r MAXIMS OIL Mani-z ‘MAN ii: Virtu growl under handicap. flan-rain‘ Gaarlill. Fouled IIII. I} chariotialewn Guardian. Two Oenia. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1946 OPIG v Covers Prince Edward Island Like the ' aper Read by Dew Eve 12 PAGES All “lwlllca, In full of spies. MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN Bu Mlil W00. bacription Delivered 86.00 other Provincea d: U.S.A. $7.00 __ __T Sees Less Western Grain For Eastern Farmers Soviets Claim New Data On Atom, Cosmic Rays Gales Continue In Great Britain LONDON. Nov. 25—(R.euters)— Guics sweeping with increasing fut) across Britain today par- niymi road and nail traffic as the Thunles rose to its highest point floods stafted The air ministry warned no respite could be expect- 5.1.1.0 the present four days ago. so within 24 holirr. Severe storms, the North Atlantic, sent amall vt-ssels srtirrying for the safety of port. The grounds of the royal resi- dence of Windspn Castle were in- undated by high waters. ______.___ LONDON, Nov. 25 - (AM-A government source said today ginm, Danish and Norwegian o- dicrs will gradually replace sp- proximately 1-10th of the British forces in the British zone of Ger- many. Coming Events "Movies at Bradalbane tonight. "Duticing Island Country club tonight. "$110981". Seal-view Hall, Thurs- day. Nov. 28. "Unloading 2.51m; fggds and 110111‘ Tuesday andgwednesday a; North Wlilshire. F. J. Tralnor. "Come to the concert and 19g- iu"! 1" Killsston Hall tonight at I PM. Lunches will be sgrygd. "New liurcn W. l, Pantry Sale amiiwer-‘lv- Mlllfdfli’. November P0111"! — Bovine daily live and 090M poultry. Paylnn toP market PTlCC. Davis a Fraser Ld, "come to the lecture and basket social in Canoe Cove Hal] on Wednesday evening, Nov, 27th, "Notice-Morrow x 1e tires. list truck fire 700 x 20 ten plies. G C- Green. Emerald. u "Show - Mt. Stewart Tuesday Persuit to Algiers" plus Serial and Cartoon ‘ ‘Pie Social Hull, Tuesday, music. and Dance. Lot 85 Nwflmbfir 26th. Good extending into By EDDY GILMORE W1 NOV. 35—(AP)—"' let scientists claimed today to have discovered a new kind p; atomic disintegration and t.) have unwvered new. ImPOrtant data 95°11'- 00511110 Pays and the earth's composition. (The London News Gtronicle reported Monday in a dispatch from Istanbul that Rusgin i; building a “gigantic atomic en. "KY lJfllJect" near Sukhum port on the Black Sea.) Prof. P. I. Lukiaky. reaearch expert, was credited with m. n. omlc disintegration discovery. (Atomic disintegration 1| a term generally used to describe the bmibsivn of ratio-active raysfrom atoms. The Russians apparently made no claim concerning atom splitting or of gaining the gnaw- ledke which would enable tlmm to manufacture an atomic bomb.) Details or Lukiskys experiments were not published. U O O The apparent explanation of the Russian experiments on at- atomic disintegration appeared in a recent article in the transact- ions of the academy o! sciences or the USSR... written by Luk- islry and Peftlov. Thla article dealt with mesons, sometimes called heavy electrons or mesotrons. Those are particles of mysterious origin found in cosmic rays in the earth's at- mosphere. about 200 times heav- ier than electrons. ‘These mesons may have either positive or negative charges of electricity. When the negative meson hits the nucleus oi an atom. this meson ‘is cnptured— that is, it. enters tile atom’; nuc- leus. The result is an unstable atom. which possesses too much maaa ur- ioo much energy-—tha mass and the energy of the add- ed meson. The Russians expressed the theory that the nucleus which haa taken on this additional load gets rid of it, possibly by break- ing up. The Soviet scientists ventured the opinion that some of the lighter weight atoms. like those 0f carbon. nitrogen and ‘oxygen when thus hit by a meson, broke up completely. Such a break-up would be disintegration. Probe Oxygen Tent Explosion ~ NIAGARA FALLS. 0212.. Nov. 25 --tCP)—Chief coroner Ernirle Lany- son. presiding at. an inquest today T"Dance at K. of C. Hall. Souris.