MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN woman sit by it. A hearth is no hearth unless s W our-Ian Charlottetown. Summeraido 015.00 per umum, m..w;..,. .. P. E. I. 00.00. other Provinces and U. S. A. ll2.o0 per asusum. i The Pe's ape p Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew Feeling Of Pessimism Settles Over In Wake Of By Relman Morin LONDON, Oct. 28 - (AP) A brooding sense of dissatisfac- i.on, streaked with pessimism about the future. settled over B.-.t.aln today in the aftermath of Coming Events "Masquerade Dance in Vernon River liall, October 29th. "Reserve Nov. Zlst and 22nd for Notre Dame liigh Tea. "Cleaning and buying "Tim- othy acad." John Leard, Crapaud "Paying 10 cents for clean Tim- othy Seed. Mccuigan and Boyle. "Masquerade dance Clinton Ilsll, Monday, Oct. 29th. Lunches snlil. "Masqm.4i'ndc- Dance Charles Hall, October 30th. music. at St. Good "Turkey supper. French River Hall. Tuesday. Oct. 30. Proceeds in aid of hull. "Masquerade dance at French nu-cr hall. Monday. Oct. 29th. Dancing 9-1. Prizes. "Buying good quantity mixed g'.'lln. Must be over half barley. luiion do Splllctt. "Come to the Regular Dance at Bonshaw every Tuesday night. MacNeiil's Orchestra. ' 'Chiclten-ham supper a n d dance in Wlltslllrc Hall, Thurs- day. Nov 1st in aid of rink. "St. Margaret's Parish Chicken and Hans Suppcr,'Tuesday. Oct. 30th. If stormy, Wednesday. I "Parkdale Concert Tonight! 50 Tltkets available at door for those without reservations. Come earlyl "Lot 65 Hnll.'-Tuesday. Oct- oiwr 30th. bingo. Cash and other l'iilIlfil'llC prizes. Dance. Time 8.30. "Come in and talk over our Plifllla Finance Plan for feeding tour hogs and poultry. Dillon dz Spilictt. ”sliur Gain Cavalcade. Trac- .-itiv Hall. November 2nd. at 8 it. M. sponsored by Home 'and School. "Halloween Party. Bazaar. sale of Lunches and Candy. Carleton Sirlzng School. Tuesday. October Triltll. "Reserve October 29th for Mas- itwcrade Dance at Darnley Hall. ills of lunches.' Sponsored by '. I. "For Snapshots that will not lids mail your Films and Nega- lives to Garnhum Photo studios. Charlottetown. "Chick-on and Ham Supper, Afton Hall. October (lath. Spon- -Wvd by New Dominion United Church Ladies' Aid. '."Sianle,v Bridge rink hail. lttcsday. Oct. .10. big masquerade dance. Four prizes for best cos- tumes. Juiiglni 10.30. "Buying live fowl and chicken "3ii.v. We weigh and pay at farm. Write or phone collect for pick up scrvice. Smith Bros, Pownal. "Notice. A meeting will he l'"l'l in Hampshire School on Ttwsdns. Oct. 30 at 3 o'clock. an interested in building hall please niicnd. "Come to the Hallowe'en fiance at Wlnsloe Station Hall. lit-rlnoiuiay. Oct. .11. Sponsored lav the Milton Hockey Club. Prizes for best costumes. F"Mammoth masquerade dance. Bonner Stewart's Barn. Brackley "Itch. Tuesday, Oct 30th. Buses Hvlng I.M.T. 9.30 p.m. Coma masked and win a lovely prize. g."Annual Meeting of Hope River Egedlt Union Ltd, will be held in 0 Credit Union Hall, Hope River Einndny. October min at ii P. M. special speakers in attendance. ,"P0ultrv wanted. Loading im 3'71 and chicken weekly for be-ll -anadian and American markets. 9 live you a pick up service and mush and pay on farm. Paying Pit market prices. Write or chone rsss day. ms-as night. antral Sn and Poultry atatmn. Britain Election the general election. Winston Churchill. again Prime Minister. announced his cabinet Saturday afternoon. There were no surprises in his choices. Most of them are experienced men with proven qualifications for government. But this government conlrcnts the same two towering problems that faced the defeated Socialist Labor Party-economic anaemia and some badly deteriorated re- lations with other countries. Many persons wonder whether the new Conservative regime will be better equipped to handle them. The essential fact about Britain today is this: It is a divided country governed by a minority party. Hui Minority Vote More men and women voted Labor than Conservative. Churchill today has a majority of 27 over Labor in the House of Commons. and an over-all major- ity of 18. Many observers believe this is not a workable majority. The Tories do not. have the same tight discipline that Labor had. Many of the new members are business and professional men with commitmen-ts outside the Commons. So there already is talk of har- assment by the Socialist oppos- ition. long sessions, a political war of attrition. In political circles in London. it is considered not unlikely that these tactics could result in the necessity for another general election