- ' MAXIMS or A- MERE MAN --g-n may school nut!”- -,uwuruinnn.uisin:orIa-in-t (hay flmasolvoo procure must be Ln. 3; carrier: Chorlott 0 800 . ,'EL1uvvoohly. 0t.laorProvlnuAAnrItT.8.A.812.00 per Annu .n .. IL." in In. Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dew CHARLOTTETOWN. , CANADA, .MONDAY, AUGUST .13, 1951 IN E MILLION YOUTH PARADE IN RED RALLY IN Hopes Brighten For Success In Cease-Fire Talks French Cabinet Minister Is Shot, To Death In Quarrel Over Divorce ORLEANS. France. Aug. 12- (AP)--A promising youns French ,,,,1.m-inn who only 24 hours ear- iler won it post in the new French cabinet was shot to death by his pretty brunette wife to- (lay after he told her he wanted a divorce. lie was Pierre Chevalller, 42. who wns named secretary of state for technical education, youth and sports in the cabinet of Premier Rene Plevin. Police said his wife. Yvonne. confessed to firing five shots from a revolver that'kllled him. ('h-wallier was Mayor of war- tlei-istnteci Orleans and a hero of the Fr:-tit-h Resistance Movement during the Second-World War. In private life he was at physician. She was is former midwife. Ciievnlller was a close co-work- er of Premier Pleven. Friends said the couple had, been on bad terms, and that she rarely accompanied him on his frequent trips to Paris made ne- ressary because he was a. deputy in the National Assembly. Police said a few days ago Mrs. Ciirvallior bought a small re- volver and asked for permission to carry it on the grounds her husband had dangerous political enemies. Early this morning he left Paris in an official ministry car. At 9 am. the car pulled up nutsi-it-. his home here. He told lltr tlinuifeur to Wilt while he went inside to change his clothes. A quarrel ensued. Chevallier told his wife he wanted a div- orcr. She drew the revolver and fired five times. Two bullets struck him in the head and three in the chest. .” Mrs. Chev.-illier met police at the door and said: "i haw.-. just killer mymlmsbund?” Twin -lldys Born in Automobile NAPLES, M3,, Aug. 12 -(AP)- Niu boys were born in an auto- .'l10llllf' here early Saturday as the exprvtant father frantically rang i 7irvstrl:in's doorbell and the nvilllr: blew the car horn. The parents are luv. and Mrs. Albert C. Niles of Auburn. They Wm on route to hospital in Lewis- lon when the stork arrived. Before Dr. John M. Bischoff- berscr of Naples could get dressed, the twins were born. Coming Events ."Dsnco Alberry Plains Hall. Ms M. Rtfrelhmentl. "Diner, Lot 65 hall Tuesday "lulu. Burns' Orchestra. "Dilnro. St. Peters Legion Hall Plrrv Monday night. from 9.30-1. Wchsters orchestra. Admission 50c. ”Cnnte in and talk over our Fiiriim Finance plan for your hogs "id poultry. Dillon 8: Splllett. ' 'Resorve Thursdoy. August 23rd. Ham S Hall. in Annandale "Dance at Wlnsioe Station l,f"” Wllttlit. Music by George -lllllwt-ll and his Merry islanders. ,"0Ilr store ill be closed all HY Wednesday Old Home Week. L. Dickieson. New Glasgow. ...... "Come to the Regular Dance at onsliaw every Tuesday night. MacNeill's 0rchestrA. ':llance in Donagh school Mon- or-l nlsht. August 13th. Burke's chestrs. Lunches. "Buylnc good food bogs daily. w cofhm. !!lxl;bgretl.gbt. aumn mu. "N”'"'r3ill'lng live poultry 5.l'"y MOTIIIIV. Highest prices. -'- C. Green. Emerald. "B"Vl"i3 live poultry every Tiioaday. 6 until 12 olclock. if. L Dlmuon. New Glasgow. ,,;"Vr 8-no-sou that will not "V; '4”; your Films and Nago- Uhmommmlrnhum Photo .ltudlos. .v;'r3"Pcv.IIl1cli't;:s will I besncllosed excep ay gains Old Home Week. Parker rid, Brent Wood. "1" Gran: Social on souui 37:?" Grounds. Monday cm inn. foo Groom, - 0 Dora and loft Drinu. Q:,'n'l""lrI. Ask about the ltiarr smooth the way for Trungggg Stephen T. Early Dies Suddenly WA.SH'.INGrTON, Aug. 1-2-(AP)- Stephen T, Early. who served as press secretary to Franklin D. Roosevelt - all the 12 years of the new deal, died Saturday of a heart attack at the age of 61. President Truman. in a state- ment, said Early gave the best years of his life to the public ser- vice: In recent years Early had been vice-president. of the Pullman standard Car Manufacturing Com- pany. In the days before the First World War. Early was one of the Associated Press men who covered the state-war-navy heat. It was then that Early became acquainted with Roosevelt, who was assistant secretary of the navy. In the First World -War. Early became machine gunner and was