MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN :23- Pride aunt have n fall- 3, carrier: Charlottetown. lnnunoralda loo weekly. Elsewhere in 0thorProvl.ncoaandU.B.A.8Iz.00per r.E.I.l8owookl.y. Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. TUESDAY. AUGUST 28. 1951 Watch tonight; pray tomorrow. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN 14 PAGES The Guardian, Five Cents. Morning Dally Founded 1881. HEAVY FIGHTING ERUPTS ON KOREAN rnou SECTOR -85-Man Human Chain Rescues Two Explorers Milk Price Boost Announced IV” 7';''g'”” In Chitown, Montague Areasx An increase of one cent a quart '1 the price of milk in the Char- ;-xitetown and Montague areas is 1.-rwided for in price changes aimg with maximum charges for islile cream in the Borden area. arnounced here yesterday by the e Edward Island Milk- Con- Board and effective Septem- l next. . nu Se-ptembtr l the price of !"..k in Charlottetown will be 2 "owed to advance from 10 to 11 mils a quart and from 15 to 10 Coming Events "Dance. Belfast Hall, Wednes- ci.i::. August 29th. "Buying Timothy iicaulgan and Boyle. "Regular Dance. Lot 65 Hall might. Bui-n's Orchestra. Seed daily. "Dance at Head Ilillsboro School lziday. August slat. Refreshments. "st. Peter's Parish Bazaar. T'.-wily and Wednesday. August Jll'h and 29th. "Dance. Alberry Plains Hall. A ..'ust 28th. l'tcfrcshmeiits. Music. .lI;.cre Gallant. "Dance at Gordon Lodge every Friday night. Music by Roblchaud. Dancing 9 to 1. "Ice cream. dance, Baldwin's P. ad School. Wednesday, Aug. 29. E.:'kc's Orchestra. "Dance. Kozy Hall. Georgetown. Wediiesday. August 29th. Refresh- ments served. "Dance in B-rlclgciown Hall urvlnesday night. August 29th. In nzrl -if Rink. Good music. "Lobster Supper in Long Creek I 1 Tuesday. August 28th. sup- " srrverl from 5 till 9 "lWnn't miss "South sea Sinner" : is serial at MacDonald Bros. Tilealff, Mt. Stewart. tonight. "Dr. M. N. Beck, SI. Peter.- ull he .ihsent from his office (xxx. 26 to Sept. ii inclusive. "Dance. Howe! Hall. Brackley l'":nI. Thursday. August 30th. lliiszr. Charlottetonians. "Now in stock. Potato Top Kill- .md new lniproved livestock Fly 9:0 Dillon as spillett. ' Chicken and Ham Supper, i'l?lflL:rtou'n Hall, Thursdly. Aug- wl 30th. Dundas Ladles' Aid. "Don's mlsanihe big dance at rmrlicad Race Track tonight. W-tic by the Charlottetonlans. "Points in and talk" over our Pmiiia Finance plan. for your lines and poultry. Dillon & Splllcit. "Ir-. Cream Festival. Bazaar and sale of home cooking. Belle i:,1:i'f Church grounds, August 1. g"Unloading a car of Miracle lrcds at North Wiltshlre. Tues- (I:-xv and Wednesday. MacLean 70!. "Come to the Appin Road an- nual Church Supper, Wednesday. shill-I;t 29th. Supper served from "Dance every Tuesday night. Manley aridiie Rink Hall Music "Y GCOTIO chappelrs Merry Ia- landcrs. "For snapshots that will not lads mail your Films and Nsgo um to Gas-nhuin Photo studios Charlottetown. "Chicken Supper. Bazaar. Binvo. "0. Legion Hall. St. Peter's. Tues- ds , Ii Wednesday. August 28th "Will not b:-doing any crush- ' Wednesday. August zoui. due at Tennli-s on machinery. Benton Mckae. Wlnsloe. h"Anolher big hath danca at runner Stewart's. Brackley Beach. esday. Aug. 28th. Good music iood "1-salon Dance. North Rustico "all. every waan gd ;;:'.':c9b until 1. E " orehuuigoeorga Danelnl Canmn service Chappall and his I Uh-lbdding car high wheat at our mill. Friday of this week. N West. sumrnarslde. 