within six months. May Move Slowly Few persons expect that Chur- chill will start. immediately. to undo the "British revolution". It has created some political un- touchaubles, and the experts be- lieve he will move slowly and cautiously into the vast areas of British life that were changed by the Socialists. But sooner or later. to fulfill the purposes of having been 7(REi'tTai'cFPiTi;e"is"coWii" Royal Couple Use New jiamps EDMONTON. Oct. 28 -(CP)- Princess Elizabeth and Prince Philip have been using the new Canadian four-cent stamp bearing their likenesses, issued to com- memorate the royal visit. They have been sending letters with them from their holiday re- treat on Vancouver Island and from the royal train on the way from Vancouver to Edmonton. Postal officials have expressed some dissatisfaction with the like- masses of the Royal Couple on the violet stamp, but no comment on that. point was available from the couple in response to it query sent by a reporter to the royal train. Few oitif Developments in Canal Zone B By Edward Pollak CAIRO. Oct. as - (AP) -The Egyptian State Council today ap- proved general mobilization of manpower and drafting of all Egyptians between 18 and 50 "in case of war or threat of war." It also provided for setting up a high council of war headed by Prime Minister Muatapha El Na- has Pasha, To become law. this prepared- ness move in the British-Egyph ian dispute over the Suez and the Sudan needs only approval of the cabinet ministers. They drafted the mobilization bill. Wvhen parliament is in recess, as it is now. the cabinet can issue decrees "if this is required by urgent circumstances." Britain in the last fortnight has poured thousands of troop rein- forcements into the canal zone and has military control of the canal in the face of Egyptian labor, food and water supply boycotts and mob demonstrations. Egypt's general mobilization bill provides that the high war coun- cil under the Prime Minister would also include the ministers of war. interior. commerce, com- munications and national econ- omy and the army chief of staff. The council would be respons- ible for organizing conscription. providing' communications and supplies for the armed forces. co- ordinating national production and maintaining order and secur- ity behind the army. The bill also empowers the- authorities in case of war or threat of war to requisition neces- sary supplics for armed forces and set up courts-martial. Saturday Egypt formally de- ' rnandeci that Britain pull out of the Suez Canal area immediately. A note handed to the British Government said that continued British occupation of the Suez is a "shameless violation" of the United Nations charter. The note -ioREtEu”.:E'orTr7rEa"1'5-cci7-I;- Five Killed in Quebec Traffic Crash DRUMMONDVIDLE. Quc.. Oct 28-(CP)- Five persons died as the result of a traffic accident at nearby St. Cyrllle Saturday night Dead are: Paul-Emile Paquetlc. His daughter. Gliisline. Claude Godkin. 17. Mrs. Raymond Tourigny, 21. Lucien Lecierc. 21. All were residents of this in- dustrlai centre, 67 miles north- east of Montreal. Mr. Paquette and young Lcclorc died in hospital early today while the three others were killed out.- right. , The accltleni occurred miles north of here Tcurlgny's car rammed into the six-year-old cl-Zlit when Mr. rear of a parked truck. Mr Tourigny escaped without injury. FORT WILLIAM. Oct. 23 -(CP)- Prlricass Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh arrived here by air from Rivers, Man., at 7:23 p. m. EST today. RIVERS. Man.. Oct. 28 -(CP)- Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh were welcomed back to Manitoba t ay by is cheering throng of 00. persons. includ- ing 120 wounded veterans who travelled IN miles to see them. The royal couple flew into the joint air training centre here at 3:03 p. in. CST (4:08 p. in. BS1!) today from Saskatoon. In s. one-hour stop. they received the cheers of farmers and town- foik from rural Manitoba. And they brought cheer to the veterans as they spent 15 minutes with them alone. The veterans had been disap- pointed when no stop was made at milisry hospitals during the royal couple's visit to Winnipeg Oct. 10. Government and army officials arranged the special trip to Rivers, and the Royal couple doubled the scheduled ienlth of their stop to visit them. lblmlflui. Oct. 3 -(CP)- Tlio frontier people from the fringe of Oansdrs northland came into this mushrooming "gateway to the '-We on: . mg. no Strut. on-gloat: north” Saturday to led the Prince Royal Couple At Fort William On