MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN a-t-q-u-u Genius means the ‘r nsccndent 0111""! W "u"! "Wblh flni of all. Q. Charlottetown Guardian. Two Cents. naming Guardian. rounded 1N7. SIX DEATHS, HEAVY DAMAGE IN ONTARIO F LOODS,’ 10 p. c. Increase In CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, Artur. 8.0.104} Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew, 1o PAGES iirarer still your faith once piighred hold. MAXIMS OIA MERE MAN nearer la love than life, but; Subsc Rentals Authorized uirrriu DETROIT, Arrl '1 -—- (AP) .- lleiiry Ford dfczl at 11.40 p m. to- night. Death cam: to the notzd auiomotive pioneer. who would have been 84 years old next July, a ltl: more then one end a hull yours affier he retired from n-stiv; direction cl’ the great in. rlus'riai empire he founded in 1908. . Eight-cent Chocolate Bars 0n Market iiow TORONTO. April '7 —-(CP)._ The nickel chocolate-b - became un even romotcr post-war poa- alblllty today when the first tight-cent bars appeared on tho market here. Previously priced at six-cents —the old five cents plus one cent war to -choco1ate bani [vegan to go up another two r-enfa in Toronto today. Man- ufacturers said the price would ho unlfonn at eight cents throughout the Province before the week is out. A ZO-ceni-a-pnund increase in chocolates by the pound was also forecast, with likelihood of it. too, being in effect before the week-end. Now at ‘ll cents a pound.‘ the new price will be 91 cents. 0f this 14.6 cents ls excise and salon tax. Manufacturers snid increased coats plus removal of Govern- ment ceiling made it neoeiaa y for them to hoist prices. They asserted production coats had r _ rcgtbaa-lol-paaroeat-‘r: since 030. (Apparently there was no Ln- crease in the retail price of chocolate bars in C‘ ‘ottetown yesterday. However, reporta from Halifax indicated that the new price \vas in effeo there.) Coming Events " Reserve Maxi-day, April 21 for Box Socini and Dance in Covchedd Community l-Iaii in aid of hall. "Crokinoic Party, Millview Church bascmcni. Thursday, April 10x11. Auspices Y. P. U. "Don't forget the big dance "Morcli Hall" Tuesday. April am. Holly MacKenziek Orchestra. Ad- mission 40c. ' "Pantry Sale at Maritime Elec- iric. April l2, by North River Young People's Union. "Notice. Rink meeting adver- iizod for tonight at New Glasgow Hull postponed until further not- 1w. "To arrive, choice double re- (‘loaned Peace River oats. Book. McGuigan dc Boyle. “Unloading cor today-Purine ling Grower. Milk Chow. Bork-y Meal and Crushed Oats. N. Aub- rey Cutcliffe. “Yes. it's Roily _MacKenzie's Ichestra at Pownal Garage. Wed- nesday. Arivrii 91h. Amiiseion He. Don't miss it. v "Bee Vernon Players present Pill‘ iln-d variety concert in Cherry ' Volley lluii. Thursday. April 10th. 8.15. . r "Bernard's Store. Bradeibane. are dealers for Firestone Tires end Tubes. Comm and get your Fir-cowhide for car or trifle. Alao Batteries. "All those interested in building a ciosednn Riimk in Nov Glasgow, pleaaemiteurd a meeting in New Glasgow Hail en Tuesday night. April 8th. at 8.30. ' “ Big i Dance. Happy la- lariders Oo try Club. Traveller's ltfit. April i0. fieofnl "Minis. Mod- ern fioioid ilqiilpineni. omneea "Unloading ear-load of Bran. lhorts and Midlillngl st Long- worth Ave. Orolllng ‘meadow afternoon and Wednesday. April :1 and I. lllis Bros. Central Boy- "Loading 1m i-logs Thuri/day. February 30th u follows: Bummer- side till 1.80 P. M. Keosiiigion till 8 P. u. Borden Bsapaii. Honin- Rim‘ . all day. lime: Wilmer-s. Bi-esdsibsne, friiursdsy tlli train time. ‘misting service when reads permit. Maciiiwm and curler- Dy DIOR-GE KIWEEN OTTAWA. April 7 -,(C'P> —A maximum IO-per-cent increase in rental ceilings on all self-contain- ed housing accommodation was authorized today by the Prices Baird in cases where the landlord il prepared to offer the tenant a renewal lease for a mininvum term of two years when the present lease expired. The long-awaited announcement came from Finance Minister Ab- butt“ who disclosed at the some time that all hotel accommodation- is freed from controls as 0f today. One outstanding provision of the domestic rentals boost i5 that it will not apply io housing accom- modation buili. or created by struc- tural conversion or pzconsiruction since Jan. 1. 