no Gurdlsl. ‘Ihsee Cents. Morning Daily Founded 1M1. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2o, 1949 MOSCOW l AYS RUSSIA HAD A- BOMB 14 PAGES Wemqtnke Iiuscyforseom- $611011. but 1111181. follow Ric-gym [,3 our guide. MAXIMS OIL‘ .MERE MAN "EROMINENT EcoNomsT KILLED |N FALL Canadian Oil Company Warehouse Destroyed In Early Morning Blaze iiity Firemen Prevent Fire Spreading Id Nearby illi Tanks; Cause iii Outbreak is Being investigated. May Store A-Betnbs In Great Britain LONDON. Sept. I - (AP) - The Evening News said Saturday that United States atom bombs soon may be stored in England. "The news that Russia now has an atomic weapon is expected to result in a closer sharing of atomic secrets between the United States, Britain srfd Canada," the paper sclds. Coming Events "Dime. Grand View Hall, sep- tember 26th. Good music. "Lot 65 Hall tonight show at 5-30. "Miracle o! the Bells." "lillfl your runs, to csraaum Photo Studio. Charlottpto...» "Dance, New Iona East School. ‘Ilieedly. September 27th. "Dance Long River Hall every Wfdnesdsy. Good music. Door pr ze. "Show "The Sullivans" at Clyde ‘River tonight at 8:30. Don't miss i. "Come to the dance Kinkora Halli Monday night, Oct. 10. Good mus c. "Chicken Supper and Dance in Grand River Hall. Wednesday. Sep- tember 28th. "Dance in St. Peter's Legion Hall every Tuesday night. cuff Peters Orchestrer "Now buying ilmithy seed. Reg- istered, cleaned or uncleaned. Mc- Gulsan d: Boyle. "Regular Dance at the "Sea Breeze", Victoria, each Wednes- day. Dancing 9 till 1. "Come to the United Church Supper. Chicken. Ham, salads and September 28th. Cherry Valley "Reserve Tuesgy. “ Jemlber 27th for l-lam and riot Scallop Sup- Mr. Mi. Albion Hall. Supper served M 5 o'clock. "Lot 65 Hall, Monday, Oct, 10. rlvi time fiddling and step dancing contest. Send entries to Linus ‘irninor. "Come to the annual chicken WPPPr, New Glasgow Hail, Wed- "Pid"! evening, Sept. 28th. Serv- iiii.’ from 5.30. "Due to arrive this week, car of Bran and Shorts. Please place orricrs and take delivery from car. llnzclbrook Dairying Co. "Dance in New Glasgow Hall; Tumidiiy night Sept. 27. Dancing f‘ 12.30, good music, canteen ser- Yivc. in nid of rink. . "Unloading cu of Iiasiu. All —hs.clsr mules in stock. Get our prices before "iii/Ins. P. J. Noy a. Co. _"R¢itular dance, East Royalty gink Hail. Tuesday, September l ih. Eastern Rhythm Boys. Danc- Tfiiflg-a) to 12.30. Bus leaving I. M. asphalt t"Don't miss ‘the fiddling and lep-dsncinl contest in Cardigan ‘l Thunder. 90m. 2e. Send en- t i éatalxn-Lemuel Alisn, Secretary "Come to the Bee Supper and %¢@ in Mount stswut Legion u; Bianca“ , Septcmher ma. In [mm s P. u Lights. Stipper served "We! m: friends st st. Mary's t'“"“'“""* "Whine: s o'clock until 101 cuss. eta. WWM» in new l-fsvsn School Sunday. Bsptember sstn Good . canteen 5w some. Danes mans m r. sponsored by AS152‘: Fire completely destroyed the warehouse of the Canadian Oil Co. Ltd., at the end of Grafton street near the Hillsboro Bridge and about two thirds of the buildings con- tents in an outbreak which oc- lcurred about 4.20 yesterday morn- ng. Flames from the burning build- ing were leaping at least, 40 feet in the air as drums of oil exploded and grease and other lubricants burned in the conflagration. Only the courageous work of City ion. Two sets of gas tanks, one be- longing tot the Canadian Oil 00., the other to the McCall-Frontenac 011 Co. were approximately l0 feet sway but were so effectively kept cool by streams of water that neither exploded. Alert work by the railroad also helped alleviate the danger as less than 25 minutes after word was sent out engineer Fenton Higgins assisted by one of the yardmen ar- rived with an engine and moved a railroad tank of gasoline and sev- eral cars of coal to safety. Three lines of hose were employ- ed by the firemen in battling the blaze. Two lines were laid from the water near the railroad cross- ing at Canada Packers, and the other from the only hydrant in the area. The firemen battled the blaze for over two hours. and kept streams of water on the gasoline tanks un- til 10 o'clock. ilnirétnconcern ng the ,o gin of the e. WALK OUT‘ 0F MEETING PARIS, Sept. 2$—(Reuters)—-De- legates from Hungary, Czechoslo- vakia and Poland Saturday walked out of a meeting of the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization after they were defeated in a move to stop UNESCO activities in