MAXIMS OIL MERE MAN ---j luau. ,.,,.m,., ambition on o'er leaps ,jj 33,, g, 1. use other 7 vinees cu-nor: Charlottetown. hnalnerslde 013.00 per annuua. Elsewhere and U. D. A. 011.00 per snnuna. CHARLOTTETOWN, CANADA, TUESDAY, DECEMBER . . ; Read by Eve Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew 4, 1951 ten die of little won-lee. Maxims. OIA MERE MAN For one that big misfortune days 14 PAGES The Guardian. live Cents. Morning Daily Founded 1881. B - 29 CRASHES INTO ROW OF SWANK DENVER HOMES Sharp British-Egyptian Clash In Suez Area Tells How Canadian Prices Could Be Cut T 0 United States Level orrawa. Dec. 3 -(0!')- L. B. gutters of Toronto, manager of mg Canadian General Electric Company; Appliance Division. ex- pressed confidence today lhlt 11 the sales volume in Canada could be doubled. prices of molar elect- r:cal appliances could be reduced to U. 5. levels. He was testifying before the par- liamentary committee on B0VeH1- mcnt legislation to remove the practice of retail price-fixing by manufacturers. , Quotes Prices 1'. R. Hume, also of Toronto, counsel for the Canadian Electric- al Manufact:urers- Association, tabled figures showing the differ- rnce in Canada-United States prices on 'three major electrical appliances. The price in Canada. with the U S. price in brakets: Refrigerator. 3479.00 (3319.95): washing machine, 8439.00 (3299- .Ii”Cm.inued on Page 1! Col 1) Coming Events "Concert and Dance, llall, December zlet. Orwell "Canoe cove Christmas Con- cert December 20th. "Reserve Dec. 19th for Pownal Christmas concert. "Spring Valley school, concert. December 19th. "North Milton in Hall, Thursday. December soul. "St. Catherine's Christmas Con- cert, illriday, December Ilet. "Come to Central Royalty Con.- cert in York Hall on December 7th. "Cornwall Hall Annual Meeting in Hall. Wednesday. December 5th. "Reserve Wednesday. mwmbef loth for Kingston Christmas con- cert. ' "Reserve Wednesday. Dec. 10. for East Wiltshire Chriahnaa con- cert in North River Hall. "Annual meeting of Hamilton f..O.L.. Clyde River, Thursday evening, 0th Dec. Please attend. "Reserve Thursday, December 20th. far.Park Corner School Con- cert in French River Hall. "Reserve Friday, December 21st for Argyle Shore Christmas Con- cert. "Worm your young pigs with Purina pig tabs. easy to fuse. Dillon 6: spillett. 0 "Sea View Hockey League An- nual Meeting December 4th, in Hall at 8.00 o'clock. "Reserve 'nhui-sday. December 20th for Stanley Bridge School concert. "Dances cancelled, South Rus- gvm Hell. Re-opening New Year's 0. "Reserve December lloizh for Christmas Concert in Alexandra School. Curtain 8 P. M. "Come in and talk over our Purina finance plan for your hogs Ind Poultry. Dillon & spillett. "tor Snapshots that will not fade mail your mine and Nega- tivea to Garnhuni Photo Studios Charlottetown. "The Annual Meeting of the Federal Dairying Ce.. will be held in Belfast Hall. Tliuraday, Decom- ber 6th. I P. M. "Custom Orindin and Mixing Gflln. Mondays. Wgdnesdaya on Fridays. Arthur Campbell, Purina De-fer. French River. . "Bazaar, nah pond and lundi, Bmdslbaue Hall. Saturday even- ins. December Ith. sponsorld by the Ladies Dodge. - "Buying live chickens. eapona Ind fowl. Monday. Tuesday. Wed- "-sday. 9 to 13. Dresaedgeuo and ducks. Thursday and Pride . High- ast market prices. R. L; sltieoon. NEW Glasgow. - . '-c a River w." i: preun ::::.'il:::.:.:'...::- but nr?ua. oooa”meiaitioi'. eaii ffjunches. Admission loo and 0.... ' ” llo Decision 0n Prohibiting Russian Furs OVITAWA. Dec. 3-(Special) - Prime Minister St. Laurent told W. Chester S. McLure, Conservat- ive member for Queen: in the House of Commons today bhut the government had not yet SW9" consideration to whether it would follow thelead of the United States in prohibiting the importation of Russian furs into Canada. Malpeque Oysfer Party for Island M P.'s Al Ollawa UITAWA, Dec. 3 -(Special) -- Prince Edward.lsland members of Commons and Senate now in Otr tawa were guests tonight of PN- vincial secretary. H0n- 3- W- Arsenault at a Maipeque oyster supper held in the Chateau Laur- ier Hotel here. Mr. Arsenault, to- gether with Georze Fraser. directo- or of tourism for P. E I. are in ot- tawa. representing the province at a Dominion-provincial conference on the tourist industry. iseoommenaationaby Prince Ed- ward Island to be made at the three-day psxley include extension ofrahe ferry service between Wood Islands and caribou. ., Guebts