3, L -y and ' MW”! rtdd ggg p cents in the Montague area on all retail sales. There are pro- visions for corresponding in- creases in both areas for milk sold in smaller containers. There will be no change in wholesale prices in the Montague area but the wholesale prices of milk in the Charlottetown area can advance one cent per quart. The 17 cents a quart retail price in Charlottetown after September 1 will apply to pasteurized milk. Raw milk in Charlottetown can advance from 15 to 18 cents .a quart. Table cream in Charlottetown could go up four cents a quart to retail at 68 cents and from 80 to 64 cents wholesale. Whipping cream in the same area will be allowed to go up eight cents from Sl.00 a quart to 51.08 a quart retail. The wholesale price for whipping cream will advance four cents. Blend in the Charlottetown area will be one cent a quarter dearer and skim milk will retail at one cent a quart more. The Milk Control Board fixed the price of table cream in the Borden area at 04 cents retail and 60 cents wholesale on and after September 1. These changes have been ap- proved by the Executive Council for the Province. The new order issued by the Milk Control Board provides that the price of butterfat to the pro- ducers of fluid milk in the area of Charlottetown will be 51-10 I pound on September 1 and after. And to the producers of fluid cream the price nf bulierfat will be 90 cents a pound. The price of buttcrfat to the producers of fluid milk in the Montague area will be sl.0(l per pound of butterlat. Canada-"s Hog Population Shows 12 P.C. Boost OTTAWA. Aug. 27 -- (C151 Canada's hog population iiicrc.1::- ed 12 per cent in the year end cd June I. the Bureau of Stalls- tlcs reported today. The sprint! pig' crop was 13 per cent larger than 1950. Number oi hogs on fiirnis at June I will: 5.875.000. compared with 5.247.000 a year earlier. Thr- incrcasc in the west was 30 per cent. and in the cast four pir cent, with all provinces up ex cept Ontario. During the June-November pe- riod. numbcr of sows expected if fax-row was 623,700. up 23 per cent from the same time last ycnr. Hog totals at June 1 by Prov- inces. with the figures for a your earlier in hinckels: Prince Edward Island. 76.000 (618001: Nova Scoiln. 62.000 (55- 6001: New Brunswick. 92.000 (El. 900): Quebec. 1.430.000 (1.240, 900): Ontario. 2.150.000 (2,213,100). Manitoba. 346.000 (269.-tom: sin. kalchcwnn. 607.000 (433,700): A1. hr-rtn. 1.038.000 (809100); British Columbia. 65.000 054.000). RETIRED C.N.R. WORKER DIES NEW GLASGOW, N.S.. Aug. 27 -(CF) - William George Kline. who retired from his position with the Canadian National Railways at Moncton. NB., in 1933. died at his home here today. He was '10. In Flooded Welsh Cave ABIERORAVE, Wales, Aug. 27 -(AP) - A chain of 95 men pulled two explorers to safety tonight from a flooded under- ground Welsh cave where they had been trapped for three days. The explorers were unhurt. Th.l-wo men had been prison- ers since Saturday morning deep inside the cavern of Ogof Ffyddu near here. A sudden rainstorm sent Ions of water down the un- derground Byfyre River and blocked all exits from the cave. situated in Glamorgnnshire about 35 miles northeast of Swansea. A team of deep-sea divers plunged through the stream to reach the explorers. There was no sign of life inside the cave until one iiour before the rescue. Then faint shouts appeared to indicate lhe men were alive. when the explorers Lewis Raillon. 40. and William Little, 30 were located, the human chain was formed through the swift underground waters. The rescuers grasped the pair and yanked them to safety. million and Little are speleo- logisis, or cave researchers. The men had found safety in a high chamber deep inside the cavern. They said they had found food in a tin box and had hud- dled around their one acetylene lamp while waiting for the flood waters to subside. The swirling river normally flows quietly through the cavern. This morning, the rescue teams began to darn it high in the moun- tains in an attempt lo divert its flow from inside the cave. but were unsuccessful. In addition to Railton and Lit- tle, four other men were IBPOFV ed earlier to have entered the cavern Saturday. Today they told police they had changed their minds and had been safe