the food is better. the cloth- ing is better and more varied and there are certain strange features such as privates first class. There are also such radical dc- partures as white sheets on the beds and a drive to get single rooms for each soldier. benevolent gestures which may not be gener- ally distributed because of the (Contlnued on Page 5 Col. 27' 0 News -In Brief HAMILTON, Aug. 10- (CP) - Some 1.000 ”ou-tslde" city workers, including garbage collectors and grave-diggers. went on strike to- day. demanding a 40-hour week and wage boosts. WASHINGTON. Aug. 10-(AP) -The House of Representatives. byra smashing vote of 382 to 12. today passed a bill to give”,P;,ggi.- 'di'lrt'Prinnan a free hand to clamp on price-wsigp-rationing controls in the United States if he deems it necessary. The Senate opened debate on a similar bill. TORONTO, Aug. I0-(CP)-The nickel chocolate bar is back up 10 seven cents here. 'a survey of lead- ing candy manufacturers disclosed today. Gives Figures On p N. S. Tourist Traffic HALIFAX. Aug. 10-(CF)--Touio ist automobile traffic into NOVH Scotln during June and July was on a par with that of last year ni- ihough a downward trend set in during the latter part of July. Thomas J. Courtney. director of the Nova Scotia Information Bur- eau. aaid today. A total of 30.440 "foreign" eulo- mobiles from other Canadian Pro- vinces Ind the United States en- tered Novs Scotiu during the two- mcnth period compared with 30.- 156 last year. Tourist car traffic showed ll substantial increase up to July 15. but a falling off during the sec- ond half of the month wiped out a large part of the gain. The Bureau's figures indicate that a larger proportion of visitors than ever before are travelling to Cape Breton Island. Tourist auto- mobile crossings at the Strait of Canso were almost 1.000 II-eater than last year for the correspond- ing period. Two Unscheduled Passengers On Polish Ship) WASHINGTON. Aug. rv - tar-i - A second unscheduled passenger has turned up aboard the Europe- bound Polish motorship Batory. the United States Government dia- cloaed late today. . The Justice Department said the Gydriia-Arnarlcan Line identified the man as Howard 1:. Campbell. of Des hloirres. Iowa. and lliited him as an American citiaen. Camp- bell ovidontly boarded the Eatery as a atowaway before the ship left the United states. t no r 322.. Another man. with a p bearing the name of William Newton. was reported by the BI- icry Wednesday to have landed a renud seaplane alongside the ship 100 miles out in the Atlantic. He was taken aboard. The Justice Department said both men will be detained and queatiomb American and Brit- ish au itaa.wb,In the Data? oooiravat soutiraar Iigian nut, hind or p 1 II ' ., 1 leave I of It-otian LAKE SUCCESS. N. 11.. Aug. 10 (AP)-The United States today called the North Korean regime a Russian "zombie" spearheading s I new imperialism organized to wipe out the Republic of South Korea with Russian-made tanks and guns. Warren E. Austin. ch-ief U. S. delegate. told the U. N. Security Council that the Soviet Union could call of! the North Koreans today-if they chose-and keep the war from spreading. The Soviet Union replied with charges of ”sIander," but acknow- ledged that Russian forces sold war material to the North Kor- eans in 1948. when Moscow an- nounced withdrawal of its occu- pailon troops. That was the nub of a battle of words in which the Council again got virtually nowhere in the im- mediate business at hand-discus- sion of a United States resolution to call on all countries to avoid supporting the North Koreans. Russia's Jakob A. Mailk, Coun- cil president for August. called Austin's remarks ttslanderous con- tentions, based on nothing." He said the North Koreans had sup- plies sold io them by the Soviet Union "when it withdrew from North Korea." At 5:15 p.m. EDT the Council adjourned until 3 p.m. tomorrow. Earlier today the nine non- Communist members failed in a concerted attempt to stop what the Americans call "obstruction" of the work of the Council by Malik. The Council bogged down once more in procedure. with no and in sight before Sept. 1, when Britain's Sir Glaclwyn Jebb re- lieves Molik as Council president. In a 3.000-word speech outlining the American stand, Austin made it clear that Washington: 1. Considers the Soviet Union responsible for the "unprovoked" attack of the North Koreans on the south. . 