a. captain when the war ended. Later. after he had rejoined the Associated Press Early scored a notable bent. on -the death of Pres- ident Harding at san Francisco. He went to the White House in l933 and it fell i.o,hlm to announce the bank closings of the early Roosevelt days, various hig new deal projects. the attack on Pearl Harbor. Winston Churchill's visit to America in 1941 and Roosevelt's death. He stayed on for A while at President iTi-umanls request, to Beds Slidh-iiy More Agreeable in Sundayjalks .. By Don Butts MUNSAN, Korea, Aug. 13 - (Moadny) - (AP) - The Com- munist delegation appeared slight- ly more conciliatory on the buffer zone issue Sunday, nalsing some prospect that an eventual Korean armistice can be reached in talks with the United Nations delegation. The conferences will be re- sumed at lil am. (9 P.M. EDT 5l1nda'3') in Kaesong. Tire meetings had teetered for three days on the brink of collapse tintil Sunday's session. Then North Korean Lt.-Gen. Nam ll, senior Red delegate, ac- ceded to a formal United Nations request for a map. The 30-by-40 inch was close- ly studied at U. N. advance head- quarters Sunday night. For the first time the Reds had put on paper their concept of: 1. The present battle lines. 2. The 38th parallel which the Reds insist be the buffer demar- cation line. 3. The U. N. command's "orig- inal and generalized" proposal for s demilitanizcd zone. The Allies have called for I demllitarized zone along a de- fensible line approximating the present fighting front. It is south of parallel 38 in the west and well north of the parallel in the centre and east. Responsible sources said they believed that, while the Reds were still vitally interested in draw- ing a demarcation line along the 38th parallel, they were even more interested in obtaining an armistice. - ' For this reason it was believed the Reds might retreat from their ,. promise. original stand toward a. coin. ' (AP) By STANLEY RICH HONG KONG. Aug. 12 - (AP) -- Communist police jailed to R0- man Catholic priests, closed my or Peipingls l7 parish centres and put all the rest of the city's so foreign missionaries under house arrest in simultaneous raids July ?5, Church sources reported todavl Describing this as "the most frontal attack yet." made'against the Church in China, the sources predicted similar action against Catholics and other Christians throughout. Red China. The Reds have been conducting A campaign for an "independent" Catholic church, having no con- nection with the Vatican. Tho new direct drive apparently is intended to force the people to accept this Red "church" or none. The information of the latest arrests came from Catholics arriv- ing in this. British colony from Peiping. These sources said those arrested in Peiplng July 25 includ- ed: Father Harold Rigney, former rector of the Catholic Fujen Univ- ersity And the only American mis- sionary still in Peiplng. Others reported seized included Father Joseph Miners. a German professor at Fujen University; an- other unidentified professor; the German Bishop Constans Kramer. of Luanfu diocese: the Belgian Mass Arrests of Priests In Peiping Disclosed gion of Mary in North China; A Frenchman, and 13 other Germ- ans. Bltter Attack MOSCOW. Aug. 12 - (AP) - Pravda. leading Soviet newspaper. today made the most bitter attack yet on American missionaries in China, particularly Roman Cath- olics. The Communist paper said the missionaries in China. had three purposes: To kill off as many Chinese as possible, inspire Chin- ese pupils with A hatred of every- thing Chinese and engage in wide- spread espionage against the Chinese people. o The article claimed that in one Roman Catholic orphanage in Uchln. 57,000 children were taken in during the 23 years since its founding and only 126 survived. SEEKING BAKERS MONTREAL, Auk. 11 -(GP) - Jack Sullivan. who uns Australia's largest chain of akerles. said he is in Canada tp find "about 50 bakers. mechanics and engin- eers" to take back to Australia. lle said that in Australia there is such a state of full employment that he can't hire anyone for the Father Van Vooli. head of the La- oxpanslons he has planned. OTTAWA. Aus- 12 -- (CP) - The Govarmnent announced to- night that the interest rate on its fall issue of Canada Savings Booth is being increased to :i 1-2 per cent. In the five previous issues of savings bonds. the interest note has beat 2 3-4 per cent. The Announcement slso said the limit on individual holdings in being boosted to 85,000. The limit was 83.0!!! for the first is- sue. following the second World War. and 01,000 for subsequent iuuu. Both moves obviously Aimed at encouraging savings as part of the govern- mantls anti-inflationary program. However. it was not immddiAto- ly clear what effect the higher interest rate would have on other. and porticulsriy non-governsnenh of, securities. - - Ono economist sol the foot there was I limit on t e amount of booth on individual infant bu! WCPI FM Pia If.'