above ground all week-end. Strike Halls Production Of Vital Metals DENVER, Aug. 21 - (AP) Production of sl.rateizlcully-imporI- ant copper. lead and zinc virtual- l-,- halted Iodny with a strike cal- led hy the international Union of Mine. Mill nnd Smelter Workers. The independent union--cxpelli-ii from the C. I. 0. a year ago for following the Communist Party line eslimuled 58.000 workers went off their jobs. They includ cd ii number of members of the rrnfl. unions and Railroad Broth- erhoods (A.1-IL.) who refused to cross picket lines. There was no Immediate Whiir llouso rcuclion to a union request llint the government fake ovei the industry. But government of- flciuls said they expect some or-lion soon. (Iurrciil wages range from 3131 an hour to 31.62 for work. mcn covered by the mine-mill un- ion. The Metal Trade: Counci. lA.F.L.l in the copper industry are paid wages ranging from 51.31 to 31.55 an hour. The union's original domiind wniu for .10 cents an hour more may nnd 5150 '1 month pension nt ngc 65. Union officials said there has hccn modification of those de- mnnds. TICKLISII BUSINESS The toes of a healthy person's foot. bend inwards when the sole is tickled. but upward if the spinal cord is diseased. U.K. Labour Party Sticks To Rearmament Plans LONDON. Aug. 2'! - (Tues. dlyl -- (AP) - The Labor Party is sticking to its policy of am. in; Britain fully, in defiance of left-wing critics led by Aneurin Bevan. former Labor Minister. It published a policy statement today which declared the coun- iry's three-year N,'I00,000.000 anns program is "the minimum requir- ad to deter aggression and so prevent a third world war.” "No other aim can take prior- ity over that," it said. The statement. prepared by the party's 2'3-member executive committee, which includes For- eign Secretary Herbert Morrison among its laadeni. will be sub- miued for debate at the party's annual convention at Scarborough in early October. It will become the balls of a platform if. as many politicians , t. a gianaral election is call- Id thia fal. At a press conference Morgan 0 Phillips. party secretary. said the policy statement is not lo be rc- gardcd as "election propaganda". and us Issuance now should not be regarded a sign that there will be an election soon. Before an election. Phillips said. there will be an election manifesto issued by the party. "And we are not working at any such urgent document." he added. Approving the policy declara- tion several weeks ago. the com- mittee over-rode objections of four co 'ttee rs - Bevan. Ian Mlkardo. Mrs. Bar- bara Castle and Tom Di-ibcrg. Bevan and two other Labor members quit their ministerial poets last spring in protest against a budget which provided money for the first year of the, arms program but forced patrons of the state Health service to pay half the coat of false 'teeih and spectacle: LONDON. Aug. 27 (AP) British officials today brushed off an idea to settle the Iranian oil dispute by appointing an American to manage the great Abadan re- finery. The suggestion. contained in British news dispatches from Washington, received some prom- inence here as presidential envoy W. Averell I-Iarriman went into a round of talks with British lend- ers on the prospects of an Anglo- Iranlan settlement. on route to Washington. There was no evidence to sug- gest. however, that the idea of ar. Abadan came up during Harri- nian's conversations with Prime collenguea. g British officials said they have had no official word from Wash- ington that the U. S. is thinking of offering such a suggestion as -a. way out of the deadlock Britain and Iran have developed. About 350 picked British ollmen are staying on in Abadan - an is- land off the Iranian mainland where the world's biggest refinery is located and they will be ready to resume operations as soon as the Tehran Government gives the word. With