MAXIMS OPA MERE MAN MAXIMS OFA MERE MAN Though uanrvlri In! the rule for a while. yet time aupprouetla wronga. To be a well-favoured man is the gift of fortune; but to road Ind write comes by nature. CoversPrince Edward Island Like the Dew - ' CHARLOTTETOWN. CANADA. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 20, 1951 The Guardian, Hvo Coats. 5, carrier: Charlottetown. lurnnuralde sou weekly. Elsewhere in Morning Dally Founded IIIT. p, E. I. no weekly. other Provinces and U. 8. A. 812.00 per annum. ATTLEE ANNOUNCES BRITISH ELECTION FOR OCTOBER 25. 16 PAGES Red Forces Strike Back Hard In Eastern Korea Keen Competition Yesterday Among Queenis CO. Biowmen Attendance Tops Previous Record A rrowd. estimated to be consid- erably greater than last year, was in attendance at the opening of the Queens County Plowing Match held at the farm of Macltae Bros.. lit. Melilck yesterday. Mr. Elliot Robertson. President of the Queens County Plowing Association introduced the prin- ciplil speakers. Declaring the Match officially open. Premier J. Walter Jones congratulated the management committee on the great amount of Work they had accomplished and the fine attendance which the match had attracted. Plowing demonstrates itself. he said. and is of prime importance to good farming with a great deal of wealth to be taken from the top Six inches of soil. Although P. E. I. docs not get its fair share of at- tention, the future is on the farm- :rs' side as municipal areas grow oiggcix and as a solution to trans- portation problems, air freight my hold the answer if produce is Match 15 A Mount Mellicl: farmer. Mr. Alex MacRae, proved himself to be the best plowman at the Queen's County Plowing Match yesterday when he won the tractor two-sod competitions within a stones? throw of his own farm. The tall. work-hardened farmer scored 98 points in winning the event. which was the highest score of the day. The matches were held on the farm of the MacRae Broth- ers in Mount Mellick and were at- tended by an estimated crowd of 00. Using a tractor plow for the first time. Mr. MacRae plowed a. near- ly perfect finish and crown. His plowing won the high praise of the jtdges O.C. Hicks of Fredericton and L. W. Roper of Charlottetown and it had to in order to win the event for there were 26 contestants in the competitions. Following the meet Mr. MacRac was awarded the Bank of Com- merce silver platter. emblematic of the plowing championship. He stated that he might enter the Provincial Plowing Match at Dun- das next week depending upon whether or not he threshes the grain on his 150 acre farm. Mr. MacRao placed seventh in the three-sod event a year ago in the vtcontinued on Page 15 C01. 2) (Continued on Page 5 Col. 3) Spring Park To Petition For Incorporation Vote Coming, Events "Buying Timothy Seed daily. lllccuigan and Boyle. "Crushing grain every wecls day. Birt L-eard. Peake's. "Regular dance French River Hall. Thursday. Sept. 20. Dancing 9-1 a.m. . "Lot 05 Hall. Monday. Sept. 24th. Ohicken Supper and Dance. "Dance in l-lowc's 1-lull. Brack- lrv Point. Thursday. September 201b, "Dance and Refreshments in Kelly's Cross School. Friday. Sept. 21st. "See Highland dancing contest at Provincial Plowing Match, Dundas. "Reserve Wednesday. September 26th for St. Stephen's Church Supper at lrishtown Hall. "Hot. Chicken Supper and 3&7-Mr. Rollo Bay llall, Wednes- gar. September 26th. Meals gserved 10. "Chicken Supper. St. Charles. Ollening of new Hall. Thursday. 5l'Dtt-mber 20th. Meals from 5 on. Dance after. "For Snapshots that will not fade mail your Films and Nega lives to Garnhum Photo studios Charlottetown. -"Dance. Bridgetown llall, Sept. 2.01 and 28th. Good music. Re- f-';;,hments. Sponsored by Hockey bid. "Dnnce Qt"-E-1;"-Frldly night. South Rusiico Hall. canteen ser- Music by the Charlot.teton- 3. "Hampshire Women's institute Ch-lciren and Ham supper in Wilt- Shire Hall. Thursday. September 20th, at 5.30 o'clock. "Provincial Plowing M a to la. Dundee. catering by the Barn Drive-In. Lunches, full course meals both days. "1"ll'mII'I. Ink about the star 5:13 I-laces rlmnee run. Fol: can I Md mm. contact your or . ...... D 'Provinclal Plowing Match at wllndll. September 20th-27th. rite for brine list. Albert Acorn. Clrdlnn. It. 3. a. "Beta lupper North In-yon School. Friday. 