.."”""- some i-'k...i.'..-2': .i erased aw llity that tho widesproad-im- Interest Rate Boosted On New Savings Bonds plications. The bonds, the sixth of the series, will go on sale Oct. 15. They will be dated Nov. 1. 1951. and will mature 10 years and nine months from date of issue. Previous issues have matured in 10 years. with A straight interest rate of 2 3-4 per cent a year. The new issue willl carry 10 interest coupons of 3 1-1 per cent. The first coupon will be payable Aug. l. T963. if the new bond is cashed be- fore the first coupon becomes due. interest will be paid at the rate of two per cent A year cal- culated to the last full month. After Aug. 1. 1953, interest will be paid at the coupon rate of 3 1-2 per cent a year for each full month which has elapsed since l.liAl (hip. The Finance Department. on- nouncing the changes. said If- naoce Minister Aibboit could be quoted as saying the new features ”inAke the new bond the moat At- aecurity of its kind over offered." FOUR. OAKS, N. (1, Aug. 12- - A fast Miami-to-New York streamlined train carrying more than 500 passengers was wrecked today with three cars flying down a 20-foot embank- ment. But nobody was killed. "The most miraculous thing I've ever seen," said Dr. Watson Wharton. "The steel cars saved the passengers." Nine persons were taken to hospital and scores were treated for cute and bruises, but ,many of the 25 ambulances which con- verged on the scene went away empty. The 18-car train. the Atlantic Coast Line's East Coast Champ- ion, was passing two miles north of here when nine middle cars derailed in a rain-soaked fill area. . The diner swung cross-wise on Train With 500 Aboard- Wrecked, No One Killed the double track and came to rest almost standing on its nose with one end buried in mud at the bottom of the bank and the other end in the air. At the bottom of the bank. rescue workers found one car upside down, another on its side and one upright. The other cars stayed o the right. of way, al- though o e turned over. Four Oaks is about 30 miles southeast of Raleigh, the state capital. C. G. Sibley, A.C.L, assistant vice-president for operations, said the engineer saw nothing wrong with the fill when approaching it Another passenger train pass- ed safely over it an hour ahead of the stieamllner. Sibley said the wrecked train was travelling 45 to 50 miles an hour. It's Fair time in Charlottetown and the big show swings into high gear tonight. Premier J. Walter Jcnes. BSc.A.. M.A., D.C.L., will officially declare Old Home We-.k opened when he takes his place on the platform facing the grand- stand. Wlth him, and also speak- ing briefly, will be His Honor Lieutenant Governor T. W. L. Prowse. l-lis Worship Mayor 13. Earle MacDonald and Hon. C. C. Baker-,l Minister of Agriculture. The opening function will s'arl7 promptly at 7.30. For the past several days the Exhibition grounds have best is been g,,..Po.Lgctlvlt.y as cnuntl- vziull 'h :52 entries arrived W be placed in their quarters. The RV!!- slock exhibit this year will not only be the heaviest on record, but it is believed it will also he one of the best ever seen here. Highlighting the openlnk ibnllht will be the four classes of harness horse racing which will attract thousands or people who love It"! thrill of watching the sulkiea swinging around the turn' and mm the stretch in stirring battles to the wire. There are over 200 ent- ries for the 30 events llSf&d- The biggest entry list of the entire card is in the 2:10-2:20 Pace which drew 52 horses and as a result had to be divided and race in five divisions. The opening dash tonight will start at 8.30. Hundreds of people visited the grounds and the cattle and hutse barns yesterday as the tradition- al pre-mu it Sunday was ob- served by those who like to tlook them over' in advance. Al: I lute hour last. night people Were 1”” wandering around looking