Return Trip Philip and Princess Elizabeth. Mackinaw-clad oilfield workers. ranchers and farmers. whites and Indians. they swelled Edmonton's 170.000 population to the point where an estimated 200,000 damp but eager onlookers saw Elizabeth and Philip move about in a dull drizzle. The polyglot crowds of this most northerly city of the royal tour chased the pair around the city from point to point. occasionally breaking through police and mili- tary cordon: to get. a close-up view of the visitors. now on the way can after their transconti- nental western swing to the Pacific coast. .Elir.abeth and Philip. rested from a three-day private holiday on the west coast after a tiring function- fllled 3.000 miles. seemed to take to the we” .. with renewed en- thusiasm. They smiled and waved as the crowds, 20.000 at. n time crushed in to touching distance. And Elizabeth. in an outdoor speech to a crowd in front of the domed Legislature Building. told them she and Philip would like to see more of this booming northern area. and hope to return "one day". "Above all." she said. "I wish we could see those people who live and work. under pioneer eon- ditians, in the north." " New Atomic LAS VEGAS. Nev.. Oct. 23 - (AP)-A dazzling new weapon in America's atomic bag-a medium- sized bomb with a lazy-after- cloud-was dropped over the Nev- ada desert today. The bomb, apparently dropped from an air force B-29. exploded with a high flash and after glow, visible on Mt. Charleston, 50 miles away. The ball of fire seared against a purple mountain background at 7:20 a. m.. PST. (10:20 a. m.. EST). For several brief moments it put the bright morning sun to shame. The bomb burst at an elevation that appeared to be at least 1.000 feet above the floor of Yucca Flat. Its flash was considerably greater than that of the baby A bomb. unveiled at the Atomic Energy Commission grounds last Monday. Observers agreed that it did not appear as bright as the blasts set off here last January and Feb- ruary. Strangely. the detonation, for Tested in Nevada Desert all its spectacular aspects. was Snow. Rain Brings Down News Wires HALIFAX. Oct. 25' -(CP)-- Show and rain late tonight disrupted Canadian Press wire facilities west of Saint John. N. B.. and resulted in it loss of complete news coverage to most Maritime newspapers. Cable "troubleshooters" were reported working on the lines and they are expected to be in order tomorrow. There was no complete cov- Ci'8::e of today's National Hoc- key League games as a re- sult of the wire failure. Ontario Merchant Kidnapped; Found Seriously Injured GALT, Ont.. Oct. 23 - (op) - Edward Dunhrocise. promin- em. Kitchener. 0nt.. shoe mer- chant. was kidnapped on a Gait street Friday night and was found Saturday on a coun- try road with a broken leg and his chest crushed. He apparent- ly had been run over with his own automobile. Dunbrooke. 58. told police than when he went to his car late Friday night. two or three men were in it. He said he was dragged into the vehicle. beaten and robbed. The men then drove 10 miles out of Gait and tossed Dun- brooke out. They then ran over him with the car. He said he lay on the ground unable to move until 8 A M. Saturday when he was found by a farmer. Police said the kidnappers abandoned Dun- brooke's car after it went into a ditch. l Princess Drives Train 20 Minutes EDMONTON. Oct. 28 -- (CF) - Princess Elizabeth drove the royal train's 315-ton locomotive for 2.0 minutes Saturday. The fireman was Prince Philip. "It was I magnificent exper- ience." said the Princess when she stepped from the huge mountain- type engine after handling the con- trols from Yates to Peers. Alta., a distance of 14.4 miles. ' The Princess. dressed in light blue raincoat. kerchief. black rub- ber shoes and leather gloves. got. the train off to a smooth start at Yates and brought it to a halt at Pearl without a Jolt. V At llosevesr. pauengers on it westbound transcontinental train halted at a siding were surprised to see the princess waving from the locomotive of the paaslng royal train. - Yam and Peers are a few miles east of ldson. where the Royal Couple earlier made n short stop on their Journey from Vancouver to Edmonton. Weapon is not felt by observers on Charles- ton peak. or in Las Vegas, 75 miles away. But the odd, zig-zagging cloud which stretched for miles across the desert before disintegrating was seen by hundreds of early Sunday morning risers. This was America's 19th atomic explosion. unofficially. With Rus- sia's known trio of blasts. it brought the world's total to 22. For purpose of