'sopteml.e am. Admiral - . mum. on so oanla. Women: In Mi. .At a meeting of citizens of the Spring Park area last night a motion was adopted empowering the chairman and secretary to solicit a petition to instruct the Sheriff of Queen's County to hold a plebiscite to determine whether the area will incorpor- ate under the Village Services Act. The resolution was passed on motion of Mr. . H. Burhoe. Chairman of the meeting. which was held in the Spring Park hull, was Mr. G. P. Rodd. with Mr. O. K. Presby acting as secretnry. Invited speakers were Hon. Douizald Macklnncn. Minister of Public Works and Highways. Mr. .1. F. Connnlly. Director of Town Planning, Hon. Dr. W. J. P. Mne- Mlllnn and Mr. D. L. Mathleson. It is understood that a few days will be required to work out the details of the boundar- ies of the area to be included in the act of incorporation. but that the petition will be presented to the Sheriff with the lcnst pos- fcontinued on Page is Col. 4) Allied Pilots Win As New Air Battles Fought By John Randolph U. S. EIGHTH ARMY HEAD- QUARTERS, Korea. Sept. 20 -(Thursday) -(A!')- Red forces struck beck hard in Eastern Kor- ea Wednesday and sized a key hill in a day of fast action that saw a new flare-up of the air war. Allied jet pilots won three air battles with Russian-made jets over "Mtg Alley" in Northwest Korea. As many as 112 jets were engaged. The Feed Air Force lost one jet destroyed and five dam- aged. No Allied losses were report- ed. Reds In Bombing Raids After nightfall. two or three unidentified planes-- presumably Communist--flew through Allied anti-aircraft fire and made bomb- ing and strafing attacks on front ground positions in western Korea. There "was no mention of damage in a. pooled dispatch. The jet battles raged from al- most ground level to 30,000 feet. Allied planes were outnumbered in all three engagements. Heavy ground fighting centred in the rugged eastern hills where a gain or loss is measured in alti- tude. not miles. Korean Communists hurled three savage counterattacks at Allied infantry men who had won a commanding peak on "Heart- break Ridge." The third Red charge broke Allied resistance. It was a bitter blow to foot soldiers who clawed their way to the top Tuesday. carrying the heights in three hours of hand-t.o- hand combat. - Whoever holds "the peak. north of Yarlggu commands a five-mile sweep over Red positions in the Soyang River valley to the north Bitter Fighting Wednesday's reverse was only one phase of the hill fights that have become one of the greatest battles of the Korean war. From northeast of Yangu on the east- ern end of the Hwachon reservoir eastward almost to the Sea of Japan was a series of Imail act- ions that for sheer bitterness have had no parallel in this war. other U. N. soldiers defended a peak northeast of Yanggu for the second consecutive day. A Com- munist regiment was heating at the position. , Farther east Allied units halted two smaller Communist counter- blows on hill positions northwest of lnje. on tho west-central front AP -7CT)mnIiai on Phlge 15 Col. 1) LONDON. Sept.- 19--(CP)--The King was up and about at Buck- ingham Pnlnce today while both in Britain and throughout the Commonwealth deep concern was voiced over the possibility he mny be suffering a serious lung ailment. London newspapers demanded that the 55-year-old monarchs subjects be told more about the lllncss. which nlnc doctors dc- "National Film Board presents Free Educational Films in South Granville School. Friday. Septem- ber 14th. 8 P. M. Sale of Lunches. "Provincial Plowing Match. Dundee. 310.00 each in champion- ship prises for light and heavy bones; donated by R.T. l-lol-man's. "Hear Mrs. Malcolm MacLcod speak on her trip to Copenhagen at Southport school on Thurs- day. Sept. 1) at 8 pm. sale of candy. "Regular Friday night-Dance in St. Peter's Bay Holy Name Hall. Friday: September 21st. Dancing frttorm O30-1 AM. Chaluon'a Orch- as I. "Hear W. 1!. Shaw, 1). A. Mac- Donald. Louis O'Connor at Feder- ation of Agriculture Meeting. Kl - hora I-fall, Friday, September ns 3.30 P. M. "Buying Live Fowl and chicken Monday to Friday noon. every week. We weigh and pay at your yard. Get our price before selling. Phone collect for pick up service. I. .1. ucnougall, Vernon. "Special meeting Kingston Branch Canadian Legion will be .;;:::”..