‘ “EFF-lily. November 26th. Cliffordbl Orchestra. U. Chicken Supper. last e season, Tuesday. Nov- “Iona Ha dance of th Ember 26th. "Joint Farm Forum Meeting, Pow-mil Garage ifaii, Tuesday. Nov. -6th, 8 o'clock. Special Films, "Kingston Baptist W. M. S. Filmy Sale. Holmana, 30th November upper at Dnn McPhxefis, 26th. Aid of Sprtngicn _“Bcnn S i\O\'(‘l1li.lt‘1‘ Memorial. v,"-I115t received one car eech of uzht nnd heavy asphalt shingles in ‘ileum colors. J. F. Merrie, Kh- "Oeme to dance. sale of home- made articles and lunchea. in Cove-head Community Hall. Wed- nesday. Nov. 2'1. in aid o! W. I. d"W¢ w buying Poultry every A”? FY0108 highest prices. M. and l. Peters, Market Building, Char- cttetuwn. d "Dlnce. Cardigan Hail, Wednes- Cfly. November 27th. Sale of ptd. ooitcc served free. Muale Webster's (filial-re. Dancing O P. M.’ to m"St. Dumtan’! College DIIAUIUO L“ Placenta "Arsenic and Old w . Kinkora Hall, flulraday, mbfl‘ 8th. Curtain 8.00. "Come to Chriltlan Gulch “W! Sale. Bu»: and After-n 3 l- Wedneuday, December 4t. w 6.000120 Anderaon‘: louse. "noodle Church, Bradalbane. “filieuneTrTY out: on y: new moifiao-nu Rollo Anficndaia 07125:. 1w: siillhccnal Georg» ‘binrifl/ell" NOV; P The occasion was the fail show- '.."'£.’?-- into the death in an oxygen tent explosion of 64-year-old Aubrey Johnson. today made four recommendations concerning use of oxygen and oxygen tents in hos- pital cases. 1. Use of oxygen at less pressure than has been customary. 2. Replacing cloth tents with non- infiammable tents made of glass fibre, 3. That a type of rubber connect- ion made of neoprene or synthetic rubber be used. 4. That. the oxygen supply be tested before it is conmcted to the tent. Dr. Lawson said that in his opin- ion the fire was caused by acci- dental introduction of some foreign substance, probably grease. into the reducing valves. A spontaneous burning took place. Great heat de- veloped and a flanie was throw; out with explosive violence. he eq- geated. 1947 Swim Eye- MONTREAL- rlov I — (CP) - Bleepy-eyed reporteia who probably never knew tberb in auch an hour u 0 am. forgot their tirtrweineaa in a hurry todcv and lave their undivided attention to bathing auiu designed for lady swimmers and beach decorators in 1947. in; of Montreal designer Beatrice Pines’ collection of next. summer'- swim luita and the consensus of than and women who at around a breakfut tabig and watched three putt! Inndela display two dolen euita wee that it’; a pity there's only one slimmer a you. ' These auita, with fancy names pi "svelte," "Peruvian Prin- "Iiack Magic," "Bloomer out." aha "ntp-nip-noorav." have been design-ed to conform with modeaty retulationa of Hanan onnouo dloeeaan author-idea urn-piece wit: are in the 1mi- erily, aklrtc and trunk! attic-It a hadgiong th lent ear, and brumwetkm elouillt-tlna. opener For Reporters Broekington Appointed To Boy Scouts Couneil o MR. L. W. BROCIUNGTON OTTAWA. Nov. 25~Appoint- merit of ‘Leonard W. Brockinglnn of Ottawa as honorary counsel 0i the Boy Scouts Association was announced today by Gerald H. Brown. honorary Dominion aec- rotary. Mr, Brockington succeeds Mr. Justice W. H. Harrison of Saint John, N.B. . The new honorary counsel 1s a former wartime assistant to Prime Minister Mackenzie King and adviser on Commonwealth affairs to the British Minister of I010!‘- mation in 1942-413. ‘Bread Rationing To ‘Continua: In Britain LONDON, Nov. 25--(AP)—Fo0d Minister Sirarhey told the House of Commons today that the stop- page of the soft coal industry in the United Slates “has added a further and more serious compli- cation" to the difficul‘ British food problem and that there 1s “no possibility" of abolishing bread ra- tioning now. ‘Transport difficulties, springing from Maritime strikes in the Un- ited states, have put British grain stocks "very much below” stocks held a year ago. World grain sun- pliea, he said, are about 10000000 tons short of needs for the 1946-47 year. Even this gap may be widened in actual effect hy strikes kn the United States "which have grave- ly affected the ability of both Can- adian and United Slates aflhnr- ities to move wheat for export.” Shoot First Policy Entlangers Policeman MONTREAL, Nov. 25 -—- (OP) — A nizht watchman using the wild Warts old Iun law of "shoot first and ask questions latstr" nearly cost o. Montreal policeman his life laat night. Cnlstable