handy reference. it could well go down as the "Lazy Z" bomb. The A. E. C. declined to verify that the bomb was dropped iroin a plane. issuing only its routine CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA. MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, 1951 KOREAN TRUCE TALKS TIED UP OVE Egyptian Gov'i:” Approves War Mobilization Bui SiiIT Good Hopes Of Agreement By NATE POLOWETZKY MUNSAN, Korea, Oct. 29 (Monday) - (AP) - Allied and Red truce negotiator. meeting for the fifth time at Panmunjom at 11 A.M., today t9 P.M.. Sunday. E. S. T.), were deadlocked on where, to draw a cease-fire line. . The Communists want a buffer; zone five to 12 miles south of the' present battle line. The Allies in- slat on the battle line, mostly well inside North Korea. A United Nations command: spokesman estimated the differ-l ence involved about 1,000 square miles. Red Newsmen Optimistic There was no indication that any quick settlement was in prospect, However. Communist CCliiiEfTl')'ld- ents at Panmunjom expressed op- timism. ' announcement that there had been a. nuclear explosion at the Nevada test site. But. from Mt. Oharleston this is what I saw: The B-29. front the Air Forcest Strategic Weapons Command atf Albuquerque. N. M.. swooped over-' the test site accompanied by two (Continued on Page in col. 4) . Gifts Reminiscent Of PEI To Be Presented A set or thand-coloured pictures showing Prince Edward Island at its summer best, a birch-bark canoe for Prince Charlie and a specially bound volume of "Anne of Green Gables" for the Princess Anne. will be among the gifts to be presented to ,T ir ltoyal High- hesses the Prince Elizabeth and the Duke of Edin-btrrgh when they visit Charlottetown on November 9.g They will be supplementary in the Presentation to be made to the Princess Elizabeth by Fire- mier Jones when he welcomes her on behalf of the Province on the balcony of the Provincial Building. The series of six beautifully colored pictures of Island scenes. to be presented by the City at the ceremony at City Hall. are set in attractive natural blond satinwood frames which form a perfect background. For Prince Charlie. the hand- made birch bark canoe of the type used by the Indians in early days! is something to delight the neartl of any boy. it was made by the Iiiicmaca at Lennox Island and is a two-loot long true replica. it is complete with paddles. and an additional touch was added by. the maker in supplying. on hisl own initiative. an Indian spear used in catching eels. The copy of L. M. Montgomery's famous Island story for the Prin- cess Anne will be bound in hand- tooled leather. with the crest of Prince Edward Island as well as illustrations of native wild flowers. The pictures for Princess Eliz- abeth include hand-colored photo- graphs of Government House in its summer setting of tall whiic birches; a scene at Fort la Joie. early French capital of the is- land; a view of Victoria Park, roadway taken from Government, House grounds, with the harbour in the background: Cavendish beach in the National Park; l..eard's Cove, and Green Gables. Liberals To Back Churchill LONDON. Oct. 28--(AP)--Wim ston Churchill tonight won a qualified pledge of support from the Liberal Party for his new Conservative Government and its narrow majority in the House of Commons. But Liberal Party headquarters announced that Clement Davies. the Liberal leader. had turned down an offer of in place in the Government. The Liberals pledged their six votes to the aid of the Conserva- tI,ves' 18-seat majority in the House of Commons on "measures clearly conceived,in the interest of the country as a whole." Wearing his old "siren suit"- the zip-fronted overalls which he adopted in London's blitz- Churchill conferred , with Davies twice during the week-end. SAINT JOHN. N. B.. Oct. 28- (CP) - The Union of Drivers and Maintenance Workers employed by City Tranolt. Li.d., decided tochy to defer strike action un- til Wednaadsy. Previously. the strike for higher wages and a ahortor working week had been scheduled to start. at I AM. to- HIUHOI 'ment," one of them told Allied cor- "I feel certain a. few miles are not going to hold up an agree- respondents while the sub-com- mittces of both sides were meeting: Sunday. Despite the snarl. the Allied command disclosed that the Com- munists had come around to the view long held hy the U.N. team- that the only realistic cease-fire line would be in relation to the current battle line. The Reds have abandoned their previous insistence on the old 38th parallel political boundary. This was a