at the party senators Molntyre and Barbour. J. Watson MaoNaught. parlia- ment y assistant to Fisheries Minister Mayhew, M Chester 5. McLure and J. Angus MacLean, joint Conservative members for Queen's, c. 0. Baker. provincial minister of agriculture in Ottawa conferring with Agriculture Min- later Gardiner and a number of federal and provincial officials. .u;.. Special Christmas Leave In Germany HANNOVER, Dec. 3 -(OP) - Special. seven-day Christmas leaves for two groups of the 27th Canad- ian Brlgsde in training in Ger- many were authorlzed today. But the bulk of the brigade which at- rived hcre recently won't get leave for some months. Christmas leave was authorized for soldiers with relatives in Brit- ain. France, Holland and Belgium. and for members of the brigade advance party who hadn't seven days' leave before leaving Canada The men must pay their own enough money in their paybooks to get where they are going and back. ' WINDSOR. Ont.. Dec. 3--(CF) Jhe giant Ford of Canada plant ground to is stop this afternoon after the noon walkout of 6.700 factory employees which "union leaders described as spon- taneous." Some of the 1.200 Work"! duff to'report at 4 p.m- HPDGING fit the gates of the 55-acre plant to find their way blocked by hun- dreds of plcketlng men. An addi- tiohal 1.000 night-shift workers were not expected to report. Officials of Local 200, the Un- ited Automobile Workers of Am- erica (C.l.O.-C.C.L.), which rep- resents the men. blamed the "Farmers, ask about use Shut Gain Feed Finance Play. For partieulars contact your local feed mill. . "Dance at Gordon Lodge every in-idly. Music by Robiehaud. Done- 0 to l. ltoeds-and weather per- mitting. "Bauer, sale of home cooking and candy,--lilo sandwiches and tea served at New London Hall. rridsy evening. Dec. 7th. "Prince County ilbderstlon of Agriculture Meeting will be and nitiay. December 1th at 2 P. M. and 7.90 P. 01. High aehool Audi- torium, summmisc. . I 0' ' e"cna. come all to bid Daugmwinsloe station Hall. 00- nuday. December 5th. svonlurod by. Milton Hockey Club. Music is transportation and must have to 29 Deadh Most Serious Incidenijo Dale CAIRO, Dec. 3-(AP)-The most sefious clash yet between British troops and Egyptian; in the Suez Canal zone resulted today in the deaths of 29 on both sides. an Egyptian Government commun- ique reported. The announcement said the fighting in and around the town oi Suez is continuing tonight. It listed the Egyptian dead as two policemen and 14 civilians. the Britons as 13 servicemen. The Egyptians also claimed 13 police- men and 55 civilians were wound- ed. The Egyptians called the fight- ing the bloodiest that has occur- red since the beginning of the Anglo-Egyptian crisis in mid- ctober. For the first time the British forces announced they had taken "prisoners". They said they had captured as. The Egyptians said 08 were wounded on their side. Two clashes in the city of Suez. one at noon and a second in which the British forces lost seven killed in an ambush. shat- tered the truce negotiated after the Ismailia battle of Nov. 10 in which 18 were killed. The combined death toll of 29 in the two accounts would raise the unofficial total to 73 killed in Canal Zone fighting since mid- October. The British account of the noon battle said "terrorists" and Egypt- ian police opened fire on a party of army engineers. An Egyptian spokesman in the zone gave a different version. He said an Egyptian police patrol was fired on when it passed near a British camp and police returned the fire. He estlmetedr the British casual- (By Norman Altstedter) PARIS. Dec. 3- (CP)-Andrei Vishlnsky apparently made clear during secret Big Four talks to- day that Soviet views have not changed on the question of atomic control. A Western spokesman said the Russian Foreign Minister gave "useful clarification" of the Rus- sian position but indicated that Russia still demands prohibition of atomic bombs before agreeing to discuss international control. The spokesman also indicated that Vishlnsky sidesiepped the question of whether Russia would allow United Nations inspectors inside the Soviet Union immed- lately after an order for prohibi- tion of atomic bombs. PEI Seed Samples Arrive In Florida Word has been received by the P.E.I. Potato Marketing Board that the 42 samples of seed po- tatoes for Florida testing arrived there in good condition. They have been planted outdoors in the sun to develop the