MAEKIMS or A MERE MAN to itself do not but true. Nothing aliall ua rue if England Guardian. Five cents. :,l:,.,un; pally Founded III1. if '5 Paper IAN f p L Read Everybody . 1 Cover Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1. 1951 COMPROMISE SEEN POSSIBLE IN Visiting Province sills Excellency Bishop 0.12.. Nclligan, of Windsor, Ont.. is spending I few days in Cardigan, guest of Rev. H. J. Ci-oken. Bishop Nelligan is a. former resident of Tignish. and plans to spend a few weeks visiting relatives in that loc- a.ilty. - M. Coming Events "Hope iuvex-(Picnic, Tuesday. August. 7th. - i :- -'”'t'rl'r" --Dance. Iona. 1-fall. .Wednes:lay, August 1st. "Green Road Parish Picnic Wed, Aug. lst. "Corran Ban Picnic, Wednes- day, August 8th. "Dance at the Covehead Race Track Wednesday. August 1st. "Reserve Wednesday. August 8th. Long Creek Baptist Sunday School Picnic. "Dancpg. French Riveii Hall, Thursdayinight. August 2nd. Music by the Paynter Boys. "Notice-Buying live every Monday. Highest G. C. Green. Emerald. "C. Y. 0. Dance in Morell H-all every Wednesday night Chau- ion's Orchestra. ..;.. "Reserve August Bill for post- poultry prices. poned picnic-aid St. Patrick's Church. Grand River. "Collecting Rugs for swift Canadian Co. Contact K. Mac- Donald. Brookiield. "Dance-. St. George's School. Aueuit and. Ice Cream and Drinks. Turner's Orcheatra. lsmh Anniversary of Parish and annl1.il Picnic at Bloomfield, Aug- ust lath. "Come in and talk over our Purina Finance Plan. for feeding lour hogs and poultry. Dillon its Spinett. "Dance in Emerald Hall, Thais- diy. August 2nd. Blue Hlven Orchestra. Dancing "show. Morell Community Hall. El"!!! Tuesday. Friday and satur- Clln 8.30 P. M. Coming Friday and Saturday, '--A -gm f"P0r Snapshots that will not vine mail your Films and Nega- NH to Gnrnhum Photo studios Charlottetown, M"1ce cream festival and dance. hgulilre Stewart Legion Hall. Aug. Wmmtzld of school. other am- HJII-eaion Dance. Nomi nuiueo every Wedneada Dancing imoiib until 1. can in service 0rchenrl!B'G00r(O Obappell and his nimtlew llaven Outdoor show'io- whrmhgg 9-'l:- Bgftth taking. heart a r.v " '. arm... in mchmcol horse. lue ,,;p":iddl1nt. harmonica playing, R mmcln and limp oonlut, K under. W"-tfiia. 4 Pic- adnudar. D-tn. Den ni.R''"”v 1050!" Swim-. rumjt ):'l'tli ltuatlco, - Supper 3 'l"l in the evening. Pravda Accepts Dare, Prints In Full Article By Herbert Morrison (By Edward Curtis) LONDON. Aug. i-(Wednes- day)-(AP) Foreign Secretary Herbert Morrison today told the Russian people through a Moscow newspaper that if they were , really free they would know the west wants peace and Soviet leaders are sowing the seeds of war. Morr.ison's plain-spoken. 1.500- word statement was published in the Communist Party newspaper Pravda. In a speech at a British Press Association luncheon June 13. Morrison had challenged Pravda to print fully a state- ment from either him or Prim.- Mlnister Attlee. Pravda accepted the challenge. It also published a 2.600-word rc- buttal. The texts of both the message and the rebuttal were made public in London at the hour of Pravdais press run. At the same time Russia's new English-language magi.-zine. The News. announced it would give space to both United States ani Russian journalists in its col- umns 'for the expression of ideas designed to promote friendly re- lations between our country and America.” Statement to Russians Morrison's Russians said: "You are told that we are war- mongers, that in alliance with the other countries of West Eur- ope and the United States of America we are arming to the teeth to attack the Soviet Union: that we are engaging in an arms race; that we are preparing for statement to the 4 Capt. K.