-.:::I..""'":. i".”"' on was I , w" ' 'm.' ,nmJM'liI7.IQt.l.lry;ra "com can all ma 3 ..,.3oeial an?fu'Danc:. at cahavg E3001. mday. September out, "I with holes fral. - held in Legion I-lorne. Charlotte- town. Thursday: Sept. 20th at 8.3) pan. lmportan that all members Attend this meeting London Papers Demand Details Of Kingis Ailment scribed crypficnlly in 3 bulfeun "9"'"59d" T"93d8y as "structural changes in one of his lungs. Several of the King's nine doc. tors visited him at the palace to. day and stayed more than an hour. Palace officials did not identify them. Among other visi- tors was Princess Elizabeth. A small crowd milled around the palace. The King had no Dublin engagement today. but Tuesday night received Prime Minister Attiee. presumably to discuss the Labor Government's decision to call a general election Oct. 25. Tuesday night's bulletin little clue about the meat. A London lung specialist said its careful wording suggested the royal doctors still were not sure what the trouble was. "One thing is certain-struc- tural changes in the lung mean a disease of some kind," he add- ed. "But there are many. dis- cnses of the lung and the bulle- tin uivu no hint." Treatment of the King's iii- neu is likely to be prolonged. Messages of sympathy from many parts of the wroid reached. the King. Almost every newspaper in Britain published editorials ex- preulng concern and urging he should rest and not let his sense of duty retard his recovery. E. I. i-larrlrnan, Australian minister in charge of next year's gave King's ail- royal tour of Australia. said arrangements were going for- ward in' expectation that the tour would be carried on as planned. The itinerary planned for the XI the Queen and Princess Margaret shows that it will be Ina strenuous than that arrang- ed for an earlier tour which was cancelled because of the King's illness. r To succeed Marshall As 05. Secretary of Defence Long-time deputy to Gen. George Marshall, Robert A. Lovett, 50- year-old New York banker. has been named to assume post of U. 8. Secretary of Defence. succeed- ing his former '10-year-old chief, who resigned for "personal reas- ons". A Yale graduate and naval aviator in World War I. Mr. Lov- ett, above. served as Gen. Marsh- all's Undersecretary of State for 18 months and as his defence Two Men Drowned When Taxi Goes Into River CAMPBELLTON. N. 3. Sept. 10 (CP)-The death toll of is drawn- ing accident at Cross Point, on the Quebec side of the Resti- gouche River. stood at two to- night after an apparent third vic- tim was found to be safe. Joseph Bedard. believed to have been with eight other men when a taxi plunged over a ferry wharf. left the car before it reached Cross Point. Quebec Provincial Police carried out dragging oper- ations for hours before his safety was confirmed. Norbert Rloux. 1'1. and Wilfred Drapeau, 19. both of St. Angelo. Que.. met death in the accident Survivors were the driver. Omer Carrier. and Albert Bedard. Mar- teil Bouillon, Maurice Bernier, Roland Llzotte and Marc Bouil- ion. The passengers, lumber workers employed by the Cascapedia Man- ufacturing Company at New Rich- mond. had left the Quebec village last night for their homes in St. Angeie. When they reached Cross Point early today the driver, unfamil- iar with the road. mistook the ferry wharf for a. bridge and the car dropped into nine feet of water. Cries of the survivors who es- caped from the death car were heard by a. resident. Eddie Ol- scamp, who helped them to the wharf. There was no immediate sign of the two victims. whose bodies were recovered later in the deputy for last year. day. levels Blast At Restaurants OTTAWA. Sept. 19-(CP)-L. F. Burrows. secretary of the Canadian Horticultural Council, charged in A statement today that Canadian restaurants are "rniding their pntrcns' pocket- books" with "fantastic prices for homegrown fruits and vegetab- les." Defending producers. he said the restaurants' "excessive prices are curbing consumption at a time when fruits and vegetables are in peak production." "When a customer complains about food prices in restaurants." he said. "he is given at sympathe- tic smile and told that high prices demanded by producers and wholesalers are entirely to blame." Mr. Burrows offcrcd examples of what he termed "price goug- ing at the expense of the pub- lie." with early Mclntosh and Melba nppics selling from 52 to 52.25 a bushel-"about one cent per apple"-an Ottawa hotel was offering them for dessert at 15 cents apiece. A large restaurant