1944, since these rents already have been adjusted to rates which take into account Labor and material costs. 30 Days lo Decide The tenant will have 30 days in which to decide whether or not to accept the landlord's one; end 1r he chooses not. to this will serve as a notice to vacate at the en-d of the current lease subject i0 pro- vincial law. Board , kesm . said that w- oommodaiion coyered by the desig- nation "self-contained" included I apartments, flats. duplexes, one, family houses and similar d-weli-l lngs. ' In cases where houses have not previously been rented and, have no fixed maximum rcrriel. the rem- sis appraiser will add ihe i0 per cent increase when setting rent- als. The landlord then will not he ' required to offer the tenant the two-year renewal lease but rather the landlord and the ten-ant may agree on a. lease for any period. “ "(Continued on Page s Col. 2) Teachers Arrive [illlillililflliflli Province arrived in the City yes. terday 1o be in- readiness for rm owning session this morning of their Federation's convention in the auditorium cf Prince of Wnlcs College. jinx-ailment begins at 0.30 AM. and at 10.30 the convention will 8t‘! down to business with the first item on ihe agenda being the read- 1118 qf the president's report. Part of this morning's session will be devoted to dlscussl l after which there will be given an out- line of the lllNtl-ddy programme The afternoon will be taken up with group instruction. ' The feaiuro of today's sessions will be an address at 7.30 pm. by tho Rev. Dr. MacOormsck. pro- fessor of SOCiGiOQy at Si. Phenols Xavier University. Antigonish, us. Teachers from all peril of thei CALLS DOG PUBLIC ENEMY ‘ IDNDON. April 7 -(Reuters) -F‘ar from feeling that the dog is man's best friend. Dr. 0.1’. Clark claims that the dog is a "public onmn-y". Writing in ihe periodical "Medical World." Dr. Clerk said: "If there is one ani- mal we could well do without, if not altogether. at any rate to a very large extent. with enorm- our benefit to health. morale an] nlerves. it is the ubiquiioiu can- [opinion expressed to The Guard- jsn yesterday by Summersids biuinees man, who has inc." i. REVEALED ANNUITY AS DONOR OF '1‘. F. Ahearn of Ottawa re- vealed as donor of annuity to Gouzenko. Ahedmn, President of Elwiric Railway Company, provid- ed $100 per month to excypher clerk because cf great service to Cancels. ' Says Much Work To Be iione 0n. Gar Ferry Yet "I can't see ihe new car. ferry as being here before August". ivas~ihc Mr. John‘ Arthur. justdretiarxg“ from Montreal.‘ 01-. rows sill ' ellduring which time he had the privilege of being con- ducted over the boat. Official announcement; lately have been to the effect that she would be delivered in J1me. While Mr. Arthur does not claim 1o be an expert in shipbuilding. he was given the opportunity of making a very iliorcugh inspection of the ship and it was quite evident to him that a very great deal cf work remzrns t0 be (lone. One of the workmen, whom he questioned. said 111a‘. in his opinion she would not make her test runs before July and efic: that it would be necessary to bring her back to the yards to take down her motors i0 examine (hem. Mr. Arthur says that ihe motors and power plants have been install- ed and the motors are connected to the drive shaft but not lo the bridge where ihe controls will be. The mil tracks have not been laid and there is a lot of finishing to be done oar all ihe decks. In one room that hc inspected. workmen were jusi finishing ibe plywood sheath- wiCorntinued on Page 5 col. 1) Challenges ii s I Figures Re PliigllllgfS . COLOGNE. April 7 -(Reuter|)-— Josef Cardinal Frlngs. archbishop of Cologne, declared today that between 3.000.000 and 4.000.000 Ger- man soldiers still eirc in Russian hands. He challenged Russian figures to the effect that 1,200,000 German prisoners have been 1e- turned to their homeland and said: "Where they have gone to no one knows." The Cardinal's remarks were made during a formal meat- lng with Albert Bradbeer, LII Mayor of Birmingham. who ls vis- iting Cologne. PITTSBURGH. April ‘l - (AP) e-The United Siaics‘ rich soft coal industry was crippled today as at least three-quarters of 400,000 miners remained idle in response to United Mine Workers (A.1".L.) leaders‘ demands io ltay out of the pits until Federal snow conditions are met. Surveys were hampere by a netionu telephone strike but first reports from ihe leading bit-unin- riu arm indicated production was only between 30 and 20 per cent of a normal output of around I.