2. Knows that the Russians and International Communism could lift the fear of war from the peoples of the world if they wish; ed to do so. Austin took the floor after get- ting the ad from Washington to open a ull-fledged campaign a- gainst Ruslan tactics and speech es in the Council. The Americans are said to feel the time has come to slap back vigorously in the verbal battle. no matter what the state of procedure in the Council. The U. S. delegate accused the Soviet Union of setting up in North Korea and other countries "subservient puppet governments -zombie governments that breathe and speak and act, but have no soul." Price Increases On Plumbing Fixtures TORONTO, Aug. I0-(CP)-Price increases of up to 10 per cent on bathtubs, sinks, toilets and other plumbing fixtures are being put into effect this wek, a spokesman for a major manufacturer said to- night. He declined to be quoted directly or to have the company identified for publication. Publishing Costs Move Upward NEW YORK. Aug. 10 - TAP) - Price advances on raw materials are increasing the costs of pub- lishing a daily newspaper. Certified Dry Mat Corporation announced a price advance of one cent - from 18 1-2 to 11 1-! cents I mat - effective today. A spokesman for the company said all raw materials, such as the pulp and rag stocks. tint go into making newspaper mats have in- creased in cost. ' Loss Ice Cream Icing Consumed CYITAWA. Aug. 11 -(GP)-lee cream must be losing its popularity. The nuraau of ntttistica today ra- portad production of the fa-oaen sweet in the first seven months of the year tell more than 1.000.000 hounds-from 15.0I0.000 in 1060 to l0.00'l.000. - ' CRANWIIL. 1-lncs., Billlnd, Aug. 10 -- (O!) - Canadian air cedars I-othreolwoer tour of H1 , . Visited the new air Hires; I well 0 mmpvrwlg Oran an were for craft. 1 , at the I oarieta 12 lloads mi... For Strike By Employee: Aug. 22 Statement: Issued fol- lowing Meeting Of Rail Heads With Un- ions. 1 I MONTREAL. Aug. lo-(GP)-Um ion leaders today rejected the final proposals of Canada's railway: in the wage-hour dispute and the railroads announced they will pre- pare for a strike by their employees. set for Aug. 22. The a cement was made in a statement authorized by the rail- way presidents following a late-af- ternoon meeting. Earlier in the day the railways made their "final offer" to the un- ions. The statement said:- "We have been informed by lead- ers of the two union groups involv- ed in the current labor dispute that the final proposal of the railways put before them in this morning's meeting are unacceptable to the negotiating committees. "The union representatives gave no 'indication that they were pre- pared to recede in any degree from the full demands for a 40-hour week and an additional wage increase of, seven and 10 cents per hour. "In these circumstances the rail- ways have no alternative but to prepare for strike action by the employees and appropriate announ- cements and arrangements will be made at once." The railways earlier presented a table to show that if the unions' original demands were applied eq- ually to all employees of both com- panies, the estimated coat to the railways would be: Forty-hour week with mainten- ance of,take-home pay, 880,158,000: same hours with seven per cent in- crease. 0110,7.'i8.000: with 10-per cent increase 312!-i.8.'l7.000. Estimated compensating freight increases to meet. respectively. than figures: 24 per cent. 34 per cent and 38 per cent. - S 7”3fi””- ' . MAXIMSF . , .g 0! I . 'M.ERE MAN . V F g A p A MERE MAN. ar0Au ' A S 3 S Pine impatient of exirunea. de- gift of heaven. A I p I V g g ' l :rs"I:I.te by any than exoell .,,,, Covers Prince Edward Island Likethe Dew PAGES Subscription Delivered 0030 Iloli 0031 other Provinces I 0. I. 01.00 Quota Almost Filled For Special Brigade OTTAWA, Aug. 10 -- (C?) - The swelling tide of volunteers for Canada's new fighting brigade was believed nearing the required 5.000- man mark tonight. and Army Headquarters reported applicants for officer posts already had gone over the top. A total of 301 officers. most of them veterans of the second World War. already have applied (or at- tachment to the new force to be trained for Korean or other action, an army spokesman