nearby naval forces. Britain clearly can outwalt the Iranians. Nevertheless. this attitude has given some grounds for uneasin- ess on the part of some British newspapers. The independent Sunday Ob- server noted yesterday that "emo- and air feels she tlons keep Britain and Persia (Iran) apart; reason forces them together." The paper called on the British Government to bear in mind "our vital interest is to strengthen Per- sia." ' Harrlman. informants here said, expressed some criticisms of cer- tain aspects of the way Britain has been dealing with the Iran- inns. These were not disclosed al- though it is generally known that Britain has been given no Amer- ican blessing for her plan to hold onto Abadan, come what may. Wool-Pfite-sm Slide ill Sales In Australia SYDNEY, Australia. Aug. 3'! -(Reuters) Wool prices fell from five to 15 per cent as the annual Sydney auctions opened today. It was the slump at the New Zealand sales for the last two weeks that had led to the belief that Australian prices would nose-dive. However. buyers from Japan. France. Belgium. Italy and West Ger- many bid vigorously and kept prices up. Buyers from Bri- tain were less eager ind RD- pearcd satisfied that prices will not remain at their pre- sent level. News my Brief SHEPHERDS GROVE. England. Aug. 2'7 - (AP! - Twenty-five Amcrican Sabre-jet fighter planes --the type that whlppbd Red Mig 155 in Korea-landed today to give European defence another shot in its air arm. They are fiist Sa-bre jets to set down in Europe in shape for combat. KARACHI, Pakistan. Aug. 27 - (Reuters) Trade Minister John McEwen of Australia said tonight he is taking to London a proposal for a 15-year meat agree- ment with the United Kingdom. SAINT JOHN. N.B., Aug. 21- (CP) - The Saint John Common Council decided tonight to set up a rental control authority for the city under enabling provincial legislation. went aground on Cape Breton's Point Aconl today in dense log. it is feared the ship is a total loss but her six-man crew escap- ed ln dories without inlury. CHICAGO. Aug. 21 - (CP) - Barbara Ann Scott will replace Sonja Home as star of the 1002 Hollywood lcc Revue. Arthur M.' Wirtz of Chicago. producer of the show. said today. this year. a national coal board official disclosed today I-Iarrlman is . having an American take charge . Minister Attlee and his cabinet" Britons Oppose Yank As Abadan Manager I Airwoman Gtaduate Included in the first course of alrwomen to graduate from the eight week basic course at RCA1-' Manning Depot. St. Johns. P.Q. were AW2 Gertrude Peters. Sourls. P.E.I. The graduates will continue their advanced training fli. various R. C.- A.F. schools, according to the trade they have chosen, and will later be posted to air stations across Canada. -National Defence Photo. LONDON. Aug. 27 - (AP) .. The story of how a team of Brit- ons, Amerlcans and South Kor- eans snatched a Russian jet plane from its watery grave 100 miles in- side the Communist lines in Korea was told here today. The plane. a Mig-I3. now is un- der study at the Wright-Patterson air experimental base in Dayton. 0. There. United States experts will dig out the secrets of construc- tion and design which have made the Russian fighter in some re- spects superior to any Western plane now flying. The account of its rccovcry was made public by the admiralty. The Mfg-15. shot down in a dog- fight. was ditched by its pilot in shallow water off the west coast of Korea. Planes from the Royal Navy car- rier Glory flxcd its exact position. Then a U. S. helicopter dropped a buoy to mark the spot. The task of grabbing the plane was assigned to Capt. W.L. Brown and the Royal Navy frigate Card- igan Bay. He enlisted a us. navy landing craft equipped with ii lifting crane and a South Korean motor launch. The Cardigan Bay then led the two smaller vessels to within a few miles of