- 000000 tom daily. These "wit; showed about 198.- 000 idle in 10 states - West Vir- ginia. lop producer; Ohio. Illinois. ltentiliiv. Alabama. Virginia, Ind- ians. Utah. Montana and New Mexico. . A substantial majority of Penn- Soft Coal Industry ln The U. S. Crippled cylvsnia’: 101.000 soft coal miners sitcoms idle but both the eoiid fuels administration and the New _bll.lt fumsces. added to the eqiilv- Ooai Mine Administration declined production less would be about in fix an idleness figure ihere. [7000 ions of pig iron. l0 pa cont Then- production figures. however. ici’ ihe normal output. ._____._________,________ utimsted today's output at shout 26 per cent of normal. This figure Included sirip mining. not affect- ed by the mine union's safely drive. Pennsylvania's anthracite. mines in the eastern section of the state also were closed es hard coal dig- gers pl longed their Easier holiday lhroueh Easter Monday. Cori-related industry was quick to feel ihe effect‘ qt the mine work sioprkse which continued xpart the‘ six-day "mourning period" decreed last week by ~U.M.W. leader-john 1.. Lewh to memorialize the 111 Oentralia. 111.. mine blast dead. 11.5. Steel canola-iced further cm-iaiiment, raising to the equival- ent oi eight blui furnaces the re- ductions effected since the "mourn- ing period" began. (Yurtailmenia today were the equivalent of 2 i-l silent o! a 1-2 furnaces ordered ear- lier. A Steel spokesman eoid ihe Plunges Effect 0f Rentals Revision In P.E.I. OTTAWA. April 7 - (Special) - Prince Edward Islanders living in rented premises in urban cen- tres will pay their landlords an additional $4.738 monthly under the new upward revision of rent- als announced today by Finance Minister Douglas Abbott. ‘Ihis amount is calculated from figures of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics which places the monthly rent paid by Prince Ed- ward Island tenants to be in the vicinity of $47,386. “According to comparative tables made at the time of imposition of rent con- trol. rentals in P. E. I. are in general somewhat lower than those obtained in other Canadian provinces. ‘The fables show that only eight persons in urban areas of the Province pay rentals exceeding $60 a month. There are 38 pay- lng between $50 and $60 a month: :24. paying between $40 and $49 between $35 between $30 between $25 between $20 a month; 94 payini! and w; m paying and $31: 252 paying and $29; 314 paying and e34; 407 paying between s15 rind s19; 502 pHYiRK between $10 and s14. and 4oz raving less than $10 a month. In all it is calculated that there are 2.570 households in urban centres-of the grovince Which are rented sszcopméfii t° 3595 W.” sons who own their own homes. liouae Remains "Dir!" As the deadline passed for ap- plications for cocktail hers and dining-room licenses to sell 11611101‘ (Continued cu r31. 5 Valley iirchardists Ready To Gamble KENTVILLE. N. 5.. April 1 -—- (OP) ~—Most orchardlsts of the famed Annapolis Valley. who narr- vestcd a $6,000,000 apple 010D H151- yeer, appeared to be ready today to embark on an expenditure of more than $4,000,000 despite m0 uncertainty of the British market. More ihen 500,000 of the valleys 1.800.000 barrels were sold to Brit- ain last last year but so far 11:8 British government has not com- mitted ltseif on the purchase of part of next season's crop. Athough some farmers nave indicated they may reduce spray- lng and other expensive operat- ions necessary for u B°°<1 Sh“ "5 apples-most appeared ready 1° gamble on the possibility of another large British order. Meanwhile, agricultural experts said the orchards lied wintcred well and there was every prosr-fivl o! H" exceptionally fine bloom when blossom time comes around n: June_ ilew Wage Demands m Forecast vmooovsa. Avril '1 — WP)" warning iiiei. increased renials. combined with a 40 P" @111 1"" in mod price: since 1939 and new ‘restriciive" labor itfli-iifillilfl Wm bring im "immediate" demand for wage increases, vius IIZWdE today‘ by Daniel O'Brien" regional director of ihe Qanedim Congress of Labor. I-le said new assaults on U"? worker's pay-charm. 