-E Dyer To Command - Magnificent OTTAWA, July 31 - (OP) - A 35-year-old sailor from Burma and Nova scotla. was named today to command Canada's biggest warship, the 113.000-ton aircraft carrier Magnificent, starting late this year. That appointment: for Capt. Kenneth L. Dyer of Grand Pre. N. s.. and Ottawa. .a native of Burma. was one of 11 announced by Naval Headquarters in a big shift of captains and eommodores -rank equivalents of the army's colonels and brigadleri. Both the Magnificent i:evy's No. 2 ship. the cruiser Ontario, get -new skippers when the appointments take ef- fect. mainly late this year. These were the switches: Capt. Dyer leaves the job of deputy chief of naval personnel at 1-1. Q. here to take over the Maggie from Commodore Kenneth F. Adams. 47. of Victoria. now senior naval officer afloat. Commodore Adams will come ashore in November-after a cruise and the 8.000- Don to the Mediterranean-to become commodore of the R. C. N. bar- racks at Esquimalt, B. C. Commodore Hugh F. Pullen, 46. of Oakvllle. Out. and Halifax, will relinquish command of Ontario to become commodore of the R. c. N. barracks in Halifax and officer- in-charge of the navy depot. there. lie succeeds Commodore Adrian M. ll-lope. 52, of Halifax. who is retir- ng. Commodore Roger E S. Bldwell. 51, of 1-!r.lifax and Ottawa. assist- ant chief of staff for plans, will take temporary command of H. M.l l C S. Naden as ommodore of R C. N. barracks at Etsquiiiiait and officers-;, barge of ”iCIu1tIdliedi'6n.l5ase 5 col. 3) Royal Tour itinerary For llelease Shortly OTTAWA, July 31 - (GP) .. Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh have approvea the itinerary for their October visit to Canada and it likely will be made. public later this week, it was learned today. The itinerary has been return. ed to Canada and now awaits study and approval by the Canad- ian Cabinet. However. this ti! ex- pected to be a formality. Cabinet meets today and Thursday. Contents of the itinerary are a state secret, but the royal couple is expected to land at Quebec City about Oct. 1 or 2. The itinerary will take them to as many Canad- ian centres as possible and still keeps within the Prlncess' request that the tour be kept informal. The royal couple is expected to spend one week on a private hol- iday, probably on the west coast, and to make is. side trip to Wash- ington and New York. Acting commodore E. E. Patrick R'E' new bar- Tisdall, 44, of Duncan. 3. C., commodore of the Esqulninlut racks. will take command of on- farm. Capt. Edward W. Finch-Noyes, 42. of Oakvllle, our-., and Halifax. town was made easier for Navy Announces Big Shift In Co.mvmanid:ii;- But No lrrdgress T ORMSTOWN, Que.. July 31 - ICP) -- A 31-year-old soldier was charged with murder today fol- lowing a triple-silayln-g that stunned this community about 55 miles southwest of Montreal. Dead are: Mrs. Anthime Allen, 74. Anthime Allen, 6'1. Nelson Cusson. '14. Police announced they had booked Pte. Alcide Martin of the Royal nd Regiment ion a change of mu er. The triple killing occurred last night at nearby Anderson Cor- ners. Police had their first in- formation on it when Martin. .a grandson of Mrs. Allen, walked into Provincial Police headquart- ers in Montreal and said there had been one killing. That was about 4 A.M. today. On investigation police found three bod-ies in the yard of the Allen home and they gave out this story, as obtained from Martin: The soldier, on leave. was in I Rev. I society. Montreal yesterday and had some drinks, after which he decided to visit his grandmother. He drove Fblurder Charge Laid After -Triple Slaying to Anderson Corners and