the enemy coast as close as the frigate could go in the shallow water. Aircraft from the Glory set up a covering screen against cncmy air attack. The British cruiser Kciiyii screened the skies. A motor boat from the Cardigan Bay guided the us. landing Cl'lIfC. and the South Korcan launch to the ditched fighter. The men of three counlrlrs set to work fixing a sling under the plane so that It could he lifted. On the following day the Rus- slan jet was lifted from the water and the fleet steamed away with its prize. Motor Vehicles Shipments Down OTTAWA. Aug. 27 - Factory shipments of Canadian- madc molor vehicles went down In June for the first major dr- (CF) g cllne In 13 months. the Bureau of I g Statistics said today. Shipments sXrl;I:Ex;h7Nisf;otAu'tj;;ound(1E:z1 of British-made enrs also were '0' a lower. m””l V93"! Imcme M' C.” Bureau spokesmen raid the-. did not know the cnuile of the dr- cllne-whetiicr it resulted from lower factory production or from credit restrictions on retail sales. Shipments of Canndian-made vehicles dipped to units in June from 41.383 in year earlier. In the six months ended June. they were 247.775 naiilnat 191.765 June shipments of British-mndc cars totalled 2.096 ngiilnsl. 9..'l'.I'l and in the six months 22.466 --- against 36.006. OXZIORD. England. Ana. 2'! u.- .- -(llculers)- Nearly i.ooo Italian INDIAN NAVY minors are coming to work in The Indian navy traces it: he- nritaln' under-staffed coal mines Inga from the marina of the 1011. 'I at India company, formed In Coincidet-Willi New Crisis In Cease-tirilallls By STAN CARTER U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS. Korea. Aug. 20 (Tuesday) - (AP) - Heavy fight- ing erupted Monday on the East- Central Korean warfronta. It coin- cided with a new crisis in the sus- pended cease-fire talks. Reds in battalion strength shov- ed Allied forces back nearly two miles northwest of Ynnggu, at the eastern end of strategic Hwachon reservoir. Yanzzu is seven miles liorth of parallel 33. The battle razed tliroughoiil the ; day, By nightfall. United Nations troops counter-attacked to restore positions. Northwest of that area, sharp patrol clashes were reported in the Pyonggang region of the erstwhile "Iron Curtain" of Crntriil Korea. Eighth Army headquarters re- ported the Communists attacked in regimental strength (2.000 to 3.000 meni on the eastern front. but were hurled back by Allied artillery and fighter bombers. This was ill the area west of Kansong. ed Red positions and highways. Steady rains and low cloud ceil- ings hampered Allied air attacks. Red Buildup Ready? TOKYO. Aug. 28 .iReutcrsl- (AP)- The lop communist com- manders offered today Io resume the Korean lrucc talks if thr- Unltcd Nations com-.naiirl would rcinvestlxtnic and proclaim to the world its responsibility for an alleged bombing incident alKae- -'-c1nTiiEiZd-oTEage”Aa Vcnl. s.T' Snatch Russian Plane From Water Off Korea Higher RalesTC” On Telegrams Being Sought OTTAWA. Aug, 27 - (CPI Higher rates on telegrams were sought by the two railway tele- graph companies today ln an ap- plicatlon filed with the Board of Transport Commissioners. In the types of messages com- monly used by the public. they asked increases of 10 and 15 cents on standard-wordage telegrams. plus varying increases on the charges for extra words. The familiar 10-word telegram carrying full rate - both day and night - would go up by 10 cents for the first 10 words, and there would be an additional one cent a ivord on the extra wordage At present. the minimum on this type L1 30 cents day and 20 cents night on the first 10 words, with extra wordage charged for at two cents a word day and one cent a word night. The proposed new charges. which the railu-a.vs want made effective Oct. 1, would apply on lrlcgrnnls wlthlii Canada. not including New- foundland. Newfoundland tele- graph rates now are higher than those of the rest of Canada. The increases would not apply on messages to the United States However. U.S. telegraph compan- ies now are seeking an increase of their own and. if it is granted. lliere likely will be a correspond- ing one on international me.