J W Wendt, finding the door oi n fur store unlocked. entered the building intending to telephone the owner. He stopped short when a bullet whizzed by his ear. Then the watchman. WJ. Compton, emerged from the clsh- let's box and explained he thought burglars who stole $3.000 in fur-a tom the store a week ago had paid a return visit. Suits Prove Never-chateau. the ooneeaa‘ to nwdeaty can be forgiven when a pretty girl ltepn lnlide one of the natty models. Peruvian prints. raid to cave been inspired by a vilit to the Metropol- itan Museum of Art in New York. were a feature-o! the show, while hand-painted motifs of such vary- ing objects as guelles and water lilies also caught the eye. lilor the bk girl there was "Hip- Hip-Hooray, with afigathered skirt which [lvea an appearance of alim- neu to big hipl. The thin girl wu remembered In "triumph." a two- piece black. yellow and red num- ber with draped bra and shorts. "Bvelte" waa an all-black whin- tiopmduoer with gathered frvnt and elastic pante lega. Ii‘. warne- acribed as "the swimmers swim. suit" but the brunet who modelled it. didn't need any water to make it look good. llhbrloa ranged from fern? in nylon and the variety of rich c01- mcn gravely injured when a huge Zena Gale in a. mid-Atltntic hur- ricane were brought to a Plymouth hospital today. They were Rlepingcr. 26, and Frank Kern. 24- Ship capt, Prank Koelbel brofllm the Zone Gale into Plymouth after bucking a gale so fierce that it. rc- quired a week to cover 1.000 mil!!- Judgment In Potato Case WOODSTOCK, N.B.. Nov. 25 — (CM-Judgment was given in the Carleton County Court today by Judge M.L. Hayward in the appeals of Max Rose and Fred Rose. who had been fined a total of $6,200 each. or $200 with an alternative of 14 days iniail on each 0131 counts followlnz conviction of selling 31 cat-loads of potatoes a-bove ceiling prices. Judge Hayward dismissed all charges against Max Rose, holding there was no evidence 00 connect him directly Wiiih any of the sales. Convictions on. all counts were af- firmed against Fred Rose but the fine for each offence was reduced to $100 0r o. total of $3100, and the alternative Jail sentence was re- duced from 14 days to i0 on each conviction. Counsel for the Prices Board said ‘he was awaiting instructions as to whether a further appeal will be made. Record Potato Crop Harvested In Ontario (By The Canadian Prose) TORONTO. Nov. 25 -— Ontario fanmers harvested 10,764,000 hun- dredweight of potatoes front 120,- 000 acres this your, the monthly crop report of the Agriculture Department showed today. ‘This was a 3.000.000 hundredweight increase over. the 194d crop and a record year. 1111c previous high mark was set in 1987 with 10,130.- 000 hundredweight bagged. Average price or potatoes as of Oct. 15 this year was reported at $1.72 per hunclredweight compar- ed with $2.32 (or the same date a year ago. Disabled Ship Awaiting Tow ST, JOHN'S, Nfld., Nov. 25 — (CP) - The 7,176-ton American freighter Theodore Parker was wallowing in heavy seas 200 miles Savings Bonds Sales Top First, Second War Loans By ITARCY WDONNELL OTTAWA. Nov. ZS-AOPJ-Sub- lcriptions in the first month of sales of Canada savings bonds surpassed the amounts subscribed in the first. and second war loans in 1940 and 194i, a survey dis- closed today. From Oct. l4, when the Canada bonds went on sale, to Nov. 15, approximately 1,149,180 Canadians subscribed more than $467,223,- 850. Subscriptions in the first. war loan totalled $250,000,000 and in the second $824,945,000. Biggest previous loan wee the 32.000.000.000 ninth victory loan in 1045. These amounts were subscribed 1n the first eight victory 1oans:- Eighth, 91.500.000.000: seventh, 31.500.079.000; sixth, 01.407.576.000; fifth. $1.374,992,000; fourth, $1,- 3083116000; third, $991,339,000; second, $843,127,000; first, $730,- 376,000. Finance officials said 1t was difficult to compare the sales of Canada bonds with those o1 vic- tory or war loan bonds because of the difference 1n the length and type of the sale campaigns. For instance, the victory and war loan bonds were sold mainly during the three-week campaigns. In each campaign there was a house-to-house canvas for aub- scriptions. Business and industry made special efforts to have em- ployees subscribe. Press. radio and other means of advertising were used to spur sales. Most of this fanfare was lack- ing when the Canada bond sales were inaugurated, but still there was good response from Canad- ians. ' ' liomegtidtfSmiply 0f Canadian Cheese Tight NIAGARA FALLS, 01".