at the cattle which will take part. in the show. Entries were streaming on to pack the barns and none. The barns themselves are at- tracting almost us much interest. as the exhibits they nouse. There are many up-to-the-minute new ones erected this year snd those in use in past years have been renovated and made spotless. Fina AccomrnodAllon it is interesting and pleasant to drive or walk alons W9 T0545 between the barns. Gone is tne heavy dust of other years. A new seal-coated asphalt road. tne "Kennedy Kighvuy". has been built along the way to the horns. and the roads between the barns have also been treated to elimin- ate the dust nuisance. The new highway starts in back of the (continued on page 7 col. 1) 80.000 Ahead Soapbox Derby AKRON, 0., Aug. 12 - (AP)'-- Fifteen-year-old Darwin Cooper, represe g Wflliamsport. PA., to- day won the 14th running of the all-American soapbox derby course at Derby Downs before an 80.000- crowd. Ha bested 140 competitors from the United states. Connie. Alaska and the us. oocupoticn lone of Germany. His prise is A 05,000 col- lege soholonhi At the school of his choice. second plsco, with s prise of o new Automobile, wont to Bsylnontl Morcon. l2. of Gary, Ind. Wilbur Shaw. is. lndlonapolis speedway official who was to have served As referee for today's noel. suffered a. heart attack and was taken to hospital in A soriotn coli- dltion Show ran up the I75-foot-long racing strip to boom. an Autono- tnlo for the ore-roca parade, and consoled. Premier Jones To Open A Big Fair This Evening Premier Jones Group En lioule To Rifle Shoot In Accident QUEBEC. Aug. 12-(CF)-Titree men and n nurse from Nova scotia were injured Saturday when their automobile left the main highway at Riviere Ouelle. on the St. Lawrence south shore. and smashed into a tree. Hazel Mullen, Halifax nurse. is in serious condition in hospital suffering from head and leg in- jurles. She is still in a semi- conscious condition lonI8h'- Carl Desmond Jarvis and Don- ald MacKa.V. both of Dartmouth. and Pie. Donald H. Arburx of Kentvilie. are in "fair" condition. Their injuries were said to be superficial. Provincial Police at Riviera Ouelle. 79 miles east of Quebec. said some in the group were travelllng for next. week's Eird. annual Dominion of Canada Rifle Association prize meet. The accident occurred when the car missed a curve. News iifsriet BUENOS ATRES. Aug. 12-IAPI --Police arrested more political and railroad lead:-rs Saturday in a crackdown on opponents of the Peron Government. STOCKHOLM. Aux. 12 -(Reu- ters)-Sweden refused a request from Communist Poland to hold in jail 12 Polish navy men who locked their officers below deck and jumped ship last week. They asked Swedish authorities for political Asylum from the Com- munlsts. ' FALMOUTH. England. Aug. 12 -(Reuters)-A floating dock big enough to hold a battleship ar- rived llsro from Bermuda Satur- day after two months at sea. Three naval tugs have been low- ing it. Says Liv I do will ant: 230 X ICIIONIO. ADI. 12 -(CP)- M. J. Caldwell. 0.01". national leader. predicted laturdoy that Conadab cost-of-living index will reach 200 by the and of this year unless the government moves at once to im- pose direct price controls on essen- tial foods and commodities. The index now is At All All-time, high Huge Tuin-out Recalls Former Hitler Parades By Thomas A. needy BERLIN, Aug. 12 - (AP) More than 1,000,000 blue-ahtrted girls and boys, chanting loyalty to Stalin and hate for the West. staged a giant parade in East Berlin today in a propaganda show that outdid Hitler's biggest spectacles. The high point of the 14-day Communist World Youth Peace Festival came to an end after nine hours to steady marching past the reviewing stand. No Violence Western precautions against violent incidents were unneces- sary. Not a stone was thrown in anger all day. Tonight in a windup of oratory. Walter Ulbricht, East Germany's spade-bearded "Little Stalin". threatened sabotage. strikes and "ultimate ruin" if Western Germ- any rcarms for western defence. "Let the imrperialistlc West German regime learn from the past," shouted the little Com- munist deputy premier from Sax- ony. "Let them learn from Hit.