-Isaizcs. Offshore. Allied warships blast-' Acreage Effective September 10 next, no person will be permitted to cut more than two acres of forest land or more than 20 cords of pulpwood or pit props in any calendar year. without first hav- ing obtained a permit from the Minister of Industry and Natural Resources, according to the lat- est Forestry Act regulations an- nounced yesterday. lion. Eugene Cullen. Minister of Induslry and Natural Re-, sources, said this does not mean; that woodlol owners will be re- slrzctcd to cutting only two acres of forest land in a year. It means. he said. that those who will cut more than two acres may be asked to comply with certain provisions aimed at preserving and protecting the Provincels wood- lots. Those who plan to cut more than two acres in any one year must file an application with the Deparlmcnt stating the area pro- posed to be cut and the total area of the woodland. The Min- istcr may require that person or persons to whom a permit is is- sued out only trees of classes and types which the forester may define. . Permits granted must be in I iforrn approved by the Minister. The new regulations also pro- vide that "any person buying or ,sInppin; pulpwood or all prair- .In the Province must obtain it ,liccnse from the Department and lpny therefore a fee of five dol- l lars." ' New Dysenlery Cases Reported From Sasli. SASKATOON. Aug. 27 -- (CB) -- Health authorities today sen.- rd off dysentery-stricken Mei.- nonite communities in Saskatch- CVNIIIL The affected area is in the vicin- iiy of Hague. 40 miles northeast of Saskatoon. Health officials said no travel would be allowed in or out of an area comprising 30 square miles. The disease. which lf SPNIG through poor personal hygiene and sanitation, is believed to have been brought from Mexico by a party of L2 Mennonites who had sought to migrate to Honduras. Dr. B. T. Dale. director of pre- ventive services for the Saskatch- ewan Health Department. flew from Regina to Hague when the new cases-exact number not dis closed-were reported today. He said no force is conic-mplat ed in isolating the area. Volun- lcers from Hague district and the rural municipality of Ttosihern will patrol roads and bring in food and supplies. Dr. Dale indicated was not necessary. "You rnuld sleep with R d.VK00' cry victim and not catch it." h: said. 95 Polio Cases Reported In N. S. quarantine .- HALIFAX. Aug. 2'! - (CPI- Several navy nurses were con- 'scr:pted loday to aid in Nova Scoliais battle against the dread- diseasr of polio. Ninety-five case: how have been reported in the province - the most for several years. An emergency ward was put nu order to take care of tnei paiicizls Blames Cra For Collaps -(CPI A Provincial Govern- menl official said loday a. cracked girder caused the collapse of the Diiplcssis Bridge here last January. Yvan Vallee. Dcpuly Minisicr nf the Provincial Public Works Department. was the first witness to testify before A two-man in- qulry board in the bridge col- lapse. The mass of steel girders and concrete pavement plunged into the St. Maurice River with the loss of five lives. Mr. Vallce said there was no indication the concrete pillars had moved before they crashed into the river. He denied an as- serion by Quebec Government counsel Leon Methot that his de- partment was aware at the time of a possible collapse of the slruc- ture. He said fissures discovered .ln the steel girders the previous win- ter had been thoroughly repair- ed 10 the satisfaction of his dc- partment. The joints of the east- ern section of the bridge which had