sprouts. and it is expected that the plants will be above ground by Dec. 25th-Jan. 1st. at the latest. Growth there is very rapid once the plants have made a good root system, and readings for disease will be made from the ties at .'eight killed” and five wounded. BUDAPEST. Dec. 1- (AP) - Hungary today charged that an American plane. forced down near Papa. by Soviet fighters Nov. 19, was intended for the dumping of spies on Hungarian territory and demanded severe punishment of the persons responsible. A note.handed to the American legatlon confirmed for the first time a Tass, official Soviet news agency. announcement of Sunday night that the U. 5. Air Force C- 47 transport. missing on a flight from Erding in Western Germany to Belgrade. Yugoslavia, had been forced down in Hungary. But the note disclosed neither the whereabouts of the four-man crew. nor l-lungary's intentions concerning the crew and plane. Nor did it explain why the C-47 force-down had been kept. secret r two weeks. The Soviet announcement said .............D.....;.-D.. (Continued on Page 13 C01. 2) 8,000 Ford -Workers On Strike At Windsor Plant strike on the firing this morning of 28 factory employees and on the failure of a conciliation board to submit a report on wage-con tract hearings held here Oct. 8 and 9. Rhys M. Sale, Ford Company president. said the 28 men were fired "for inciting fellow em- ployees to take . part in an un- authorized work stoppage" last Thursday. The stoppage coat a loss of 47.000 man hours of pro- ductlon. Today's walkout was the latest flare-up in.a six-month-long un- Ion-company dispute over the signing of a 1951 wage contract. Last year's contract was due to expire May 29. When union-conv pany negotiations over a new con- tract bogged down. the union ap- plied for conclliatlo and a board considered ,.!jlLO,,,,M,dllPU!Q ellllt, weeks ago. ' Union officials who say they are asking for a wage increase and union security henefita eon- stitutlng a 1)-cent-an-hour "pack- ege".increase on the basic Ford rate of 81.32 an hour. blamed the deadlocked negotiations on Ford Company action. The officials said the union would "do allvin its power" to have the Z men reinstate". Mr. Sale charged that the Thursday walkout was due to the "goon squad" tactics of a few leaders who had "shouldered men away from their machines and subjected them to abuse." The N men fired had been "clearly identified" as leaders and parti- middle of January"'to Feb. 1st. 1952. Hungary Charges Yanks On. Espionage Mission Throne Speech Debate On Final lap OTTAWA. Dec. Jig -- (CP) -- By a vote of 103 to 39. the Commons today rejected a Progressive Con- servative non-confidence motion urging the government to take "adequate" steps to combat infla- tion and deal effectively with the cost of living. C.C.F. and Liociai Credit mem- bers voted with the Progremivo Conservatives. It was the third non-confidence motion downed in the lengthy Throne-Speech debate which be- gan with the opening of this fall ' Oct. 9 and has been going twice weekly since. Previously. the chamber voted M0 to 10 against a C.C.F. demand for price controls and subsidies and 145 to 55 against a social Cre- dit motion criticizing the govern- ment for alleged "failure" to com- pensate needy war veterans for the high living costs. Discuss Various Subjects As the debate moved towards I close. a half-dozen speakers took the floor to discuss education. lux- ury taxes. credit restrictions on motor car sales. the distribution of war orders and action to halt soil erosion. As the House opened. Prime Min- ister Bt. Laurent promised that everything possible will be done to help Canadian nuns imprisoned in Red China without bringing more harm to them or. other Canadians detained by the Communists He described as "fantastic" the: Communist charge that the five nuns had been responsible for the deaths of more than 2.000 child- ren in their orphanage. The Chin- "Aipparently chose to ignore the fact that the majority of the child- ren taken to the orphanage already were "ailing and beyond recovery." And he suggested Canada's ren- eral security mecautionn probably would be compromised if a board was established to hear represent- ations from individuals before de- cisions were taken as to their re- liability for security purposes. Credit Restrictions In the main debate. .1..' Gibson (Ind - Como:-Alherni expressed hope the government will consider a relaxation of credit restrictions as they apply to sales of used Dolran Bros, Orchestra. - '; clpanta in the walkout; m . t9vI?tlaus4f3-7?