‘... Nov. 25 -(C P)—- The domestic supply position of Canadian cheese will be “extremely tight” during ‘he next Board. today told the annual con- venticn of the Ontario Association. Mr. Singleton also reported that Canada likely will fail 33,000,000 pounds short in hea- contract to Creamery 01.! Cape Race today waiting for the ‘weather to improve so that a tow line to the Coast, Guard cutter Campbell could be restored. The cutter was standing by the disabled ship after a line which had been put abtlllfd earlier had snapped in a strong gale. Shipping officials said the Theodore Park- er. registered at Les Angles. was unlikely to reach hem before Wed- nesday at the earliest. Meanwhile, Canadian and Amer- ican officials still are keeping. watch for the Newfoundland fish-| lng schooner Francis Robie which I has been unreported since leaving[ Halifax more than two weeks ago. ‘ The schooner, carrying a four-man crew. was en route to Bay of Is- lands. Nfld, The organized search for the missing craft has been ab- andoned but all ships have been requested to keep watch for her. C.P.R. EARNINGS fiTR-IBAL. Nov. 25 - (OP), — Canadian Pacific Railway Oomp- any today reported earnings for the week ended Nov. 21 at 06.048.- 000 compared with $0,915,000 1n the corresponding period in 1945. an increase of $133,000 or 2.2 per cent. INJURED BY HUGE WAVE PLYMOUTH. Eng, Nov. 25 —- (AP) - no United States cattle wave broke over the steamship Ted onwuacheerhileantnalttoibc dlflvlfllofaniayder. ' scotia privateer was the origin of the Canadian Navy—-they were the first manned by Canadians in fight the enemy, Thomas H. Raddall, pro- minent author from Liverpool. N, 5.. today told the Canadian Club in a luncheon address. hinged on the decision made by cape cod Yankees living in Liv- erpool, N.S., to defend selves. by the attack of United $8198 privateera during the American revolution. otherwise have been the 14th seaboard col- any.“ supply Britain with 125,000,000 pounds of cheese in the year end- ing next. March 31. He estimated 1946 cheese pro- ductlon. at approximately 140000.- 000 pounds. of which 94,000,000 pqtlnds would be exported and 46,- 000000 pounds would be available for the domestic market. Product- ion during 1045 was approximately ffilailggxl} nryogméiggufitz’); lowgflmrgg is administered by the various or thekeaérfll Dang, Products provinces under agreement with the Dominion '1he Fedeml Gov- Chief Executive 0f Boy Scouts llere 0n Visit Major-General D. C. Spry, O-Il. D.S.0., chief executive commis- sioner of the Canadian General Council of the Boy Scouts Assoc- iation. arri-ved at the City airport met by Provincial President of the M.M.. and Provincial Commissioner and driven to the Charlottetown Hczteir, . ,_ - During the evening, General Spry was a guest of the Charlotte- town Garrison Officers’ Mess where he renewed old acquainmn- with whom he had fought in the Second Wc-rid War. This morning, General Spry, accompanied by local officals. will be driven about the City zmrl will meet several officials and prominent citizens. In the afternoon at 430, General Spry will meet representatives of the Provincial Scout Associations a! the Charlottetown Hotel in an informal conference. Following the conference, he will be the quest at a quiet dinner and at B80. the General will be the guest speaker at a special meeting of the Char- lottetown Navy, Army, and Al-r Force Officers‘ Club. (Continued on Page 5 Col. 8)- littawa Conference 0n Old Age Pensions OTTAWA, Nov. 2.5 - tCPl-A conferenrc of Dominion and Pro- vincial officials on the adminis- tration nf old age pensions regula- tions opened in camera here to- day. The conference brought together the inter-provincial board estab- ilshed under the Old Age Pensions Act and discussions centred around the interpretation of reg- ulations, posrnble amendments to them and general problems aris- inz from thtir administration. The Old Age Pensions Act now eminent pays 75 per vent of the cost of the p"l1.