001-101“ Wm‘ recent "restrictive" labor legisla- rion, might bring about spontan- eous strike eciion which no labor leader could overl- 7 r nil liikllllli 1'11?! iii i Uh? As Bus l-nto River SEATTLE, April 7 -- (Al?) Seven- persons were believed to have died when a North Coast Lines bile. en route here tom Portland. Plll-hged off e bridge into ihe Du- wamish River, near Seattle's south city limits, shortly after 7 P.M. tonight. An hour after the accident, all was confusion at the scene as m. licemen, deputy sheriffs dnd ciiy police officers rescued passengers from the submerged bus and tried to revive them with artificial res- piraiion While authorities said they be- lieved seven were dead they/could not give an accurate estimate. The accident occurred when ihe bus collided w-iih an oil truck on the bridge. The truck driver was Yelloried to have escapcd with minor injuries. 5001'“? after 8 p.m. a wrecker succeeded in bringing the bus to the surface of ihe river and rescue squads prepared 1o determine if any DHSSGHE€TS WETe lfRppCd in- side A diver W115 summoned i0 assist in the work. The number pf passenger; aboard the bus - which had capacity for 33 passengers - when it plunged into the rive-r had not been learn- ed by the officers. Reports on the number varied from 15 to 24. .; The North Coast dispatcher at Tacoma, the last major stop before the bus mode its plunge. said there were 24 aboard the machine when it left that city at 6 p.m. Palestine Jews Lose ttgalloitle ~ JERUSALEM. April 7 -—- (AP) — Palestine Jews lost another legal battle today in their fight to save Dov Bela Gruner from the gallows and there W35 immediate speculat- i-on that the convicted member of ihe Jewish underground might be executed tomorrow. The Palestine Supreme Court ruled that the ail-Jewish city of Tel Aviv could not appeal the case to the Privy Council because the city was not a legal party in ihe action. The Privy Council had de- clined earlier, on similar grounds, to consider an appeal brc-ughi by Gruner’: uncle. Prefab ‘Houses May lie Popular In china SHANGHAI. April 7 -(R.eut- ask-Popularity of prefabricat- ed houses is reported spreading rapidly in overcrowded Chinese cities. and China's first prefab- ricated hospital is rapidly near- ing completion. Some of the compact. attract- ive, three-room prefabricated iiouscsgordered from the United States some time ago have ar- rived in Shanghaiand work on assembling them has storied. All parts-together ivcigtiing a little more than one ton a house —came in handy packages. Chin- ese workers are finding it easy to assemble them. The walls of (he houses are aluminium. sheets. lined with plastic layers-said i0 insulate ihe house against the weather as effectively as a brick and pissi- er wall. The prefabricated hospital is going up at the ‘Jig southern Chinese city of Canton. HAIBCUT PRICES UP QUEBEC. AlYfli '1 -— (GP) Haircut prices will be increased 10 cents in Quebec City and district if a request appearing in ihe lai- ggi, edition of H19 Quebec Official Gazette is granted. The price would be increased from 40 to 50 cents on weekdays end from 50 to 60 cents on Saturdays and on eveflqt h olidaye . All” WU 291,000 U. S. Telephone Workers Are Idle "Seven Die Long Distance Service is ‘Gut By 80 Per. Gent WASHINGTON, April 7 -(AP)._. The first country-wide telephone strike in the United stare; cur 1°08 distance service 80 p91‘ (gent today and crippled local service at many points not served by ihe d-ial system. ‘The National Federation of ’l'eie- ilhone Workers. which called the sirike to back up a demand for wage increases. saidincompletc reports s1io\ved294.000 of the Bell system's 617.000 workers were off the job. The union said fills number was 6x96610111 to reach 350.000. Most of the strikers were women operators. w/isr-nncnori April 1- —iAPi-President. Joseph A. Beirne. of the striking Nat- ional Federation of Telephone Workers said tonight the Union was settling down fora long Shutdovm of ihc United States