Germany. FOUND IN 1541 Fernando Dc Soto, a. Spanish explorer. discovered the Mississippi River in i541. firemen prevented further destruct- a] led‘ faio,‘ N.Y.; Hugh. N. also? Man Was Professor Ai Princeton PRINCETON. N.J.. Sept. B (A-P) -- Professor Frank D. Gra- ham, internationally-known econ- omist, saw Princeton University win a football game Saturday and then plunged to his death from the top of Palmer Stadium. Graham, 59, was professor of in- ternational finance at Princeton. A native of Halifax, he was a grad- uate of Daihousie University and later taught there. Police said he plummeted ’l0 feet from the parapet of the stadium. A minute before, in company with his wife, he had seen Prince- ton defeat Lafayette College 26-14. He was apparently killed in- stantly. Mercer Country authorities ascribed death to skull and rib fractures, and listed it as accident. The author of several books on economics, Graham was formerly a consultant to the United States Treasury and served on a number of Government commissions, In 1945 the Government sent him to Germany to study the Nazis’ economic methods in war. Mrs. Mary bouisa Graham told police she became separated from her husband when the crowd of 22,000 football fans began to leave the stadium. Witnesses told police they had seen a man run toward the top of the stadium on the east side of the stadium. and at least two said they saw a. hand disappear over the parapet. Police said they loc- ated no one who saw how Gra- ham reached the top of the 5%- foot wall which stands behind the last row of seats. Besides his widow, survivors in- clude three sons: Frank Jr. of Buf. of Princeton: Ind John, an undergraduate at Swarthmore University; and one sisaer, Mrs. Walter Pengelly of Tor- on . Formal Order For Freight Rates Boost , OTTAWA, Sept. 25 -- (C?) Board of Transportation Commis- sioners Saturday issued the formal order permitting the railways to increase their freight rates by eight per cent. The new rates be- come effective 10 days after the railways file their new tariffs \vith the board, Three Death By ENDRE MARTON BUDAPEST, sopt. 2s __ (AP) _ Laszlo Rajk, a Foreign Minister, and two former communist Party officials were sentenced Saturday to death on the gallows for a pur- ported plot to overthrow Hungary's Communist Government. v They themselves had testified they workéd with Americans and Yugoslavs to toss Hungary under the influence of Yugoslav Premier Tito. (In s note he personally handed Saturday to the Hungarian Min- ister‘ in Belgrade, Tito charged that the trial of Raik and seven others is part of a plot organized by Russia to overthrow the Yugo- slav __ government and replacing it By Robert Goldlein CHICAGO. sept. Q5 firs?) - A group of top scientists contended Saturday that Russia's development of atomic energy means the Uniicd States no longer can prevent West- ern Europe from being attacked. "Western Europe from here on ls st the mercy of Russia." said Dr. Harold C. Urey, Nobel prize win- ner. The scientists also sgreed that if the United States and Russia ultim- ately engaged in atomic warfare it will be at lesst s 10-year military struggle which will require oc- cupstion sl thl final step. All setive in atomic freon the sisrt. the scientists ex- yrelbld their views st s prcis con- ersnceon Russia's reported de- velopment. of atomic energy. The scientists st the press eon- ferencq-besides Urey, were Dr. Leo l professor of ‘ logy st the ity o! Chicago.- Dr. ‘Itrerfin R. Hogness, director of the _Uni- malty lef Chicago Institute of and Biophysics; and research ltsdlobioiogy lsqn Census K. Allison. director of liltfvfllltyfi Institute oi Sentences In Hungarian Treason Trials with a regime "servile to the 1i- 3.51m"), TWO other men wcreaentenced to life imprisonment and one to nine years. Appeals were entered f0!‘ all. though R-ajk protested that "I consider the verdict justified." A technicality delayed a decision in the case of the other defend- ants, Lt-Gen. Gyorgy Phlffy and C01. Bela Korondy. The five-judge people's court ruled it was not, competent to deal with them and zilrtllered them held for court-mar- a . The case attracted the most in. ternstional attention to Hungary since the treason trial of Joseph Cardinal Mindszenty last Febru- ary. The Roman Catholic Primate now is serving a fife term, Contenld U.S. Unable To Defend Western Europe Nuclear Studies. Théy gareed on the points: 1. Russia. because of her vast territory and concealed war in. dustries will not need as many atomic bombs as the United States to reach an atomic weap- ons psr with America. 