-2 .1.I”9.o.t.v.. Soviet Atomic, Control Views Are Unchanged The group spent 4 U2 hours behind closed doors getting down to the essential points of differ- ence which are snarling East- West agreement on methods of reducing their armed might. The sub-committee agreed to use the Western peace plan. and the Russian amendment to it. as the basis for discussion. A British suggestion to split the points of conflict into the "easy" one and "difficult" ones. studying each category separately, was turned down. The delegates decided that if they become deadlocked on one point. they will go onto the next to see how much general agree- ment ihcy can reach before they report back to the U. N. political committee next Monday. Agriculture Conference Opens Today At Ottawa By HAROLD MORRISON O'I'rAWA. Dec. 3 - (GP) - Ag- riculture ministers and their dep- uties from every province will go.- ther here tomorrow to ponder the outlook for Canadian farmers in 1952. They likely will find it the brightest since the Second World War. The Korean war. and the West- ern rearmament drive that it sparked. has created fresh demand for Canadian agricultural products. It has wiped out the heavy sur- pluses that threatened farmers just two years ago and brought. the possibility that Canada may. have to turn to other countries to bol- ster its own food needs. Here are some problems to be thrcshed out at the three-day an- nual Federal-Provlncial confer- ence: 1. With higher wages at factor- ies attracting workers away from farmers. the problem of getting sufficient help has become a major worry for Canadian farmers. Dele- gates likely will call for increased and selective immigration to boost denleted farm labor ranks. 2. A large part of Canada's bumper wheat crop still lies on prairie fields and there may be some discussion of the govern- ment's transportation policies. 3. Though highly important from the long-range view. is the ques- tion of government policy on ag- ricultural floor prices. The Canad- ian Federation of Agriculture. spokesman for some 400,000 farm- ers. likely will continue to seek government support. for 1952. 4. Agriculture Minister Gardiner likely will discuss his talks with British Government officials con- cerning Canada's markets in Brit- nin in the coming year. Canada's wheat production still is far more than she requires for her own needs. but her milk out- put is steadily declining and the outlook for 1952 - which the con- fcrence will survey - probably will show even smaller production than 1951. Milk production this year new is estimated at 16.350.000.000 pounds. down about l.000.000.000 pounds from the 1943-47 average of 17.380 000.000. with milk output declining. but- ter production also may drop -' wlth Canada seeking --more and more of her butter supplies from other countries. She is importing both cheese and butter this year. Historic Power Agreement Signed 'OfI'llAWA. Dec. 3 --(CP) -7116 than and Ontario Govern- me today signed an historic agreement for Ontario to share in the developmental 2.300.000 horse- power of hydro energy from the international rapids section of the st. Lawrence River. The' agreement. later tabled in the Commons by Prime Minister St. Laurent. must be ratified by Parliament and the Ontario Legis- lature. The Prime Minister said the agreement was made in the ex- pectation that the Federal Gov- ernment will undertake an all- osnsdian aeaivsy as the navigat- ion phase of the huge river-lake project that has been in abeyence for many years. KEY WECT. lI'la.. Doc. 3 -(AP)- Presldent Truman today signed a fair employment practice, order applying to government contracts. It is designed to prevent discrim- ination against Negroes and other minority groups in hiring employ- ees to carry out government con- F1991? Eight Airin-en Killed; 5 Houses SmashetLBumed DENVER. colo., Dec. 3 -(ap. -A B-29 bomber with one engine dead, crashed into a residential area here today. killing eight air. men. Six airmen were injured. The crippled craft mowed through five houses and set the debris ufire. Only two civilians were hurt. The bomber, pancaking slowly in as it went into a stall, cut a swath about two houses wide and less than a block long. two miles short of Lowry Air Force base runway. The fact that most residents were away from home, or were in sections of the homes not hit by the bomber saved them fiom death in the debris which burst into flames. ' "We were coming in in good shape and I didn't realize we were in any danger and the next thing we crashed," said Sgt. William A. Zippel. 