=i0hS and the Pro- vinces pay 2i! per cent plus the cost of administration. from Halifax last evening. He > as. Boy Scouts. Maior N. W. Dowther.’ Lieut. Col. W. W. Reid. D.S.0. ED" . ces and met many other offlcers| i HEADS RED ARMY Marshal Ivan S. Konev, one of Russia's most brilliant command- ers, has been appointed com- mander-in-chief of Soviet army ground forces, succeeding Georgi iK. Zhukov, according to the Lon- idon Daily Worker, Communist iParty organ. His appointment was first reported last July by United Press, but there had been no of- ficial announcement. Former ll. S. Minister To Turkey Dies _ NEW YORK, Nov. 26 --(AP) - Henry Moxgenthau, Se. United States ambassador to Turkey from 1913 to 1916, died today of a cere- bral haemorrhage at the age of 90. His son, former Secretary of the ‘Praasury, was at his bedside. Mr. Morgenthau, born in Genn- any and brought to the United Stats-s when nine years old, was a wealthy lawyer and real estate de- veloper. He also was interested in a number of banking, insurance and industrial enterprises. He was an early supporter of Woodrow Wilson and chairman of the finance committee of the Dem- ocratic National Committee in 1912 in Wilsons first presidential cam- paign. He was scnt to Constanti- nople by Wilson a year later. Ending his diplomatic assign- ment in 1916, Mr. Motgenthau m- sumed his post. with the DEmOCPE- tic National Committee in the sec- ond Wilson campaign. In 1919, he represented Wilson on a commis- sion investigating the condition oi‘ Jews in Poland. Iibur years later, the League o1’ Nations named Mr. Coal Production lip In September OTTAWA, Nov. ‘Li-Coal pro- duction increased in September 184000000 pounds. Mr. Singleton ascribed the lower production of cheese and Ollie!‘ dairy products to declining 011W!"- of fluid milk. which was expected this year to total loss than 17.000.- 900 pounds n drop of approximately [our per cant from 1945. Production of butter this Y9"? was estimated at approximately 270,000,000 pounds against 293500-- 000 hounds last 3'90?» The" were m) important exports of butler. pmoiéé? 713315.05‘ 0i Canadian llavy (By The Canadian Profl) 101201010, Nov. ‘L's-The Nova ships built. paid for and "Ilhe whole destiny of Canada them- They were driven into it If they had decided the Mnritimes would to 1,426,929 tons, 20 per cent more than the i,18'l.4-29-ton output of September. 1945, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported to- day. At Sept. 30, this year's produc- tion was 12,976,785 tons, compared to 11,944,110 tons in the some! nine months of 1945, J September coke production was only 195.000 tons, compared ioi 189.000 tons in August nnd 2318,0001 tons in September, i945. Total for the first nine months this year was 2.402.000 tons. Last year it was 2.955.000 tons. can} output in September wan higher in all producing areas ug- cept British Columbia. Produc- tion flgures. 'wiih percentages of increases in brackets: Alberta. 714.494 tons (Mi; Nova Scotla. 449.147 121i; Saskatchewan, 125,- 727 (Till; New Brunswick, 29.488 (l5). Tho Brliim Columbia out- put of 108,075 tons was a decrease of nine per cent from the pro- duction of September last year. OTTAWA, Nov. 25-—iCP)-Yoim . mnadiana who have swapped battle dreal for campus garb now number more than the Dommions whole univeraity student body of new“ dgy], it wan disclosed to- day. Scattered in 39 universities from coast to “out. veteran: pursuing college clanea total 35.000 and the Department of Veterans’ Af- tlon studies The great hulk of the siurionls taking courses under the D-V-A. Expect More Veterans In Colleges Next Year fairs said today this number was in Canada, Other colic-rest expected to hit 40000 next _v.