2. Atomic weapons alone would not be decisive in any such wsr. snd such s. military struggle would last at least 10 years. 3. Russia is at least abreast of the United States in devel- ,ment of long-range rockets- potential carriers of atomic war- heads. _4. Bacteriological warfare is ‘not in the same class" with atomic wsrfsre. A country needs sir superiority to start bscteriologicsi warfare. the msterisls are difficult to s e. and there is s danger the ds- esse will spread beck to the et- tscker. _ 5. Russifs hand is now vastly strengthened in any future dis- cussions en international con- following To Gradge which will be held in the auditor- this afternoon. Dr. duates. two-year course are: MoAusland, Charlottetown; Gertrude Bagnali, Dorothy London. First year course: couche. Col. G. Elliot Full, chairman of the elude l-lon. A.W. Mathesou, Minis- ter of Health and Welfare and members of the Sanatorium Com- mission. Oysier Growers Annual Meeting ‘Beaten sociation and much took place and much active inter- est in the affairs of the Associa- tion was evidenced. The meeting was attended by lVfr. RR. Logic in charge of the Bio- logical Station at was accompanied by his co-work- ers, Messrs Skinner and Wilson. Matters under discussion were Government inspection liming of beds for starfish, grading tank, new ideas in rearing spat, trol of atomic energy. regulations regarding Bedeque Bay. The three retiring directors, Wil- iiam Burleigh, Ellerslie, Foster Sharpe. Bldeford, William Mac- Neill, Summcrside, were reelected and the officers of the Association will be elected at a meetlng of the board of directors, which will be held in the near future, -_ s . U. S. lias Boom In Home-building NEW YORK, Sept. 24 -(AP) —- The United States is in the midst of a house-building boom. Only a few months ago there was a serious slump in home construction. Thcrc are several reasons for the splurge in building. said David Ford/president of the Council of Insured Savings Associations. Strong resistor-ice to the high cost of building cr buying s. house has broken down to some extent. Ford said. Many persons ivalted for a drastic break in prices. When they realized finally there would be no king-size drop, they ussped isle the market, There has been a. modern-ts eas- ing of prices and costs all year re- sulting from lower price tags on some materials and shorter delays in obtaining some critical mater- ia.ls. Another factor, Ford said. is that the house of today is a better-built iob than’ its counterpart of last year. Some authorities maintain the continuation of rent control has rolonged the space shortage and s. in part. responsible for the up- swing in building. Another faction holds the dsys of rent control are numbered and that fear of its end hss influenced many renters to build. Various authorities have estimated rents might rise on average ss much as 25 to 50 per cent if controls were abolished. BIQUEST ANNOUNCED FREDERICTON, Sept. Z5 —(CP) — A bequest of $16,633 to the Unl- verslty of New Brunswick was an- nounced Ssturdsy by Dr. A. W. Trueman, U. N. B. president. The bequest was made by Ml Gert- rude Winnlfred Smith. St. Stephen. N_ 8., who died in 104d, and the income will provide an snnusl $52.5 scholarship for s Charlotte County girl needing financial help in unl- varsity Four graduates will receive their certificates and pins at the grad-u- ation exercises of the Nursing-aides ium of the Provincial Sanatorium W.B. Howatt, Summerside. will address the gra- Thosc who have completed the Jew Ruby Irma Hunter River; Euelah MacRac, New Gertrude Harriet Leckie, Mis- Chairman of the exercises will be Sanatorium Commission. Mrs. Wil- liam Mutch will present the certif- icates and those present will in- The annual meeting of the Oy- ster Growers Association of Prince Edward Island was held Saturday evening in mo. Sungmerside Town Hall with the presfdentj m. Lorne of St. Eleanors presiding. The meeting drew a, large attend- ance of the members of the As- constructive discussion on matters of interest Ellerslie. who stamps, regulations, storage. both cold nnd~ Larger Exhibition Grant F 01' Ch’t0wn Discussed Nursing Aides OTTAWA, Sept. 25—(Special)— Prospects of a larger Federal grant for the annual Charlottetown Exhibition were