lclcplione industry. Bcirne said the Union lied made plans for a long tieup when the strike was called. He madcthestatementto re- portcrs after an evening con- ference with Edgar L. Warren. director of ihe Federal Con- . ciliatlon Service and top con- cilietors handling the gov- ernment-sponscred negotiat- 1 ions. The American 'f‘clcplrozie and Telegraph Company, pare-nu. firm od." one Bell system. said a survey of 14 null-viral cities showed long disr- ance operations were only 20 per cent of nominal. Long distance coils including those to suburban areas o1 large cities and local calls in areas with- out the dial system largely went on an" emergency basis as the strike be- BENEFlCIiUiY OI‘ SPANISH COUNT Named sole beneficiary of nearly $104,000 left by the late Manuel Antonio Luzarraga. a Spanish count. was body Diana Duff Cooper. seen here, wife of the British ambassador to France. The count met her only once, but remained an ad- mirer for almost 30 years. N. S. Unable To Fill Potato Order For ll. K. KENTVEIE. N.S.. April?- (CPb-Kings Coilntyilll little chance of filling a. British Gov- eminent order for 5,000 tons- equivalent to 165.000 bu5hg|$_ of potatoes, Robert P. Longiey, provincial agricultural repre- sentative for the omlntiy. said here today. gan shortly before 6 A.M. EST in the east and spread to the west coast uhree hours later. Dial System Working ' But 18,700,000 of the country's 31,600,000 phones. or about 60 per cent, ere in the dial system. Users of these instruments could look forward to uninterrupted local ser- vice until possible mechanical de- fects stopped operation. Principal hope for an early end lo the unprecedented walkout con- tred in Washington where sleepy- (Contizrued 0n Page 5 Col. 3) CONSCIENCE MONEY MONTREAL. April '1 — (OP) - The i-argcst single payment of con- science money ever received by the Canadian Notional Railways was acknowledged here today by the treasurer oi‘ the company. It was a. cheque for $1.000 from Winni- P08- VETERAN ACTOR. DIES HOLLYWOOD. April 7 -iA P)-- William P. Carleton, 74, veteran stage and screen actor, died last night of injuries received Thursday ivhcn he was struckbv an automobile noariiis home in nearby Studio City. Carleton. a. reading man on the stage for many years before he came to Hollywood was active during ihe war in obtaining screen all stage talent for camp shows. Mr. Langley. appointed in ~____._ __._-_. ription Delivered 80. Mail $5.00. other Provinces U. S. A. 87M Gitizensllf Ghatham Ready To Evacuate By The Canndian Press Residents ivc-re cviicmiting many homes in chatham lane last. night ea the Kent County @111’ 0f 17.000 population ‘ap- p. uhensiveiy awaited the flood crest of the rompuglng Themes River. At 10 P.M. the river was still “running wild" and had roaohed a. level 11 feet nine inches higher than the lum- mer normal. its erect waa B-Yllected to reach Chatham about noon Tuesday on its way out to Lake St. Clair. City Manager T.M.B. Kingston said the steady rate of the rise in the river and reports from up- stream communities indicated the Themes would equal the peak of the great floods of 1987 when the crest comes. That record was 20 feet four inches above summer normal. Millions In Damagea While Ohathsm remained the focal point overnight. over the whole flood scene Ontario count- ed six deaths and millions of dollars in damage to crops and farm implements. property and communications installations. ‘Ihe sixth death. reported lest night. was that of Wiilieim Jou- benvlle, 17. whose farm tractor ran into a waif-out near (Eliot- ham. I-le was drowned. M. Thsmesvllle. 10 miles up- stream from Chatham, residents were also evacuating homes in low-lying land. ‘fliamewills and other communities on the banks of the Thames sew streets under water as the flood crest moved irresistibly along. As at other places previously stricken. emergency shelterowere organized for evacuated fleaslidea in Thsimesvilie and Chacham. Boaia were ihe only means of treriqiort make a survey of the potatoes available, said answers to a questionnaire sent out to grow- ers indicated that only about one fifth‘ of the wqiilred quant- ity , waa w The British order specified that the potatoes be certified free from bacterial ring rot. packed in BIO-pound bags and shipped from Halifax. Mr. Longley said the requlrd bags were not available in the country and the fact the pota- toes would have to be shipped from Halifax instead of nearby Port Williams would add eon- siderabiy to the oost. The price offered of 81-05 l- hundredweight. he sold, was no great inducement to growers. 