there became involved in an argument with her because he had not V15. ited her for the last six months. The argument reached a point where the soldier, father of roux- children went into the Allen yard with his grandfather. There he first beat the old man with his fists. then kicked him and final- ly stabbed him with a pocket- knlfe with a three-inch blade. The old man's cries attracted his wife and brought the grand- mother from the house. She was powerless before Martin. But before she died her cries attracl- ed her neighbor, Cusson. He he- came Martin's third victim. Then. said police, Martin drove to Montreal and about 4 A.M. to- day told Provincial Police he had Corners. "When our investigators there they found not one murder, but three," said inspccior Gen- eral xNorbe'rt Lalbbc of the Pro- vincial Police. "Our men found the bodies lying in the Allen yard." An inquest was scheduled for tonight at Huniingdon. Que. Arrive In City En Route To Acadian Eighty-six members of La. Sur- vivance Fraiicaise arrived in the City last night to take part in the Acadlnn celebration git Egmont Bay 13' -1-. i..' .; ,'-.. '11Ee” arty was ii sect av itev. osaelin, secretary of the Society, of Laval University and Ad-ian Veretie. Plymouth, New l-la pshire. president of the Registration at the Charlotte- the former commander of the naval lnrse sroup by the fact that resis- air station. Shearwater. at Da.it- NW0" Card! had been sent to mouth. N. 3., comes to Ottawa, to. them in advance and room num- succeed Capt. Dyer. The Dart. mouth post has gone to Capt. Dun- can L. Raymond. 47. of Ottawa. (Continued on page 5 col. 2) l bers assigned. -All the visitors had to do was pick up their keys and go to their rooms. . They will be guests tonight at n Israel Govit Improves Position ' In Election TEL AVIV. Israel, July 31 - (AP) - Premier David Ben- Gurionis Mapai Socia-list Labor Party improved on its 1949 show- ing as Israel's No. 1 party in re- turns today from the general election and the Mapam. a pro- Russlan rival for the labor vote, was nudged out. of second place. The General Zionists. a liberal nigh-t-wing group which calm- paigned on a program of free enterprise, moved into the No. 2 Montreal Man Charged In Ferry Fraud Case QUEBEC. July 31 - (CP) - Crown prosecutor Noel Doi-ion announced today that Armand Rochotte, Moritrea-1 business man. has been charged with theft of 3291.000 and fraud involving 8375,- 000, in the operations of La Tra- verse De Levis Limlteo of which Roehette is president. The 40-year-old Montrealer was arraigned before Judge Alexandre Mlchaud of Sessions Court in the ...:...................... '”An lceicream aocial. Sea View Hall, Tuesday. Aug. 7. "Ice Cream Festival 'and Dance. Kallyia Cross Hall. Friday. August Jr . "St. Teresa's Picnic Wednesday. August lat. Sports 2 p.m.; eup- pers served 4 p.m. till 8 pm Dance in the evening. "Dance. in Stewart Legion Hall every Thursday George chappell and his Merry Islanders Canteen service. Admission soc. "Annual Lobster Supper. St Mark's Church Grounds. hot 7. Tuesday. Aug. Slat. Pious remem- bar the date. supper starting at mo. Gaines and other attractions . . II Bagnall. lnnte. until noon. Bnmmsraido-unit 13 P. H. and Remington until P. at. tlaolwau and casein. iudue's office. The charge was that between last Dec. ill and Jan. ill Rochetta defrauded shareholders of the ferry company of the 8375.000 and between Dec. 16 and July 20 stole 3201.000 from the company in money and securities. The charge was laid on I. coin- -plaint lodged by Yves Bi.