chain clmrgctl 15 cents for a piece of pie. From six to eight apples were required for a pic. "Therefore. the main ingredient of a pie which sells for 31.20. costs 10 cents. Peaches wore sell- ing at 65 cents a aix-quart bas- ket on Toronto wholesale mar- kets. while a downtown cafeteria was featuring peach pic at 35 cents per Cut.” Bank -Robbers AGet 34.000 In Ontario BEAVERTON. Ont., Sept. 19 - (OP)-Three gunmen robbed the Bank of Commerce here today of 34,000 and escaped after firing I blast from a sten gun at bank manager P. S. Croft. The gunmen escaped to the north of this Central Ontario community. driving so carefully out of town that a police cruiser travelling south passed them un- auapectlngly. As the gunmen left the bank. manager croft fired two shots from a .12-calibre rifle. They miss- ed and a bandit who had "cover- ed" the hold-up with a stern gun let loose a burst into croft”a of- flee. No one was injured. QUEBEC MAPLE LEAVES MONTREAL. Sept. lO-fCP)- Tho Quebec maple leaf la used to publicize Vancouver in preference to British Columbia's brnIId.llleh- eel J. Mcconnlol. Vancouver's publicity commissioner, said in an interview here yeotorday. B. C. , posed Altar In New SDU Chapel To Memorialize Men Who Died On. Naval Service A ceremony of particular in- terest to Naval men will take place at St. Dunstan's University on Sunday when the main at-tar in the new Ohapel is formally dedicated. The bronze plaque states it was "Erected as a testi- monial to men of the Royal Can- adian Navy and in memory of those who met death in service." The altar was donated by Rev. Louis A. Dougan. native of this city and now R.C.N. Chaplain fR.C.) stationed at Stadacona. Father Dougan will say the Solemn High Mass. assisted by Rev. Joseph Wheliy. R.C.N.. and Rev. Owen Sharkey. at 9.30 am. The ser- mon will be preached by Rev. Michael P Maclsaac. Chaplain of the Fleet (R.C.), Ottawa. It is expected that many uro- mincnt churchmen. in-eluding His Excellency James Boyle, Bishop of Ohariottetown, and senior naval officers will be present for the ceremony. Rev. Louis Dougan is well known in this city where he for- merly servcd at St. Dunstan's Basilica and as Chaplain for H, M.C.S. Queen Charlotte. For the past two years he has been sta- tioned ll I-i.MCS. Stadacona. Halifax, but is expected to be posted to Esquimalt. B.C.. this winter. lieds Prepared To Resume Truce Tallls TOKYO. Sept. 20-- ---tAP)-Communist. war leaders today switched tactics and pro- immedlaie resumption of the Korean truce talks at. Kno- song-even before their charges against the Allies are cleared up. But the Reds did insist on keeping trouble-plagued Kat-song as the site. They also insisted the charges of neutrality viola- tions be settled by "appropriate machinery" even as the dele- gates resume talks broken off by the Reds Aug. 23. First unofficial was favorable. Smiling Red liaison officers met an Allied team at 6:10 a.m. (5:10 p.m.. EDT. Wednesday). cut of lunch and handed over the note from North Korean Premier Kim ll sung and Chin- eae Red General Peng Teh-Hual. The Allied team returned by helicopter: to Muman and trans- mitted the message to Gen. Mat- thew B. Ridgway. (Thursday) Allied reaction Ridgway”a headquarters fram- iated the Korean and Chinese texla. then aub- relealed. the stance of it. - AP unreapondant Robert Tuck- man who went will; the liaison team later reported from Mun- un that the note "may lead to an early reopenl of the Korean maple ieavu don't color so nicely as those born Quebec. - -t"c3ntlnueoTnTrTa'a”lo'oo. 1) Labor Par-t-y Prestige Said At Low Ebb (By Fraser wlghtnn) LONDON; Sept. 19 -(Reuters) -Britain will hold a national election Oct. 25, giving Winston Churchill h i 3 lo n g - awaited chance to make a. comeback as leader after six years of social- ism. Prime Minister Attlee gave the news tonight in a BBC broad- cast. ' He said Parliament. now in re- cess. will be recalled Oct. 4. and dissolved by royal proclamation Oct. 5. The new Parliament will assemble Oct. 31. The King will hold a stale opening of the new Parliament ov. 6. In a public statement tonight Conservative leader Winston Churchill said: "The British nation now has the opportunity of bringing a new view to bear upon our Jour- ney Ihrough these anxious and difficult times. "It can. if it chooses. place in power a government which will try its best to solve our