70-mi|e Gale 0n England's East Boast LONDON. April 7 - (Reuters) - A ‘IO-miie-an-hour northwest gale on England's northeast coast io- night ripped off sides of two houses and the roof of a grandstand. drowned two young men. 5on1»: small harbor boats. ii-[ied up :1 mo“ holding a tarpaulin and flung: him down 2O feet away Parents and children escaped uu-y injured from the houses. at Bfidn iington, Yorkshire. and Gntesheali Durham. but were loft homeless. By JVES GALLAGHER . . . MOSCOW. April‘? - (AP) -'1‘he ihrec wesiern- powers rejected to- night a proposal by Foreign Min- ister Molotov to allow ihe German people to choose in g piebisciie between ceniroiized and federal forms of government. With ihe four-power council 81> parenliy deadlocked hopelessly on the question of ihe future Ger-roan regime, State Secret Murshali proposed that the min sters move on to the next iicm on the agenda {lermnn boundaries. Molotov quickly blocked this move. however. and Foreign sec- retary Bevin remarked that it did not make much difference what was discussed. since “we have been here for four weeks and have ac- compiified absolutely nothing" Following the fruitless session. American and British sources es- smed that Molotov was using ihe Oouncli meetings io pump Soviet propaganda inie Germany. They sold ihe Russian ioraip Western Powers Turn‘; Down Molotov Plani governmental procedure and his, consistent fight to obtain 58T6E-_ mom on a centralized German‘ government were prompted more view; before tho Gridiron than by n desire io mach iflflllll. Miiloiofs conilznious campaign for a Unlicd Gennany and e cen- trnlizcd government brought For- digi-iuiiinisu-r Bldauli. m... ihe hot debaii. Bidauli sold that at first he had no Iiuidameniai disagreement. with the original Rilsslen proposals for Gcnnany. but ihoi since hearing li/Ioioimfls "cxposliiorb" ihe was becoming "anxious" cri Soviet in- tentions. _ Bidouit then look a firm riaiid with Marshall and Bevin against the plebiscite propoml Bcvi ‘s assertion that the min- isters "d made no progress point- ed up ihe almost dsfeaiist aunos- ph e overlaying ihe conference. seemed to bear out talk in western circles that the meeting people agree- minisiers speeches Orr German would end in about two weeks. by n zlc-sirc lo plan-e the Russian‘ in Thamesville. business pieces on the main street were flooded. and merchants piled stock in up- per stories. Added to the iii-eat of Intq. (OmitinuodonPaqolmLD o“ \ mmm- , 001's m’ MUM . MUCH M‘ h . Nevin! ~. TORONTO, Apri-i 7 — (CPi Minimum and Maximum temperat- ures: Vancouver 48. 37; Edmonton .25. 56: Regina l5. 36; Winnipeg 20. 3B; Toronto 35, 38; Ottawg 34, 3'7; Mcnircai 38, 452 Quebec 34. 4.0; Saint John 35. b1; Moncton 35. 47: Halifax 39. 50; Charlottetown ‘i0, 46; Sydney 43. 47: Yarmouth 4T. HALIFAX, April 7 - (OP) Weather synopsis and official in- land forecast issued by the Domin- ir-n Public Weather Office here or 11:15 p. m. tonight. Synopsis: Colder air is llowuig into the Mariiimcs from the north- west this evening end temperatures are expected to be near normal io- _ iiiiglil and Tuesday. Rather cMi-ige- a this v {llliil i-iouzirnos; accompanies nnirlvr air and than are even a few A and snoivfurrlel. i showers day. Forecast. midnight: 5.1mmm;v-Cioiid_v and colder. Prince Edward Island overcast tonight. colder Tuesday. cloudiness. Winds becoming nus-ih- ivesl. 20. High Tuesday at Char- lottetown 40- vaiid Ulliii lilgih llilfl iliLs afternoon at. 12.34 and ionight at 1.26. Sum sets (his ever-lift M 636 and rises tomorrow morning oi 5.27. Lost quarto-r moon April 13th, 0.23 A. .\i. Summcrside iide eishlem min- utes later ihnn Charlottetown. CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD Ill-AND” Daily except Bundsy. Leave Borden iit 9.05 AM. Leave Tormentine at 3 PM. Winds ' iwili increase somewhat during the - Tuesday ‘ variable ' F. f.