long way from solv- ing the problem, however. Two Meetings Hold The two-man sub-committees met twice for a total of about four hours Sunday. arguing over the exact "line of contact" oi: the op- posing armies. This -line of contact. is wherettlje shooting actually occurs. Its loba- tion is considered important be- cause it is out in front of the main defence lines of both sides. The Allied proposal made to the Reds Thursday. when the sessions resumed after a 64-day suspension. called for a 2'5-mile-wide buffer zone centred on the advancing skir- mish line. A United Nations command spokesman said the Reds insisted the Allied definition of the skir- mish line was all wrong. and of- fered to prove it by drawing up their own version. When they (lid draw it. a UN communique said, it was found in be as mtich as two to three miles south of the U. N. version at many points but practically identical "along some other major portions." By Philip ('larIie TEHRAN. Iran. Oct. 28 -(AP) -A Communist plot to overthrow, shah Mohnmmcd Rem Pahlovil was reported uncovered in n poi- ice raid Saturday night on an un- derground hcaiiquartcrs of the outlawed Ttcd Tudeh Party. Authorities said the rni tip the most important in the last three years. The party was declared illegal after the Shall was nicked by nssassinis bullets in February. 1949, but it has continued operat- ing covertly. In Saturday night's raid polirr reported seizure of documents anti thousands of lcarii-ts calling on turned iscox-cry Iranians to get rid of the Shah and found.-1 "national govern- ment." Police said they found "very im- poriant documents. which may Three things to sinus-sin. Into. and selfishness. MAXIMS , OPA. 'Ml-DRE MAN 16 PAGES The Guardian. lin Conh. Morning Daily loundad 1801. BUFFER ZONE 7 Killed, 25 Injured VVhen Greyhound Bus Goes Over Embankment By Robert Wells OAKLAND, Calif., Oct. 38 - (AP) - A Greyhound bus plung- ed 40 feet off a ramp on the Bay Bridge today and pancaked on 32 occupants. killing seven and injuring the other 25. "Get me out. get me out", the survivors pleaded after the bus crashed through a steel restrain- in:-,' fence and fell on its top which was crushed down to seat level. The bus. inbound from Salt Lake City, went out of control after hitting a concrete block chewed out of an abutment by I ca:-ecning gar ahead of it. Lengthy Rescue Job Rcscucrs worked for an hour. and 46 minutes to pull the bus apart and remove the last of the llapped dead and injured fion-. the blood-sputtered wreckage. Policeman Art Dezotte said the freak accident was set off by a; Kansas car which threw a huge chunk of concrete directly into the path of the oncoming bus. The concrete block measured three feet long. 1 1-2 feet wide and 1 1-2 feel. thick. The bus hit the chunk with its left. front wheel, tearing s. huge gash in the tire. The bus went out of control. It cammed across the opposite lanes of traffic. ripped through 100 feet of the restraining fence and dropped 40 feet. One of the first to reach bus was S. Q. Bryant. a struction worker. He and De- zolte smashed windows and. moved four or five persons. "At first". Brya-nt said. "every- one scented to be unconscious. There were moans but no scream- ing that I can remember. Then. as we kept working. more and more seemed to regain conscious- nc.-.-. That's when the scream- ing and crying began." the Driver Killed Among the dead was the bus driver. Vane Edward Elshire. Sacramento, Calif. The accident occurred at 52R A.M.. (8:22 A.M., EST). The bus. after ripping through the steel fence. rolled the 40 feet down to a Southern Pacific Rail- road right of way. It hit first on its upper right- hand side. The blow smashed the top down to seat level. Every seat on the right. side was smash- Red Plot To Overthrow Iranian Shah Foiled pamphlets attacked the Shah's character and morals. An undia- closed number of Tudeh Party mcmbcrs was arrested. The Tudeh Party was officially blamed for tearing down street signs of Tchran's Avcnuc Churchill Friday after Winston churchlilts election victory in Britain. The avenue was named flllrlllz the historic Roose- velt-Churchill-S t a ll n conference here in 1948. Although backed by extremist anti-British Mcsiem elcments,the goveriiment. deplore-ii the sign destruction and put up new Cliurchili mprkcrs. while the delicate American-led oil ftcicrs continued in Washing- ion, the government here stood firm on its oil nationalization plan that has put the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company out of business at the huge Abndan refinery and