hL-ld out by Agri- culture Minister Gardiner shortly prior to the adjournment of the House of Commons last week-end. The issue was brought before the chamber by J. Watson MacNaught. M.P., for Prince and parliamentary assistant to the Minister of Fish- eries. Mr. McNaught who was fol- lowing discussion of agriculture es- timates, interposed with the ques- tlon: “In details of the estimates there are grants for exhibitions or fairs in every Province of Canada with the exception of Prince Edward Island. At Charlottetown we have one of the best fairs in Canada. I understand that they are contem- plating some additional construc- tion, and I would ask the minister to take under "consideration ihc possibility of making a grant to that fair next year." lilinlstefs Mr, Gardiner replied that the Charlottetown exhibition is a class A fair which now gets a regular Federal grant of $2,500 a year but that this amount can be capitalized over a ten-year period in order to build up a larger fund. He. added: “Depending on how large n building they (the directors of the Charlottetown exhibition) want to put up, as a class A fair they arc in a position whore it would be possible for them to come to Ottawa and discuss n grant of a larger amount. I cannot say they would obtain it. It would depend on the circumstances." To Chester S. McLure, Progres- sive Conservative member for Queen's, Mr. Gardiner said there are no class A fairs in Nova Scotla or New Brunswick, Char- lottetown being the only one to fall in this category in the Mari- times. The amount allocated to Charlottetown for 1948-49 the min- ister said, was $3.500. Statement Bovine ‘LB. Incidence further question inci- In reply to a by Mr, MacNaught on the dance of bovine tuberculosis in Princejidward Island Mr. Gar- diner emphasized the extremely low prevalence of the disease in lhnt Province, Giving statistics, he said: "I believe there are about 100,- 000 cattle in Prince Edward Island and only about n dozen reactors in the whole group. In other words. the Island is pretty well cleared up." As to the bovine tuberculosis situation in Nova Scotin, the Min- ister told Frnnk T. Stanfield, Pro- gressive Conservative membcr for Colchester-Hanfs: "All the counties of Nova Scotin are restricted areas. I should not like to say they are nil fully test- ed and clenr to the extent that obtains in Prince Edward Island." In. regard to experimental farm stations , the Minister assured Mr. McLure ihnt there is no intention on the pnrt of the Government to reduce the number of the experi- mental stations in Prince Edward Island. 1f it should happen that n certain invcstigntlonnl project was concluded nt one station, ihc work may be taken up nt another stn- iion some distance away, he said. Mr. McLurc raised the point that a very fine illustration farm at South Rusiico run by John C. Cldrk was being closed. The Fed- eral grant for this sintlon, the Queen's member said, was too lo\v to continue its operation on Q present scale, Old Cur Ferry In Dry Dock At Saint John SAINT JOHN. N.B.. Sept. 25 — (OH-The Canadian Government ship Dollard will enter dry dock here soon for repairs under a $30-- 000 contract. The Dollnrd is used for buoy and other navigational work in ihe Bay of Pisndy area. Three other vessels are being re- paired or overhauled st the dry dock. Work on the aircraft carrier Magnificent is expected to be com- pleted by Oct. 20. The car ferry Prince Edward Island and Canada's weather ship H.M.O.S. St. Stephen are being overhauled. ’ WINS SCHOLARSHIP FREDERICTON. Sept. 25 —(CP) -- David Gordon Mott, Dalhousie. N. 8., was named Saturday as first winner of the Tom Hickey me- morial scholarship at University of New Brunswick. Tenable for two years, it is valued st $000. 0P INDIAN ORIGIN More states in the United States have names originating from 1nd- isn worth than from any other language. that‘ of the steel industry and steelworkers lis- ten as Federal Mediation Director Cyrus Ching, a Prince Edward Is- lander, (seated, center) reads Pre- sident Truman's letter asking for TRUCE CALL-Leaders another six-day extension of the Police Widen Probe In Plane Crash Murder Modern Farming Hazardous lob. Survey Shows REGINA. Sept. 25 —(C P) — Ever feel like trading that city lob for a little farm home in the peaceful prairie west? Ir so, consider this: Modern farming is one of the most hazard- ous occupations on the continent. A farmer is liable