many problems at home and abroad without being biased by privilege or vested interest and without being misled by class warfare or doctrinal fallacies. "The road will be hard and up- hill. but if we enter with cour- age upon a period of stable. tol- erant and progressive adminis- tration. there is no reason why we should not secure a better way of life at home and once again play our full part in pre- serving the peace and freedom of the world." Attic-e's Statement Attlce in his radio address said: "For 15 months the Govern- ment hns carried on the affairs of the country with a very small majority in the House of Com- mons. I consider the time has now come to ask the electors for l renewal of confidence in the Government. and to give it ade- quate parliamentary support in order to deal with the important issues with which the country is faced at home and abroad." Standing of the parties in the G25-seat House of Commons now is: Labor 313: Conservatives and allies 297: Liberals 9: Indepen- dent 1; Irish Nationalists 2; va- cant, 3. Labor has an effective major- ity of six. ''I have therefore asked the Kinr. for whose speedy restor- ation in full health we all pray. to grnnl. a dissolution of Parlia- ment." Attlee said. Labor Prestige His statement followed at week of speculation and rumor over whether Attlee would risk an election when the prestige of his party is reckoned to be at its lowest. The socialists are internally divided over rearmament. Cost of living is rising daily. a. fuel crisis is threatened for the win- ter and 5,000,000 trade unionists have demanded wage increases. But for Churchill. now '76. this will be the best chance he has had of recapturing the premier- ship with a working House of Commons majority since 1945. His stock is on the upgrade. Policy on which the Labor Party is likely to fight the elec- tion is: 1. An appeal for a working majority in Parliament. 2. Full support for the en- ormous three-year arms pro- gram se the way to world peace. .1. increased taxes on large unearned incomes. 4. A world plan for mutual aid for under-developed coun- Extend Anti - Communist Pact To Middle East; Adds Two Tough Armies -iiancouverlte To Head lianadian Bar Assoc- Wit sixty-five - year - old Brig. - Gen John Arthur Clark of Vancouver was elected president of the Cana- dian Bar Association at its 33rd annual meeting held in Toronto. A native of Dundas. Ont., Mr. Clark is a former M.P.. represent- ing Vancouver Burrard. 5. Two Yanks Guilty Of Smuggling Charges MONTREAL. Sept. 19 -(OP) - Two Americans were fined 5200 each today at liuntingdon. Que.. after they pleaded guilty to trans- porting conceaied liquor and diam- onds across the Quebec border from Malone. N. Y. R. C. M. P. identified the men as John Briggs of Greenwich. Conn.. and Irving Cantor of Stamford, Conn. Police said they arrested the men near Hunttngdon, about 40 miles southwest of here. The value of the liquor and diamonds was not disclosed. News in Brief NANAIMO. B. G.. SeI3i-- 1940?)- Suburban districts of Nanaimo to- night were threatoned as a giant blaze swept down Mount Benson. Police. forestry and civil defence officials were prepared to evacuate 300 persons from a suburban ex- tension, seven miles from the heart of Nanaimo. SYDNEY. N. 5.. Sept. 19 --(OP) -Steel production in Dominion Steel and Coal Corporation's plant here was stalled again tonight by a sit-down strike, close on the heels of a company order suspend- ing 2'15 workers for taking part in I wildcat work stoppage. TEJI-IRAN. Sept. 19 -(CP)- A re- port that Russia has asked Iran for oil came tonight inet ignored a move by W. Avcrccl Harriman to case the Anglo-lran- inn oil dlspuic. A source close to Iran's Finance Ministry disclosed the Ruuian request. EDMONTON. sent. 19 -lCPt- Agriculture Minister David A Ure said tonight Alberta is "des- pcrateiy short" of harvest labor and suggested some business or- ganizations might close down for two or three days a week to help farmers get in the largest. crop in (Cr-mtinued on Page 15-C3173). - 2: WABKINOTON. Sept. 19 -(AP) -A proposal to turn an inex- haustible supply of wind into electricity stirred a gust of en- thusiasm in' congress today. Fascinated members of the House of Representatives inurior affelra committee watched an in- ventor ahow a scale model of n tovvovering wind-driven power gener- a r. The proposed 03,750,000 