- lcr's disaster and also from the Korean war." He called on Communist youth of West Germany to sabotage Western deflence by melting "all manner of strikes. The Russian-controlled East German news agency said 2,000,- 000 youths participated in the giant demonstration 1,500,000 who marched in the parade and 500,000 who acted as the cheer- ing section. Wesicrn observers thought the figures were some- what. exaggerated. High German Csmmunvlsls and their Soviet guests had seats of honor for the review. Din Of Shoutiy The marchers and cheating sections keptlup A steady din'of shouting "Long live Stalin". "Ami (Americans). go home", And "Ami, get out of Korea." Coming in seemingly endless waves, many abreast, the paraders carried floats. banners and cari- catures lamtbasting President Tru- man, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhow- er and the West. German leaders. Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and Socialist Kurt Schumacher. Several floats made capital of British use of Helgoland island as a practice bombing target, and thousands shouted "Helge- land" just as Nazis once shouted "Dantzig" when Hitler was plot- ting his war against Poland. some 20,000 pigeons, "doves of peace", were released amid wild ..(Contlnued on page 12 Light Rain steak; Drought In B. C. VANCOUVER. .LlCvilT RAIN . . it rained on the British Columbia lower mainland today--the first time in 58 days. A shower at 3:30 il. in. officially ended the record dry spell, the first measurable ranfall since June 10. Had it come an hour later it would have been into the 50th day Later in the day. some sections had rain for an hour, but no- where was it sufficient for parched col. 3) Aug. ii -tCP)- farmlands and fire-stricken for- ests. A "rain rally" was held in I downtown auditorium during the afternoon As bright sunshine flood- ed the city, and in mony churches prayers for rain were heard at morning services fnies-e -wu never yd I II” woman but s mode months in I (hid. MAXIM! i or A MERE MAN I 16 PAGES Tho Gunrdlan, !'lvo Cents. Morning Dally Founded 1ll1. New schedules, regulations and rates of charges for electric power and energy supplied by the Maritime Electric Company. Ltd. throughout Prince Edward island have been ordered by the Pro- vincial Board of Public Utilities and became effective as from August 1st with the e ceptlon of the general service rate for sum- mer accommods ' . The latter service rate will remain un- changed until the end of 1951. Reasons for the genersl rAles revision affecting both urban and rural communities are given in the Commission judgment. which is published in full below. ltcleased to the press on Sat- urday, the judgment is dated July .30 last and is signed by Commis- isioners C. St. Clair lchairman, L. B. MacMillan, secre- tary, and W. R. Brenn-an, mem- her. The new rate schedules fol- low" I For Charlottetown Area This Area is described as follows: Bounded by a line following the shore of the Irlillsboro River and North River and North Creek, so called, from Falconwood Hospital on the cast to a line in continu- ation of the north side of a road immediately south of the Queen's Arms leading from the Lower Malpeque Road to the Mslpeque Road, thence eastwardly by a -(Continued on page 9 col. 1) 18 injured By Starting Gate . TlflVilMlNS. Onl., Aug. 12 -(CP) --Eighteen persons were injured. two of them seriously, when they were struck by a wing of a mo- bile harnoss horse starting gate at the Timmins race track Sot- urday night. Most of the injured suffered minor head injuries when the wing. carried on the back of I ,lialf-ton fi'uck. dragged along iihe top of A fence erected free high before the crowd. The 18 were knocked over when the truck came too close to the fence. Eddy Proulx, 11. and Rene Mongeori. both of Timmins, suf- fered serious head injuries. The second 'heat of ii. free-for- all race was being started when the wing projected into a crowd of about 200 persons lining the rail. Children held up on the railing by parents were among ' those struck. ' Starter C. A. Remus of Tim- mins who was riding on the back of the truck said he was .una-ble to close the wings of the mobile ' gale. ,-Coastal Vessel lAground Off N. S. LIVERPOOL. N. S., Aug. 12 -(CP)- The wooden costal vessel OK. service rammed aground last night at Port Mouton Head in dense foot but her crew of seven clambered to safety. The 14.9-ton vessel was termed a total loss today by her skipper. Capt. Seth Himmelmnn of Lisl-lave, ' N. S. The OK. service was built at Shelburne . N. S. in was And is one of the four-ship fleet owned by T-limmelman supply Company, Lnlfavo. Plan Special OTTAWA. Aug. 12 - (GP) - A Federalbudget, Conada's second of the current fiscal year, will be brought down by Finance Minister Abbott in the fall session of Par- lismant. Government sources any it will be A special budget. as opposed to the government's regular annual financial Accounting. in the some sense As the "baby" budget intro- duced At the special session last September. That budget was required bo- causc of the outbreak of tho Kor- t-an wsr and the slapped-up tempo of Canada's defence propurotlons. This one will be necessitated by ' the arrangements for finsnclng the universal M0-a-month old-age pensions which go into effect Jan. l next for Canadians of 'lo and over. The government hasn't yet slid how it plans to finance the pen- sions. which will Add saso.ooo.ooo I. your to Federal oxpondlturoa. The Finches out still is study- lngthopr lsmaridlsnpootodto of 181! recommend weekly or monthly do- Federal Budget At A Fall Session .M..........n..........M...,nn. auctions from the ply envelopes of Canada's wage-earners. This would put the pension plan on a contributory balls and, in I strict sense, couldn't be cAllad tax- ation. It. would be similar to the deductions made from pay cheques to ftnsnce the unemployment in- lsuranee fund. While the deduction thus wouldn't be called A tax, one high government official sAid that Mr. Abbott naturally would want to give Parliament on Account or the country's financial stondln As I background to propmls to meet. the costs of the pensions plsn. He would do thiA,by bring- ing down Another budget. It is considers; the fall budget would contain Any substantial tax chlgoa in other fiolds. There might be some minor Adjustments resul from the tut boosts mm in ular bu&et lvflllg. time, commodity. cola and-noise taxes were increased sad I new 20-par-cent defence surtox vtsa imposed on personal income taxes. Trainor, I l iPrivy Seal Richard Stokes. doubtful that ' New Oil Talks Receive Setback TE!-IRAN, Iran, Aug. 12 - (AP) - British-Iranian oil talks got. a. setback today. The negotiators cancelled a ses- sion at.whlch Britain had planned to submit a new proposal for set- tlement of the dispute over na- tionalization of the rich Anglo- Iranisn Oil Company, more than half owned by the British Govern- rient. A source close to the negotia- tions said the meeting was called cff because Iranian officials had expressed privately their coolness to the proposals prepared, but not yet submitted officially, by Lord MODERN MAGAZINE The modern magazine dates from the year 1731 when "Gentle- man's Magazine" was published. (0 Br. faaafao As on: or the Ynmiw iSN'T As PLEASANT As it Sour-ms! HALIFAX. Aug. 12 - (GP) .. Official forecasts ltisued by ths Dominion Public Weather Office and valid until midnight Monday. Synopsis - Skies are cloudy in most sections and there is for along the Atlantic coast. A band of showers in New England is mov- ing towards the Maritlmes. and is expected to be centred over the southern regions tomorrow. Indic- ations point to improving weather on Tuesday. Forecasts; : Prince Edward Island - Cloudv. Fog patches during the night. Widely scattered showers on Mon- day. Not much change in temper- ature. Light winds. &4OW early ,M0ndiI,v morning and Iph in tho ..rtt.crncon at Charlottetown 62 and 76. High ttda today at 5.11 A. M ' and 8.00 P. M. Sun rise: at 5.11 A. M. and sets at 7.2-4 P. M. l M.C.A. AIR SEBVICF 0 Daily Except Sunday Leave Charlottetown for Monetovt 5.30 A.M.: 11.20 A.M.: 4.50 P.M. Ar. Charlottetown from Monster: 7.25 A.ltl.; 1.25 I'.M.: 6.55 I'.M. Leave Charlottetown for New Glugovv-Halifax 7.40 AM. New Glasgow 8 Sydney 1.50 PM. New Glasgow A I-lallfsx Arrive Charlottetown from New Glasgow and llalifax 11.00 A.llf. from New Glasgow .6 Sydney. (.20 PM. from New Glasgow and llallfs X. Charlottetown - Sydney flights daily except Sunday. SUNDAY ONLY Charlottetown for Monclon 1 1.10. Ar. Clnrlottefovvn from Moocton 5.55 PM. Ionnsn - cars: roausarnn rssav ssavics n Lv. i Ally Standard Time I4IAvo Borders ulsvo C. I no AJI. us an. toss A.ss. tus A.M. 1.00 .M. 1-00 PM- a.so .31. 2 so us. no mu. Mo P-It uo nu. ma P-In uo us. no P-II. use us. 10.30 9.!- vvoon tsumns .. cannot! run snvrol -. (sisnauo rrnoi . 1) been Wood lAlAndo- -' - ' mu Nova - 1 Al. It LI a . . choc. s. mnsinsg-o.ns.1 us. 3 us. - I ;Eeo Novl on I Lj. 3:5”.- ap. BERLIN New Rates And Schedules. For Maritime . Electric Co. t0rderetl By Utilities Board a