-rnier. Levis lawyer. Gerard Levesque. Quebec law- yer. acting for Rochetw asked for pmllminary hearing for his client. Judge Michaud fixed Aug. 15 as the date of the hearing and ball at !20.00o. he accusation was laid after a S perlor Court order yesterday forbidding the Quebec-Levis ferry company president to vote at the company's annual meeting and a special meeting to have been held in Montreal today. "The court order - an inter- locutory injunction -- was is- sued by Mr. Justice Wilfrid Edge on I petition preeentad by Sen- ator Cyrille Vaillancouri. a com- pany shareholder. Senntor Valllancoui't's petition contended that ftoeiietce assumed more, than half the: ferry com- pany ahlraa "without any appear- anoa of right and without any consent of transfer in his favor W I ' The pa , that the meeting eallad for Montreal were not provided for in oompaify by-low. . I n I the also eontoi-idea. spot in the race for the 120 seats of the new Kneaet (parliament). The Mapai Party. which won 35.82 per cent of the votes in 1..-rael's first general election Jan. 25. 1910. was credited with 38115 per cent in official tabula- lion-5 today from 98'! of the coun- try's 1.500 precincts. That means Ben-Gurion's party will again have the biggest voice in the Knesset. but will have to continue to work with others to run the government. That hasn't always been easy. The General Zionists had 19.89 per cent of the counted votes and the Ma-pam Party 11.85. The right-wing l-ierut (freedom) Party. formed by members of the dis-. banded extremist Irgun Zval Leu- mi. took 7.05. The Religious Workers Party. Na-pocl Hamisrachi. drew 6.36 per cent: the left Liberal Progress- ives 3.58 per cent and the Com- inunists 3.32. The ultra-orthodox religious party Agudath Israel wag given 2.23 per cent: the religious Mis- rachi Party 1.76 and the Work- ni-s' Organization of Agudoth Israel 1.72. Fragmentary votes were scat- tered among 10 other Pittm- Finul totals are to be an- nounced nfficiaily tomorrow. About 881,000 men and women were eligible to vote. double that in the election of 1040. immigra- tion accounts for much of the increase. V Well-Known M. Publisher Ilaad GIRARD. Knl.. July .'li-(liP)- E. Haldeman-Julius. 62. nation- ally-known publisher of the "Little Blue loolia". was found dead in a awimniinjgi pool at his home here tonight. 0 was under Federal sentence for llama tax evasion. - 1-laldeman-Julius was lenteilced June 20 to six months in prison- and fined 812.500 for evasion of taxea in 1945 and 1947. He flied an appeal and was released an- ,der band - . Celebration dinner at the Charlottetown on their return from Egmont Bay and will leave here by train Thurs- day morning to continue their tour of the Marltimes. ' 1 liricludcgl in”the mixed group are gevarnl members of the clergy and four n spapermen re-presenting French language papers. The party will travel by bus to Egmont Bay today. leaving early this morning. Most members of the group are from Quebec Prov- lnce. Wholesale Price Index Advances OTTAWA. July 31-(CP)-Tli: general wholesale price index for June advanced to a new high at 242.7, up 0.8 points from 241.9 in May. the Bureau of Statistics re- ported today. The index is based an 1935-39 prices equalling 100. On July 4 the Bureau reported that the cost-of-livinz index. also based on 1935-39 prices equalling 100, jump ed 2.1 points in May to n recorl 184.1. The index for wholesale farm produce prices rose to 263.8 from 256.5 in May. while the indexes for general and residential build- ing materials were lower. The general index dropped in 290.? from 294.2: the residential index to 289.2 from 289.5. Sharp Slump On N.Y. Stock Market NEW YORK. July ."l1-4AP)- The stock market today suffered its eharpeat setback in a month. Heavy profit-faking blunted the four-week recovery that