govern- ment-built project would carry forward tents begun at Grandpa's Knob. Vt.. 1: years ago by a priv- ate concern. Duralulnlnum rotar- bledea would whirl in a 13-foot circle from some western mount- ain-top if congrau approves the plan of inventor Percy tnaornu of Ilontolair, N. .1. Thomas. a retired engineer, on- visions his wind-electric system as I supplementary source of elect- ricity for steam or hydro plants. Because of the variable nature of the province's history. New Interest Shown. In Electricity Froml Windy wind. he explained. it cannot be relied upon alone as a steady pow- er source. but can feed 20 per cent or more of the needed cur- rent into power grid: a. good deal of the time. William E Werne. assistant sec- retary of the interior. told the committee that even such inter- mittent production of electricity would be of great benefit in the wear. since it would conserve some of the water used in hydro sys- toms. The only corrunercial U. 5. ex- periment in harnessing the wind to make electricity was started in the mountainous Grandpa's Knob district. in 1939 by the 3. Morgan Smith Co. A big two-bladed fan actually fed electricity into utility lines for three weeks 'before a structural weakness developed lna blade and it went down the mount- alnalde. The committee took no action on the authorisation bill today. as the cab-. By DOUGLAS HOW OTTAWA. Sept. 19 - (GM an Extension of the west's antl-Com- munist alliance into the Middle East became a sure thing today and military leaders were reported mapping plans for a new military command to arise after the changr. Denmark withdrew its last-ditch onnositlnn to inclusion of Greece and Turkey in the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and informed the other 11 member countries it won't veto their admission. Formal action on a United States resolution for admission is expect- ed tomorrow. shortly before the council of 32 cabinet ministers ends the sessions that started here Sat- uvday. hat will mark the major polit- ical decision taken here. It adds two tough armies and roughly 30.- 000,000 people to an alliance that already embraces more than 300- 000.000 people and is trying to Iimass forces that will deter Rus- sian aggI'cssion in Europe. Other conference moves in the making or made included: 1. External Affairs Minister Pearson told a press conference he expects the council here to name -'t-t:mTtiFdTITPT:Ee'is'c6Ii.'ifI A C.r.tm.r.MAN is one who is Ewscfao To this l-its slam 40 A LADY! HALIFAX. seat-.19 -(GP) ' Official forecasts issued tonishli by the Dominion Public Weather Office here and valid until mid- night Thursday. Synopsis: The weather was clear over the Maritimes tonight. There are at: iew showers in the region not of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. A mass of cooler air was push- ing across the district from the northwest. There was a narrow band of cloud at the leading edge of this fresh airmass. but showteris did not develop. on Thursday b : weather will be sunny again u the temperatures will bl down about five degrees. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward island -Sunny and comer, Light winds. Low anc high Thursday at Charlottetov-r. 45 and 67. 1 High tide today at 1.16 A. M d 2.16 P. M. ansun rises today at 5.56 A. M and sets at 6.16 P. M. -j--m"ZTTT"T M.C.A. AIR SERVICE Dally Except Sumia.V Lt-nvt-. Charlottetown for Moitcinn 5:30 A.)l.: 11:20 A.M.: (:50 RM. Ar. Charlottetown from Moncifm Leave ('hnrloi.t(-town for New Glasgow - HRIHRK 40 A.M. New (llasl!0W & Sydney 50 I'.)l. New Glasgow It Hailin- Arrlvc ('harlnttt-town from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 A.lll. from New Glasgow 3 Sydney. 4:20 mt. from New G1-stow Ind Halifax. Charlottetown - Sydney mlhii tlnlly cxct-pt Sunday- SIINDAY ONLY Lv. (Thnrlottctnvrrt for Moncton 'i: 1: 1i..0 Ar. Charlottetown from Moncton 5:55 P.M. BOBDEN - CAPE TORMENTINE FERRY SERVICE Daily Stnntlnnl Time Leave Bordon ix-Ive C '1' 0:10 A.lil. 9:10 A.M- 10:35 AM. 10:35 A.M. 1:00 I'M. 1:00 l'.M. 2:40 I'M. 2:40 l'.M. use l'.M. 4:30 l'.M. - '1-.30 P.M. 7:30 r.M. 0:00 P.M. 0:00 RM. 10:80 phi. 10:80 l'.M. WOOD ISLANDS - CABIBOU FERRY SERVICE (standard Time) Leave Wood Islands- Prince Nova - 1 A.M.. 1i A.M. 1 P.M. Chan. A. Dunning - I A.M.. I l'.M.. 0 PM. Innvo Caribou- Chu. A. Dunning - 1 AM. I! A.M., I P. M. Irina Nova - I LIL. 1 l'.M..