been welded in the repairs had not been affected by the collapse of the four 'wealern THREE RlV';Jl'lST Que, Aug. 27' cked Girder e Of Bridge spans. Mr. Valleo testified the steel struciure had been erected by the Dominion Bridge Company of Montreal which also had pro- vided girders on a contract awarded by the main contractor and government agent. the Du- frcsne Engineering Company. Commission members Judge Rene Lippe and Lucien Danser- cau. Montreal engineer. udjourned the meeting to allow the inquiry to examine the twisted debris and two Bailey Bridges which have been erected as temporary links acroaa the river. The Deputy Minister was the only witness heard this morning. His evidence included production of plans and specifications, relat- ing to the 3.500.000 bridgc. 0990' cd in 1949. The hearing will be ruumed tomorrow when Mr. Valiee will be croal-examined by Lucien Gendron. counsel for the Dashin- ion Bridge company. and Louise Philippa Pigeon. couoael for George Marler. Liberal 0900'" Restrictions Placed 0n Woodie! Cutting In PEI. India following Moscow Line WASHINGTON. Aufz. 27 -(AP) - Indias boycott of the Japanese peace treaty conference opening at San Francisco Sept. 4 may bring about a tougher United States P011651 inward her. and backfire on the U.S. foreign aid pro- grams. Key Slate Department officials said India's denunciation of the proposed trcaiy seemed to follow the Soviet line and gave support to a Moscow propaganda drive ap- parcnti aimed at wrecking the treaty negotiations A 31-member Russian delega- tion arrlvcd Ioday in New York en route to the conference. In Moscow. the Soviet Govern- ment newspaper denounced lrie proposd trcaly as an American attempt to make Japan into a U.S. colony and set the Japanese against other Asiatic peoples. MANY A LATE SUCCESS is (Mr. RY-.sul:f OF EARl.v l:AlLURE HALIFAX. Aug. 2'1 - (CPI .. Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather of- fice here and valid until midnight: Tuesday. Synopsis: The weather of the Marittmea and Eastern Quebec is cloudy and occasional rain is being reported. mainly in Nova Scotla. A low pres- sure area lying almost stationary to the south of the district is caus- ing warm. moist air to flow over the Marltimes. There are no indic- ations of change, so cloudy. humid weather can be expected to con- tinue tomorrow, and there will also be widely scattered showers. Forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Cloudy with widely scattered showers. Fog in coastal areas. Warm. Light winds. Low and high Tuesday at Charlottetown 61 and 75 High tide today at and 8.58 P. M. Sun rises today at 5.29 A. M. and sets at 6.59 P. M. Summcrsidc tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. 5.50 A. M. M.C.A. AIR SERVICE Dally Except Sunday Leave Charlottetown for Men:-for 5.30 A.lt1.; 11.20 A.M.: 4.50 PM. Ar. Charlottetown from Moneton 1.2.5 A.M.; 1.25 P.M.; 6.55 I'.M. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow-Ilallfos 7.40 A.lil. New Glasgow & Sydnea 1.50 l'.M. New Glasgow 6.: Halifax. Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11.00 A.ltI. from New Glasgow 5: Sydney. 1.20 EM. from New Glasgow and Halifax. Charlottetown - Sydney flights daily except Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY Lv. Charlottetown for Monclon 11.20. Ar. Charlottetown from Moncion 0.55 .1. BOBDEN - CAPE TORMENTINI FERRY SERVICE Dally Standard Tinn- Leavo Borden leave C. II 0.10 AM. 0.10 A.M. I030 A.M. I035 A.M. 1.00 PM. 1.00 P.hI. 2.10 2.01. 240 l'.hl. 4.80 PM. 430 l'.M. 7.80 EM. 730 l'.lIl. 0.00 PM. 0.00 RM. 10.80 EDI. I030 P.M. WOOD ISLAND! - UAIIBOU FERRY SERVICE ”Ianda .1 Tune) lean Wood Inhala- Prinao Nova - I A.M.. ll A.Mo I l'.M. Chas. A. Dunning-0 AM. I I'M. 5 PM. Leave caribou- Obaa. A. Dunning-'1 A.M. ll A.M. I EM. tion leader in the Provincial Lel- iaillurs. . .2:-co NavaflA.M.,ll.ll..