said. And they were still coming in. Headquarters had no new figures on the number of volunteers for the ranks. but individual reports from across Canada indicated the flow was almost as heavy as yes- terday when it reached 2,300 up to noon. Places such as Toronto, Montreal and cities in the Mari- times and the West reported con- tinued heavy recruiting activity. The army spokesman was cau- tious about predicting how long it might take to enlist the required manpower. He pointed out that figures being quoted were those for applicants which would be scaled down by rejections for health and other reasons. Brig. John M. (Rocky) Rocking- ham. 38-year-old Australian-born brigade commander of the Second World War. who has been named to load the new force-' wherevcr it fights under the United Nations banner, arrived today in Ottawa He will confer with headquarters chiefs on plans for training. ex- pected to take six to eight months. and on selection of officers. A number of recruits who have been accepted are already on their way to the training camps where they will go into immediate train- ing within the ranks of Canadian permanent active army. Later they will be given a special. shoulder patch-now being designed at De- fence Headquarters-to distinguish them as special force personnel. army spokesman here said even when the quota has been fil- led for the new force. rcruitiniv won't stop. There is no ceiling on the number of men who will be taken for the permanent active force or for the reserve army Co-op Issue Undecided By Potato Growers Association At a meeting yesterday of the P. E. 1. Potato Growers' Associat- ion. all proceedings at the annual meetings and all business tran- sacted by the directors since 1035 were approved, ratified and con- firmed by a vote of those who were members in that year. The passing of the resolution caused differences of opinion as" to whether or not it involved in- dorsement of a resolution passed at the last annual meeting asking that the directors register the As- sociation under the Comparative Services Act. Some claimed that yesterday's resolution held the directors to the decision of the annual meet- ing last March. Others argued that the decision reached at that meeting was made by a combined group of members and non-mem- bers, and that before the Associat- ion could be registered under the Act another meeting of members would have to be held. The matter of membership was cleared up at yesterday's meeting, paving the way for the holding of a meeting at which i-he vital ques- tion of deciding whether the As- sociatlon will become a Co-oper- alive or remain independent will be decided. A two-thirds major- ' ity vote is required before the As- sociation can apply for registrat- ion under the Co-operative Ser- vices Act. .. The meeting yesterday decided that all those who were paid up members at the time of the an- nual meeting in 1035 and all those who patronized the Association since that time. all those holding debentures and the personal rep- resentatives of deceased members shall be declared members of the Association. At a meeting of directors last night it was decided to hold an- other meeting on Sept. 7, 1950. to vote on the issue of joining under the Co-operative Services Act.- Presidentia Report "At the present time there is a great deal of uncertainty regard- ing our membership," Mr. Wright stated. ':It is not known exactly who has a right to vote at. our meetings or take part in our dis- cussions. This fact was very for- cibly impressed upon us, as a re- sult of a resolution passed at our Wontinued on Page 5 Col. 4) ;io Iutr. train- bv 1!; for a three-day tour Former Comrades Would Serve With Rockingham OTTAWA. Aug. 10 -- (C-P) - The big, rugged leader of Canada's new army brigade flew into the capital today to report for duty. with phones still ringing in his ears. Brig. John M. (Rocky) Rocking- ham. just off a T. O. A. plane from Vancouver. told reporters the first hours after his a lntanent was announced Ycster ay were flooded with an incessant stream of calls and wires from all across the country. They started at 7 am. and went on for hours. Men he had fought and eolaiered with in the Second World War calied to congratulate him and to say they were available. "There must have been 110 of them." he said with a grin. '"It was a swell way to start off." Added to that. said the man in Highland uniform, was the reac- tion of his own regiment. the Can- adian scotrish of -Victoria and Vancouver's Seaforth Highlanders "They Just in touch with are and said. ' ha are you going to do WHII lll?' " he Mid. Brig. . Rockingham. the 37-year- old native of Australia who com- manded the 3rd Division's highland brigade in the last war. was met by Mai.