>ar as Uni-vm-siw of Nnv Brunswick- more qualifying for college en- Fredericton-SOC; D-iihousiv, Hill- trance complete their mata-icula- fax--’l50. Morgenthau head of a commission to supervise rehabilitation of 1.000,- 000 Greek refugees in Asia Minor. He was in political retirement between the Democratic adminis- trations of Wilson and Fkanklin D, Roosevelt, and emerged briefly in 1033 when the latter appointed him to the American delegation to the hiternational Wheat Confer- ence at Geneva and London. mineral services will be held at Temple Emanu-el here Wednesday. Interment will be private. To Admit German , Scientists To Canada? i i __ ___ l OTTAWA, Nov. 25 -— 1C1‘) The cabinet has been Considering] the admission of Gcnnan scientists‘ to Canada and it is understood; that a derision has been renrhcri‘ that the Dominion should follow the lead of other Allied countries. notably the United States and Russia, in bringing them in. ‘ However. it is indicated that the men will be hand-picked and thati their numbers will not be larsf-f They will probably be nut. to work aiding Canadian scientists in oval- uating and preparing n lame num- E ber of pieces of German equipment and scientific and technical reports already in Chi! 001111111’. is made up of men. but it1ncludes about 2.000 former women members o1 the navy, ormy and the RCA F, An official estimate Ilid "l"! were about 16000 veteran: in their first year at university 12,000 in second year, 4.000 in third year and 2.000 in fourth. Another 1,000 arp inking post-graduate courses- Vetenans enrolled in the univer- sily of Toronto ;ot:.l 9.700—more than one-fourth of registrations‘ av contrast. the rexistrntlon of veterans in universities in 1942. wal only Z4. {caribou at same hours. Gardiner Urges More Grain Be Grown in East A NTAYIKRA FALLS, 0nt., Nov. 2! —- tCPw Agriculture Minister Gardiner today predicted a dwind- ling supply of svestern feed grains for eastern COIISUXITDUUH and urged easbern farmers to increase their own production cf feed if they hoped to maintain their preseni output of livestotit and dairy prod- ucts. i In an address prepared for dc- ii‘.'ery' to the annual convention of the Ontario Creamery Association. Mr. Gardiner: mid it was "certain" that production of these product: could not be maintained at their present rate unless teed grain sup- plies were increased. Production of feed grains had been lower in eastern Can-ado in recent years than immediately be- fore the war while output has been iContinued on Page 5 Col, 8) 41m. is Moi-tar Buf DON'T (RY To PM ‘mun Weft with n’ Q TORONTO, Nov. 25 - Minimum and maximum temperatures: Vancouver 4A Edmonton l Regina . 4 Winnipeg 20 Toronto 50 Ottawa 4B Montreal 4'1’ 40 5S 57 55 52 Sydney 4Q Yarmouth BI ' HALIFAX, Nov. 25 -—(C P) -- Weather synopsis and official inland forecasts issued by the Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax a: 11:15 P.M., Monday .Nov. 25_ Synopsis at 0 PM: Temperatures were near normal in mrthern New Brunswick Mon- day but in the southern parts 01' the hiaritimcs temperatures were much warmer reaching as high a: 60 at Liverpool. However. the mild weather will not last long. Colder air is already pushing across New ‘Brunsvrick tonight and is expected to cover the Maritimes by Tuesday evening There null be snow flurried in the cold air pnrtictiinrly- l'1€f\l‘ the gulf of St_ LRRVNHCP. Forecasts valid ur-“i Titcsdny Prince iitiirarti iniillifil (Wvcrcnst xv-Lh intermittent rain changing to widely scattered snow ilurries Tuesday zifterncon (‘older tomorrow. southwest winds l5 m ph. shifting to north 15 11111.11.- Tucsday. lligh ’I‘uesdny at Char- lottetown 4.’! lligh tide this afternoon H! 1-57 and toniEht at 12. Sun sets this nftemton ai 4.2.1 and rises tomorrow morning at 712 First quarter moon December 1. 44? P. M. Summersidc ildC ezchicsu utes later than Charlottetown. AIR SCHEDULE Chnriniiei0Wh-~M0nCl0n -Lenvl Charlottetown B A. M.. 11.70 0- M- 615 P. M Arrive Charlottetown 6.55 A. M. 135 P. M.. 5.55 P. M. midnight initi- Charlottetown Halifax- Leave Charlottetown 1.45 P. hi. arrivi Charlottetown 4.55 P, M Charlottetown -New Glasgow- Leave Charlottetown ‘i A. M.. 1.45 P. M. Arrive Chariotttown 11.11 A. M.. 5.15 P. M. CAR FERRY "PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND" [move Bcrrlen at 9.05 A.M-, 1 RM. and 4,30 P M. Leave Tnrmentine 1 P M. 730 P M Extra trips are made between on which automobiles are carried. SUNDAY SERVICE From Borden. 1 P.M., 8.45 PM From Tormentine 3 EM. 8 PM. WOOD lSLANllS-JIARIBOU Leave Wood falanda. daily 8 A M. 11 A, M.. 1 P. M, a P. M. and 10.30 .1 u