followed the severe break in the market at the beginning of Korean cease- fire talks in the final week of June. Most of the selling ioday came in oils and chemicals that have becn leading the recent forward movement. - The Ano inied Press average of 60 stoc oppcd 31.00 and stood at 59490 1 Butter Sloclts OTTAWA, July 31 - (CP) - Stocks of creainery butter in nine Canadian cities on July 27 amounted to u.see.ooo pounds compared with 42ma,ooo on the corresponding date last year. the gurlllu of Statistics reported to- ay. Holdings were nmsllcr.in each of the centres except Saskatoon and Vancouver. l Stocks by cities, with totals the valmilar year .in' duh. Quebec (I .' can aeuiida; who -- .000 tia,'m.ooo); Regina Eco ms.- 000): laikatooli 720.000 (414.- 000): Edmonton a,oio,ooo (4,252,- 090); Calgary 068,000 0.350.000): Vancouver ammo .(i.&I.(Il0). i went I Made At 15th . Cease-Fire Talks (By Stan Carter) U. N. ADVANCE: HEADQUART- ERS, Korea, Aug. 1-(Wednesdayl- (AP)-Communist and United Na- tions negotiators today appeared read-y either to attempt a com- promise on where to set up a bui- fer zone 01' admit that Korean .truce talks have reached a dead- lock. The 16th cease-fire session at Kaesong opened at 11 a. In. today parallel. The U. N. delegation again sought to establish a 20-mile de- militarlzed zone along the prcsnt Statement Possible There was a possibility that Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway, supreme Allied commander, might issue a statement on the Kaesong talks. Rldgeway's headquarters em- phatically denied rumors that he had been instructed to set a time limit on the Kaesong talks. After Tuesd-ay's meeting. Brig.- Gen. William Nuckols, cliief U.N. spokesman, told correspondents "both sides now fully understand the vlexvs- of each other. although they may not appreciate it and certainly do not agree with it." (Continued on page 5 col. 2) Premier To Welcome chief MacLeod.4llere Chief Flora MacLcod of the MHCLCDd Clan will be officially greeted by Premiei J. Walter Joies on her arrival here Friday night at the airport. she wxll be accom- panied by Councillor iv. Ii. Bearun who will meet her in Monclon. M-r. Boston is Chief of the Caledonia Club. Chief ltlacLend will also be wel- comed on behalf of the City by Mayor B. Earle MacDonald and she will then be escorted to The Charlottetown by the pipers. A dinner will be held illi her hoizor at the hotel. The rext morning she will pay an official call on ills Honor Lieutenant Govunor T. W. L Prowse at Government House. Saturday afternoon the Chief of the Mac-Leods will attend the an- nual Caledonla Club held day 3' Strathgai-they. While here she will be. the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Wil- fied Macl..eod. 2 Park Terrace. VICTORIA. 30.. July 31 (CP) - shrill whistles from the cruiser Ontario, destroyers Atha- baskan and Crusader and other naval craft greeted HM C.S. Nootka, as the Halifax-based de- stroyer entered Esqulmalt harbor today, marking her return to Can- ada after six months scrvicc wltli United Nations naval forces in the Far East. The ship's arrival was u'iliiess- cd by a. large crowd, despite the fact nearly all of her crew are eastern Canadians. As soon as the destroyer was berthed at H. M. C. S. Nnden Jetty. Rear Admiral Wallace B. Creery. battle line. from 20 to 35 miles far-I ithcr north. Committed a murder at Anderson p afford. to apotleas reputation. MAXIMS or A MERE MAN The purest treasure mortal tiuaea 14 PAGES suiuai-ipnoiu delivered as. ; Mall u.oa other Province: and U.8A 08.00 KOREAN BUFFER ZONE Claxton Says Canada Not Fooling On Arms I Standardization Stand MONTREAL. July 31 -(CP)-The Government said