to be knlcked by a startled horse, or to be gored by his bull, or injured in s fall from a stairway, through a trapdoor or from a hayloft. But the widespread use of mach- inery-a. development particularly marked in the prairie west-has added mechanical to animal and natural dangers. Saskatchewan, Canada's greatest wheat-growing province, offers an example. It has 120,000 farmers. They own approximately 85,000 tractors and 40,000 combines. Tractor accidents malke up- s large part of farm machinery mis- haps. It's common for owners to sprain or break their wrists or arms while cranking tractors. Up-to-date figures are difficult to obtain. But during the harvesting season. such accidents in Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba. are reported almost daily. The Dominion Bureau of statist- ics. at the request of the Federal Department of Agriculture, pre- pared a. summary which showed that in the sample period June 1946-47, fires and accidents had Cost farmers more than 1,000,000 man-days. In the period under review, about 37,200 persons suffered accidents, more than one third of them sev- ere enough to cause lay-offs of from iwo to three weeks and $5 per cent necessitating absences of frcm three to 10 weeks. The bureau found that accidents had permanently incapacitated 400 farm operators and disabled 2,100 persons for life. (By Richard OTWIMI) FRANKFURT, Germany, Sept, 25 —(AP)—Germnn brains. equipment and uranium ore helped Russia break open the secret of the atomic bomb. "Without the help of German scientists," a high American of- ficer said today. "Russia could never have developed an atomic weapon so soon." More than 200 German experts are reported here to have worked in the Soviet Union since 1945. ln Germany, tens of thousands of unwilling German workers have been and are being forced to work pitchblende mines in the Soviet zone. Pitchblende isa source of uranium, a producer of atomic en- ergy. Every ounce is flown to Russia. German scientists started work on an atomic pile before the war ended. The Russians were not slow in picking up German atomic rc- lied victory brought it to an end. In Eastern Germany, some Ger- man scientists were waiting for the Russians. According to reports. they had already packed German equipment used in nuclear re- (Contlnued on Page 5 Col. 4) search at the point where the Al- Sta steel strike truce. Seated with him are Philip Murray (left), CIO pre- sident, and Adm, Ben Moreell, of Jones and Lauglilin Steci Co. Standing are Charles M. Hook (left), of Armco Steel, and Clar- ence Randall, of Inland Steel. By William stewsrt QUEBEC, Sept. 25 —(_CP) —<Pol- ice during the week-end extended from s. shoddy downtown district in Quebec to remote St. Lawrence north shore points their investigat- lon into a "love-plot" bomb explos- ion that wrecked an airliner Sept. 9 killing 23 persons. Saturday they led J . Albert Guay, sharp-faced little Quebec Jeweller. to court and accused him of mumering his wife via the plane crash in which pretty Rita Guay was a. victim. After the charge was read to the fidgeting IiZ-year-old Jeweller he went back to Quebec Provincial Police cells. Meantime sombre vigilance was maintained over Madame Arthur Pltre, occupant of a tiny apartment in shabby Monselgneur Gauvreau Street. Key Witness The buxom. 41-year-old woman was under police guard as the key witness in the plane sabotage case. Police said her act last Tuesday of absorbing an over-dose of sleep- ing pills-they left her unconscious for 72 hours~broke the case open and eventually produced an admiss- ion that she was the mysterious courier who shipped an explosive package aboard the plane. Mrs. Pitre declared she was an unwitting participant in destruct- ion of the plane; that she thought the parcel she addressed to Bale Comeau, Que, on the north shore, contained a. statue. Tonight that is about as far, pub- licly. as the case has progressed. R.C M.P., Provincial and Private investigators are try ng to tie to- gether all the threads of evidence scattered about. While R.C M.P. flew down the St. Lawrence to Sept Ilcs and Bale Comeau. Provincial Police worked around Quebec and through Quart- ier du Palals, the unkempt district where the bcimib plot seemed to have been hatched. Police investigators said while the bomb that explosion had Subscriptions Delivered $6.00 Mill $5.00; other Provinces 8t U. 5- 07,00 947 Official Soviet Announcement lias Few Details By Ennv Gllatsu... MOSCOW, Sept. 25 — (Al-, An official Russian statement mud today that Soviet Russia has pub- sessed the secret of the atom bomb since 1947. The statcrxtcnt was is- sued by Tnss, the Soviet news ag- encv, AL Lin: same time Russzn. renew. ed (icmands for yiroliibition and control of the atom bomb, This was the first official reac- tion i0 President Truman's an- nouncement Friday that indica- tions have been discovered of a, rcccnt zitcznic r-xyalcrion in Russia. 