-Gen. I-I. D. Graham, vice- chiei of the General staff, and went directly to Defence Head- iuubarters to confer about his new o . It is one which will place him at the head of the 5.000-man bri- lode group the Government is rate- ing to fight in Korea or elsewhere. lrig. Rockingham said he wouldntt venture a guess as to when the. force will be ready to fight because that would depend largely on the combat experience of Mic men recruited. from what he had heard about recruiting. it sounded "very satis- factory." "I will say one thing tnougri," he added. "and that is that we won't be putting this formation into bat- tle until it is fully trained." In Toronto. on route here. h was. oted as sayi it woul pro y take at lean six months before the brigade could take the field. a figure borne out by an-nyl officers here. l.0.0.F. Grand " lodge To Meet Here Next Year TRURO. N.s. Aug. 10' - (GP) - H. P. I-liacocir. of Grand Falls. Nfld., was installed as Grand Mas- ter of the Grand Lodge of the In- dependent Order of Oddfellows as the 92nd annual session concluded here today. A.C. starratt. Grand secretary of the Province of Ontario. carried out the impressive installation Oefemcny. assisted by Past Grand Master Victor Taylor, Glace Bay. Also installed -were the following elective and appointive officers: Deputy Grand Master, Barry chap- man. Port Elgin. N. 8.; Grand War- den. D..l. Chisholm. New Glasgow: Grand secretary. E. H. Munro. Windsor; Grand Treasurer, w.P. Publicover. Halifax; Grand Repre- sentative, Ellis F. Boyd; Grand Warden. M.T. Machines, Truro: Grand conductor. I-I. Carr. Freder- icton; Grand Chaplain, Rev. J.A. Fraser, Imperoyal; Grand Herald. Charles Brown. saint John; Grand Guardian, James Dunn; Assistant Grand Secretary. Aubrey Mccann. Windsor. An invitation from the lodges of Charlottetown to hold the 1001 sessions of Grand lodge in that city was accepted. : Special awards. presented at to- day'a session included regalia. col- lars to A. istice lodge. 'Moserr River. N.s., for the largest per- (Continued on page 6, (301.1) NOT AM. (RE FEMIHE5 ARE TN CANS .' TORONTO. Aug. I0-(C.P)-Minn mum. and maximum temperatures? Victoria 54, 70; Edmonton 47, 65; Regina 49. 00; Winnipeg 44. 70; Toronto 62. 85; Quebec 03, 80; Saint John 57. 73; Moncion 86: Halifax 61. 80; Charlottetown -. 80; Sydney 61. 85; Yarmouih 37. 67; St, John's 55. 78. HALIFAX. Aug. 10-(CP)-Oh ilcial forecasts issued by the Do- mlnion Public Weather Office in Halifax. Synopsis: Temperatures climbed to the 80's at most Maritime local- ities Thursday. Both Moncton and Greenwood airport reached. 86; while in Prince Edward Island Summerside reported 83. How- ever, no new temperature records were established. ' Cooler air from Quebec was- ad- vancing southward slowly. At its leading edge thunderstorms crack- led Thursday afternoon and even- ing in New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island. The thunder will disappear during the night but turn up again on Friday afternoon in many parts of Nova Scotia. The rest of the 'district will have fine weather with reasonable temper- atures. Regional forecasts valid until midnight Friday. Prince Edward Island: Friday sunny and cooler. Friday north- west winds 15. Low early Friday morning and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown. 50 and 75. High tide today at 7.40 A M. and 10.16 P. M. sun rises at 5.09 A. M. and sets at 7.7! P. M. . Summeraido. tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. norroan .- roaaaswrrrla FIBIY BIIVIOI BAIL! Lv. Borden f.v. !'ornentina' 0.10 A.M. 0.10 A. 10.1! A.M. . I03! A.M. 1.00 EM. 1.00 r.M. 2.00 EM. 1.00 P.M. 0.00 P.M. 0.00 P.M. 1.00 l'.M. 1.30 M51. 0.00 I'.M. 0.00 PM. 1.0.80 EM. 1010 0.00. wooo lsI.ANDs -. OAIIIOU DAILY rlaav Leave Wood islands 1 A.:i.P0 AM. 11 AM. 1 PM. I PM. Leave Caribou 1 A.M. 0 A.M. 1! AM. 1 PM. 1 LI. JIM. - .. .2r.x'a'- 'v .1 I