today that Can- ads is through sending major arms shipments to Europe until the Brit- ish-American split over a common rifle is settled. She also is halting the flow of U. S. Gai-and rifles to this country 'until the situation is clarified. ' Defence Minister Claxlon drove in Ottawa tomorrow with Gen. lomar Bradley, visiting chairman of the U. 5. Joint Chiefs of staff. He spoke here as Canada, for the lilili-d time, turned over enough lBi-ltlsh-type arms for a European ldlvisloii, this time to Italy. She is ,seiidlng them free. 5 Mr. Claxton served notice that, .in Canada's switch from British to .U. S. arms, Canada now has ieiiough U. 5. weapons for a divis- ion wlth more coming but she is stopping further shipments of the .300-calibre Garand rifle. Canada's future rifle, he said, may well depend on the Washing- ton meeting. in the meantime. she would rely on her stocks of .303 Lee-Enfieids. the British weapon Canadians used in the last war. if she decided to drop the Gar- and, she could turn those she now has over to other countries. The rifle split arose when Brit- ain. abandoning the .303, selected a .280 Belgian type while the U. S. stuck to the .300 calibre. Canadian tests have shown, the tar said. that .m weapons can ejro-. bored to either CEIIISYBL but at con- siderable cost. Mr. Claxton told the Italian Am- bassador. Marlo De ste.-fano, the shipment to Italy likely will be the last big one "we shall make for some time." Once the rifle question "and other similar matters are settled we shall have further equipment to transfer to European countries on a considerable scale. but until these matters are decided we are going to keep most of that tBritlsh- typelequlpment,” he said. HEAVY TYPHOON DAMAGE V MANILA. July 31- (AP)-The typhoon that hit Northern Luzon Island yesteiday injured 10 per- sons. heavily damaged cities and crops. and brought near-record rainfall. The typhoon tonight. had moved 340 miles northwest of Luzon, out over the Chlnri Sen. ,1 H.M.C.S. Nootka Returns From Service In Far East Pacific Coast flag officer, led an official welcoming party aboard from a naval launch. Cmdr. A.D. Fraser-Harris. skip- per of the Nootka, spoke for all of the 250 men aboard his ship when he said Canada looked mighty good after six months away from it. The destroyer serv- ed on both Korean coasts during her tour of duty. Noot.ka's return was made by way of the Northern Pacific route. she was relieved in the Far East by H.M.C.S. Cayuga. The ship will remain at me- quimalt. until Thursday when she will leave for her home port of Halifax. Researchers (By Howard W. l.ulr.eaIee Aaaocl latad Prose Science Editor) NEW YORK. July 31-(AP)--A penicillin for polio is one of this year's research hopes in the an- nual epidemlc now threatening. The new one won't be named penicillin. if discover.-d. but it will come from the same source. the good earth. and it will act on the same principles. Like pen!- clliln. it will he an antibiotic. This aonrch centres at the New York Botanical Garden: with fin- ancial support of the National Foundation lor infantile Par- aiysla. Antibiotics are substances made by germs and ether invis- lbly-Im':li organisms that inhabit ” Ically, these micro-ois I produce just about every ehdmleal possible. it is vlrtuallv certain that somewhere there ll I mltflro-family producing one that can kill the virus which Press For New Polio Vaccine causes polio. O The Botanical Gardens are making the search in thousands of samples of soil. gathered from nil over the earth and flown to New York. The Foundation is investing S-1.000.000 in research this year. One project is a synthetic chem- ical to kill polio virus. lt will kill polio virus in the stomach. This aim is based on the medical belief that people lief. polio via food. drink or contamination en-, ierlng their mouths. A third he-mlcal is sought. to bolster the human serum that comes from the blood of polio patients. The chemical. it ie hov- ed. will add to the potency of the centre. - A vaccine has been made for each of. the three known P0110 viruses. Each one protects mon- Rolaiion Scheme For Troops In Korea OTTAWA. July 31.