'l‘he 'l‘uss statement did not con- firm 0r deny such ull explosion. However, it recalled the state- ment of V..\i. Molotov, then Soviet Foreign Minister, on Nov. 6 .1947, that the scctrct of the atom bomb "has long rcascrl to exist." It added: “This declaration meant that the soviet Union had already discover- ed the secret of the atom weapon and it has at its disposal this wea- pon." Interesting Paragraphs But it was the last two para- graphs of the Tass statement which attracted the attention of observ- ers here, These paragraphs were: "It should he pointed out that the Soviet Government, despite the existence in its country of an atomic weapon, adopts and in- tends adopting in the future its former position in favor of the ab- solute prohibition of the use of the atomic weapon. "Concerning control of the at- omic weapon, it has to be said that control will be essential in order to check up on fulfillment of a de- clslon on the prohibition of pro- duction of the atomic weapon." (Russia long has advocated out- lawing the atomic bomb. She also has stated repeatedly that she fa. Continued on page ltieool. ii MANY A MAN Has Barn Successful. Bsctusc live. ‘tins Nature 4hr. TORONTO, Sept. 25 -(CP) -- Mlnlmum and (maxi-mum temper- atures: Vancouver" 51! G4; Edmon- .011 44 ca; Rcgiira '44 s1. Winnipeg 52 T5; ’I‘orouio 58 5T; Ottawa 34 57'. ‘Montreal 41 55}; Saint John - 612 Monctou 44) 59; l-lnlifnx 4'7 60; Charlottetown 4T 58; Sydney 47 64; Ynrmouiii i5 5G; Si. John's 48 61. HALIFAX, Sept. 25 —- (CP) —— Officini inland weather forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public wweathcr office at Halifax. valid until midnight Monday: Synopsis: Sunday thcrc were scattered Germans Helped Russia To Open Atomic Secret search, and when the Russians came. they lcft for Moscow. Oiher German nuclear physicists needed wooing. They were offered high pay and good homes, Some were forcibly "recruited." In 194T, Dr. Werner Heisenberg, one of Germany's foremost atomic specialists, said three of his clos- est friends were in Russia. They were Professor Gustav Hertz, who built Germany's cyclo- tron for smashing the atom and is an authority on the separation of U-235 from uranium; Dr. Robert Dope]. a prominent Leipzig physic- ists, and Dr. Ludwig Belilogun. who worked with Heisenberg on developing Germany's atomic pile. Dr. Hertz was reported today to be working in a Russian Govern- ment instiiilio in fhe Crimea. Another German nuclear scient- ist who worked in Russia was n Dr. Alfred Krebs. who escaped from the Soviet Union in 1947 and subxquently went to the United s. In March, 1947, Krebs told this correspondent: "From what I have seen. I believe Russia will have a bomb similar to that of the Un- itert States within three to five showers and widely scattered thun- derstorms over the Maritimes, and. in the north shore region snow- flurrics were reported. Skies were clearing in the evening as a bish- pressure arcs moved eastward from, the Great Lakes. with light winds and clear skies thcre was likely to be frost in most low-lying sections of the Maritimcs and Eastern Quebec. Cool dry air will rcmnln over the district and the tvcatlier is fore- cast to remain fine except for some afternoon cloudiness on Monday. Regional forecasts: - Prince Edward island: Cloudy. clearing during the night. Monday clear, clouding ovcr in the after- noon, clearlng again in the even- ing. Much the same temperatures Monday as on sunday. West winds 15. Dow and high Monday st Charlottetown 42 and 58. High tidc today at 12.52 A. M. and 1.44 P. M. Sun rises this and sets 604. Summcrslde tide eighteen min- utes inter than Charlottetown. morning at 6.04 BOIIDEN - TORMENTINE FERRY years." WEEK DAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Cape ‘fermenting 0.10 A.M. 10.85 A.M. 1.00 PM. 2.40 PM. 4.80 EM. 1.80 EM. SUNDAYS Lv. Borden Lv. Capo Tormentlne 0.10 A.M. 10.35 AJL 1.00 PM. 800 P-ll- 0.45 P-M. 8.00 Pl