29. flight engineer, -of Baudettc, Minn. The injured civilians "were it maid in one of the houses struck and a fireman who suffered a broken arm during rescue operat- ions. Large Increase In Wood Islands Traffic Figures An increase of over 4,200 pas- sengers carried this year is re- vealed in figures releasedl last night by the Northumberiand Ferries Limited. The totals show that in 1950 the service operating between Wood Islands. P.lJ.l.. and Caribou. N.S.. handled 74.521 pas- sengers. During the season of op- eration this year which ended last Friday the line carried 78.744 DESSQIIZEFS. The figures also show that the Northumberland Ferries carried 20.068 autos lhis season, an in- crease of 1.253 over the total for last year. The only decrease in- dicafed came in the number of trucks ferried between the two Provinces.' This season there were 5,952 while last year there were 5.904. or a decrease of 12. An indication of the value of the service to this Province is shown in the total amount of lrafflc handled by it during the 11 years it has been in operation starting with the season of 1941. Since that time there has been a total of 584.018 passenger: making ")8 Journey on the ships in ser- vice. Durlnk the same 1-1 year period there have been 120.416 autos car- ried as well as 36,460 trucks, First Woman Graduate Of U.N.B. Dies Ar 82 GAGLTOWN, N.B.. Dec. .1 .. (CP) -- The death of Dr. Mary Kingsley Tlbbiits, 82. at her Boston home last week recalled that she was the first woman to graduate from the University of New Bruns- wick. She also became. at Gage- town. the first woman principal of a New Brunswick high school. In 1885 the University of New Brunswick refused admission to Miss Tibbltts because of her sex but U. N. B. was opened to women the following year and she grad- uated in 1889. The university awarded her an honorai'yiM.A. de- grce ill i914 and a Doctor of Laws degree in 1939. For many years before her retire- ment. Dr. Tibbitts was head of the Department of English at Hyde Park High School in Boston. TORONTO, Dec. 3- (CP)-An executive of the Canadian Air- llne Pilots Association said today Trans-Canada Air Lines has sus- pended in pilot who refused to permit a Toronto civic official whom he considered "intoxicated" to sit on his aircraft's flight deck. The official said the pilot was one of five flight officers sus- pended by ihe company as a re- sult of a dispute between T. C. A. and the Pilots Association over what the official termed T. C. A. attempts to seat passengers on the flight decks of aircraft. He said the pilots involved had been enforcing a recent C.A.L.P.A. directive forbidding the sealing of unauthorized passengers on the flight decks of aircraft. An aircraft's night deck is the forward compartment of the ship which contains the pilot's eon- irola. radio. navigation equip- mom and all control panels used NEW ARCHBISHOP-The Most Rev. John O'Hara. present Bishop of Buffalo. N. Y., has been named by Pope Plus to succeed the late Denis Cardinal Dougherty as Archbishop of Philadelphia. O'Hara was formerly president of Notre Dame University. Biiiienarlmenl Slores To Defy Monlrealuiiy-l.aw MONTREAL, Dec. 3-- Montreal's big mid-town depart- ment and jewelry stores will defy a new city by-law ordering them to close on Roman Catholic holy days. An announcement today said legal proceedings have been start- ed to contest validity of the by- (C?)- law and that, meanwhile. the stores will remain open. The new by-law-actually an amended by-law-will get its first test next Saturday. the Feast of the Immaculate Conception. in the midst of the Christmas shop- ping season. Earlier today the seven stores- five department stores and two large jewelry stores-had ii sum- mons served on the city ordering it to defend the constitutionality of the. by-lnw in superior court. The summons ls" returnable with- in six days, with the deadline Monday. Announcement that the stores will stay open came in a state- ment from Henry Morgan. pre- sident of Henry Morgan & Co.. Ltd., and chairman of n commil- ter: of store reprcscnlaiivcs which met to discuss a united policy. Stores joining with Morgan's are T. Eaton C0,. Lid.. of Mont- renl: Henry Blrks and Son. Moni- real. Lid; l-loll, Rt-nfrew and Co. Ltd.. James A. 0giivy'a, Lid.; Robert Simpson. Montreal. Lid.; and Mappins. Lid. Tile by-law. passed I month ago. stipulates that all stores. with certain spcclffotl exceptions, must close on six Roman Cath- olic holy days. These are New Year's Day. Epiphany, Ascension Toronto Official Involved In C.T.A..