in lead to further riiscnveries." The the Khuzisian oil fields. By Patrick (Jrouo VATICAN CITY. Oct. 20 - (Reuters)--iPnpe Pius XII Satur- day launched his most vigorous attack yet on an Eastern Europ- ean Communist government in an apostolic letter to the Catholic clergy and laity of Czechoslovakia. lie called on the 6.000.000 Cath- olics of Czechoslovakia. their bishops and priests to face martyrdom rather than betray their faith. He told them "remember that men may take away your liberty. expose you in public loathing. throw you into prison. even con- demn you to death... "They can make martyrs if they want. but they cannot make traitors to the Ohrlstlan religion- s.a we hope and pray to God- so long as all persevere with most firm will in obedience to the laws of God and of the Church. It was the Pope's second direct Pope Pius Critical Of Czechoslavakian Govit onslaught within six weeks on a Communist government of Eastern Europe. On Sept. 17 he published a letter of encouragement to the Catholics of Poland. Saturdayls apostolic letter. writ- ten in Latin. was the first direct Vatican attack on the Czechoslovak Government since Mhrch when the Catholic Church excom- municated all Communist minist- ers concerned in the persecution C Catholics and all priests who collaborated with, them. A week before then, the Com- munist government imprisoricd the Archbishop of Prague. Ci-year-old Monsignor Joseph Benn. and appointed an excommunicated priest to administer his arcti- diocese. Czechosiovakirs second arch- to Vatican information. bishop. Monaignordosepy Matocha. of Olomouc, Moravia. and all la bishops are either in prison or rnntinod in their homes. according ed to the floor. John Shepard. B. I circulation truck driver , for the Oakland Tribune. arrived just after the Kansas car. a convertible, had struck the a-butment. knocking the concrete chunk out on the traffic lane. "The car driver was lying un- der the convertible in a pool gasoline." Shepard said. "i and a passerby were trylnl to pull -him free when the bus approached. "it must have been doing be- tween 40 and 45 miles an hour. The driver probably didn't even see the concrete chunk until just before he hit it. "He appeared. to put on his bi-aka. The bus swerved and skidded across the centre of the ramp into the San Francisco- bound lane. then smashed into the steel safely railing. "The bus tcetered for a second. then crashed through the re- straining fence down to the rail- way right of way. "Just looking down on scene made me nauseated." t.'-ii I-IALiEE'AX, Oct. 23 ---(CP) -7- Officlal forecakts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather office here and valid until mid night Monday. , Synopsis: , Rain is falling in Nova. sootia. Prince Edward Island. and South- ern New Brunswick. while there in occasional snow in Northern- New Brunswick and Eastern Que- bec. This weather moved into the district quickly late today with the approach of disturbances across Quebec and northeastward along the Atlantic coast. The disturbances will move across the district during the night and will be followed by showers. then gradually clearing weather. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island-Oven cast with showers ending in the afternoon, clearing in the evening. Not much change in temperature. East winds 20 becoming northwest. 25 in morning. Dow and high Monday at Charlottetown 34 and High tide today at 0.5 A. M. and 9.400 P. M. sun rises today at 0.46 A. M. and sets at 5.07 P. M. Summerside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. M.C.A. All! SERVICE Dally Except Sunday heave Charlottetown for liioncton 5:30 A.M.: 11:20 A.M.: 4:50 P.ilL Ar. Charlottetown from Monctms 1:25 A.M.: l:I.l P.l.s 6:5! LII. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow - Halifax 7:40 A.lt!. New Glasgow 8 Sydney 1:50 P.M. New Glasgow G Halifax Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax ll:00 A.lt!. from New Glasgow I Sydney. I:'.!0 RM. from New Glasgow and Halifax. Charlottetown - Sydney flljhtl daily except Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY !.v. Charlottetown for Moncton ll-20 Ar. Clsarlotioussawis from Moneton B: BOBDEN - CAPE TOBMINTINI FERRY SVICE Daily (inducing Sunday) Standard I'I.IlIe Leave Borden leave (7. I 0.10 A.M. 10:93 AM. 1:00 PM. 1:40 PM. 4:80 P. M. 7:80 I'M. WOOD ISLANDS - CAILIOII PERRY SERVICE (standard Time) leave Wood Islands- Prince Nova-I a. M. 1 7. st. Chan. A. Dunning - It A. M, I P. M. Leave Caribou- Cliaa. A. Dunning - I A. II. I P. 1!. Prince Ileva - 11 Al. I I3 l l . i