-(CP)-Den fence Headquarters is expected to announce within the next 10 days a rotation scheme for Can- (10 P- m- EDT Tuesday” imose points home in 3 blunt adian troops in KOF('u undi-r Tll35d3l"s 15th session lasted Speecll 0"lY "'9 days before helwliich members of the 2nd Bal- only 94 minutes and resulted in "no;80eS "H0 11 ittilV10-day Wg5l;gl3i03 tnllon. r.P.r:.L.i. will be home progress". the ?.dN.TC0ll'ldmBndiC(l)rtn- gigtgfngefezce 1;msn.,sm5. I-nallln bergfe Chirsimas. lpk Iv t "art muniue eore uesn ngi. i 0 S.VS0m I! I6. .0 Forq iher riifth straight yday thelemnil '0 find 3- 59"-uemem 0? '0 moving within 8 fairly short time Communist delegation inslstedlkeepnthe Split from engulfing Olhef and it has: beicome lclear lthat (ii: that A 12l,2gn-luedivide buffer 5nI3. El"I'n5-- overnmcn 5 go ng 0 sen zone be Gem,-ed along me 333,! He also lS likely to discuss them paratroops from the Bid Home Defence Airborne Brigade to take the place of the returning vet- crans. The would home Korea. schcmc would be tha men become eligible for eiurn after a certain period in WIVES, REMEMBER HUSBAND. UKE A coon EGQ.C.Ef9 HARD-B0li.ED xr-' KEPT continuawf :lN HOT WATER! HALIFAX. July .1! - ,(CP) .. Official forecasts issued by in; D0mlnl0n Public Weather Office and valid until midnight tomor. row. . -Synopsis - Another disturbance is approaching the north shore of the Gulf of st. Lawrence and showers are forecast for many re- Biom tonlaht and Wednesday. V9717 warm air will brleflv cover lhe Southern Marltlmes on Wed- n95dBY. sending temperatures to the middle eighties in inland loc- alities. Cooler air will spread southenstward across the Mari- times Wednesday night, Forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Cloudy with widely scattered showers. Warmer Wednesday. Light winds becoming southerly 20 Wednemgy morning, shifting Wednesday evening to northwest 15. Low early Wednesday morning and high in the afternoon at Charlottetown 55 and 80. High tide today at 8.40 A. M. and 11.00 P. M. Sun rises today at 4.57 A.M. and sets at 7.40 P. M. Summersidc tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. .-.-:m....... BOBDEN -- CAPE TOBMENTINB FERRY SERVICE Dally Leave Border Long (2, 1: 9.10 A.M. 9.10 AM, 10.35 A.M. 10.35 A.M. 1.00 EM. 1.00 RM. 2.40 P.M. 2.40 P.M. 4.30 RM. 4.30 RM. 7.80 RM. 1.30 l'.M. 9.00 P.M. 9.00 RM. 10.80 PM. 10.30 PM. WOOD 'lsl.ANDs -. UARIBOU FERRY SERVICE (standard Time) Leave Wood lalaiide. Prlnea Nova - 1 A.M.. ll A.M. I RM. Chan. A. Dunning--9 A.M. I PM. Leave Caribou- Chls A. Dunning-1 A.M. 11 A.M.. 8 EM. 1 Prince Nova - O A.M.. 1 PM. is P.Mi M.C.A. All SERVICE Dally Except lunday Leave Charlottetown for Mtlllclllll 5.80 A.M.; 11.10 A.M.: 4.50 PM. Ar. Charlottetown from Mencton 1.25 A.M.; 1.25 r.M.: 0.55 PM. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow-llallfar 1.40 A.M. New Glasgow in Sydnev 1.50 PM. New Glanow A llallfaii. Arrive Charlalluuwn from New Glasgow and Halifax 11.00 A.M. from New Glasgow 0 ghee). 4.10 PM. from New Glasgow and Charlottetown glue: nim- daily aavaupt Qunday. some! on! Lv. ace keys, but it may take yelfl '0 find out whether monkey vac- cines will work for humans. 3. .. . ' Ar. Charlottetown PHI Houston (.85 PM.