-Pilots Dispute Day. All Saints Day. Immaculate Conception and Christmas Day. The association repruentative said the incident involving the civic official was one of several cases in which T.C.A. officials have tried in place passengers on flight decks. The captain had considered him Intoxicated and refused to permit his seating on the the flight deck despite what was termed the in- slstence of ii T.C.A. executive who tried to get the man seated. Names of suspended pilots were withheld pending an official announcement by the C.A.L.P.A. from its htyidqunrlers at Winni- peg. The association represents more than son Canadian pilots employed by three major airlines. The Pilots Association ' ' I that the Transport Department approved its directive regarding permitting passengers on the flight deck "at the senior pilot's discretion." A T.C.A. spokesman said the department had given the airline permission to put Allies Wary Of Trap In New Chinese Truce Proposals By WILLIAM JORDEN MUNSDN, Korea. Dec. 4 - (Tuesday) - Wary of a trap, i- lied armistice negotiators tor. y sought clarification of a sudden Communist proposal to permit neutral inspection at some places behind the lines and to "freeze" troops and arms now in Korea. The negotiating teams sche- duled anoiher meeting at munjcm at 11 am. today (9 p.m. EST Monday). Previously the Reds adamantly refused to consider any inspec- tion behind their lines under any circumstances. The United Nations delegation was not expected to accept the new Red plan as presented, how- ever. Vice-Admiral C. Turner chief U.N. negotiator, asked 21 clarifications. He also proposed that the supervision issue he giv- Joy. en to a two-man sub-committee for further study. Among the questions was a formal request by the U.N. for a list of the neutral countries the Reds would consider acceptable. The Communists refused to turn the supervisioir issue over to a sub-committee unless their plan was accepted. The U.N. dele- gation said it could not agree in anything until clarification was made. . . To observers at Allied truce headquarters, the new Red plan seemed to fall far shorl: of what the U.N. command has been ask- ing. The Red proposal came after a Monday morning session at whicl: the Reds continued to insist thig the U.N. proposal for joint in,- spections throughout Korea would violate the sovereignty of Red. (Continued on Page 13 Col. 2) 1' A i.oT or REFORM Nlzcos REFor3MiNc. HALIFAX. Nov. 3 - (CF) -. Official forecasts issued tonight by the Dominion Public Weather Of- fice here and valid until midnight Tuesday. Synopsis: An area of high pressure centred south of Nova, scotia is moving slowly eastward and is fbllowed by a current of milder air. As a result temperatures on Tuesday will be about 10 degrees higher than they were on Monliay. In most regions the sun will shine. Regional forecasts: Prince Edward Island - Clear with a few cloudy intervals. Milder with southwest winds 15. Low and high Tuesday at Charlottetown 25 and 40. .-.m........ . High tide today at 1.46 A. M. and 3.26 P. M. Sun rises today at 134 A. M. and sets at 4.32 P. M. Summcrside tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown MCA AIR SERVICE DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY uave Charlottetown for Moncton 5:30 A.M.: 11:20 A.Pl.: d:lS0 EM. Ar. Charlottetown from Moncton 1:20 A.M.; has P.M.: 0:55 PM. Leave Charlottetown for New Glasgow - Halifax 7:40 A.M. New Glasgow : 1:50 EM. New Glasgow 5 Halifax. Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and Halifax 11:00 AM. from New Glasgow 0:80 PM. from New Glasgow and Halifax. MONDAY. WEDNESDAY. IIIIDAI ONLY 0:10 A.M. Arrive Sydney from New Glasgow. 10:00 AM. Arrive New Ghsgow from Sydney. SUNDAY ONLY Leave Charlottetown for Moneiol ll:20 AM. Arrive Charlottetown from Monster 5:55 PM. IIOBDIEN - CAPE TOIMENTINI '" IIBIY. SERVICE ' ' Dally (Including Sunday) ,. In operation 0! to! entities -.. x .,,'-v.-. a P.'.”.'.'l'.".' '" "'9 l”'.""! !f”" leave Borden leave 0. '1'. 0.10 AM. 10.30 AM. 1.00 P.Il. 1.00 P.M. 4.00 I'M. ' 0.00 PM. 1.00 PM. L OD LII. Pan- '