.:;..-4 a..n..o. l,IOO roman tcaoaaans Murdered By Red; Premier . Jones Replies To Labor. Leaderls Statement A v A lng atthe corner of Granville and Dancing from 9 ENSC , is s A . ,v Everybody Covers Prince Edward Island Like the Dev? ' CHARLOTIETOWN. (banana. TUESDAY. OCTOBER; 3. 1950 ONTINUE ADVANCE INTO NORTH KOREA 1.. 14 PAGES ssoomo an Al naivgg, isA1.rrAx,.oci. 2-(cm - .A .lhree-alarm rm gutted the will top storeys of a four-storey bul- nesa block in downtown Him” tonight and caused lighter dam- agg to, nearby buildlnk. Bra: in out on the third storey of the store occupied DY Webster and Smith. china mer- ahanu, the flames spread to I clothlnl -store. a tavern and den- tlst'a office. six persons in the brick build- Bucklngham Streets escaped with- out Injury and reported the blaze Preliminary estimates placed the damagg 'at 3500.000- Coming Events "adult your Filmi to Garnhurn Photo studio. Charlottetown. "Dance in New Glasgow hail. Tuesday, Oct. 3 Good music. "Dance, Iona. Hall, Wednesday. October dl-h. "Just arrived. shipment of Fall Bulbs. Halifax seed 60.. 72 Queen Street. "Hauling Cream to Webster's Factory. Mond 's only. Wendell lliliphant. . "Dance ever Tuesday night in st Peters Legi n Hall. cliff Peters ” . .,....,.g,..-:;'::2s....i 5.... poultry every Thursday from 3 to 12- W- 0. tfyers. Stanley Brldlt "(see "is Fathoms Deep" in. teclIl3io.rolo1'.- at Bradalbane tonight '3 3 I ' : .1 "Regular Dance at Skyline. New London every Tuesday, night. i:ill'1. Good music and canteen service. "Reserve 'MsmdaY. October 9th, , for Dance in Holy ; Name; . st. Peters Bay. Chab- ' son'a oleolreats-a. "The National Fihn Board at south Melvilld School. Tbured Dctdtdf otll. sale of Women's Ineti te. "Reserve Thursday. Oct. 5th for turkey supper at Appin Road in aid of Church. Supper eervad .-rom s- till so. "see Bart Lancaster. Yvonne De Carlo in "Avln Cross" plus (lady of Pony Express at MacDon- rid lltoo rrliaatrs tonight. Note new ' Tiine 8 P. M. p... ........ "Notice-neer-W. 3. Shaw leo- mre on his trl abroad. Also aims. at Stanley - October are. I s'oloob..lpon'sored rtitutr I! candy. pay .Wen'iclI'l In- or chicken mm Helm. now! tober dth. aervlngfrcsiia t "nof-n cuppa-. sum. other :II3GI' Ind dance. South uatico . a . ootebar-ard.-sup- horn. a up a only. " ta An ai acmowim dgoiz ' . s o mu served ll” pav- , . - x ;- 33335 """.ii'.t”'"'n..' ""”l crews” in ' ( W Rio N. 0st. a-(Am- The . unlit empire builders lag”. Illldo -politically, . and mill- to long enough to overcome it by Premier J. Walter Jones replied him by Mr. A. B. Mosher. Presi- dent ofuihe Canadian Congress of Labor and also head of the Cana- dian Brotherhood of Railway Em- ployees. with a threat to revive labor legislation divorcing ,the Province'l labor unions from out- side affiliation "and next time in- eluding the Btotherhoods as well." Premier Jones was commenting on aipresa dispatch which said the C.C.L. would "protest vigorously any change in control of the Bar- den-Tormentine ferry from the Canadian National Railways." Mosher was quoted as saying such a move would be "an obvious at- tempt to prevent organized labor from carrying on collective bar- -gaining" and that it was "in line with the policy followed by Mr. Jones in introducing labor legisla- tion which ha was subsequently forced to withdraw". Stating that "the Prince Edward Island Legislature was not forced to withdraw any legislation." the Premier added "indeed it may be forced - under similar circum- stances - to enact such labor legislation and next time include the railway brotherhoods as well." (During the nationwide packing- house strike in 1941. the Island Legislature made it illegal for un- ions in the Province to continue their affiliation with outside is- bor organiutions. The Railway Brotherhood was exempted from the regulation which was relaxed after the strike was over.) . "Perhaps." eald Premier Jones. "the public is unaware that Mr. -Moshe: has not succeeded in get- ting two-thirds of the employees of the " i T mentine ferries g;gg L sung.” -5, i "In fact enough employees were non-union imembara at lhe time of the recent country-wide rail ,sirike ,to:operate one of the two ferries if the Captain had wished to kap it going." laid the Premier. ,'1furthermore,"' he- said. "in any emergency the Bl'oi.lierhoad's agreement is superseded by The Government Vessels Discipline Act'." He added tersely, "the emergency existed." "Poalibly Mr. Mosher is clia ' d because immediately following the strike his attempt to organise the Prince Edward island bus drivers failed when the move was blocked by the Amal- aamated Association of Street Elec- tric hallway and Motor Coach Employees of ltsnerica." declared Premier Jones. Commenting further on Mnsher's charges. the Island Premier said. "rd paraphrase whit Agrippa said to Paul Much organisation hath made then insd'." .C.li.B. Receives Conscience Money MONTREAI-3- Oct. 1 - One of the largest amounts of conscience: money" ever received by- the Can- also National Railwaya has ar- ved here in the form of la iooo dollar bearer bond with two l5 dollar coupons attached. The bond was sent from Winnipeg in an un- rellatered air mail letter; whilv ho explanation was made for the return of the money, a brief un- algnad note rII'llieated- that, the re- yesterday to criticism levelled at ' Fear Vldllms In Taeion May Total 6.000- TM!" By DEM PRICE TAEJON, Korea,loct. 2 - (AP) - Bodies of 1.100 Korean civilians murdered by the Red invaders had been found thus far in this ruined town as the gruesome task of open- ing fresh graves continued today. A desecrated church that was formerly a French-Canadian man- astery gave up the greatest num- ber - 700 civilian dead. An un- known number of pthers .. perhaps 100 -- lay in the basement, Thirty American soldiers -were among the total dead. Searchers feared 6.000 or 6,000 persons were massa ad in this town alone wed- nesday and Thursday by North Kor- Bil!!! security police before the Reds f ed. Three Buried Alive Two Americans and a South Kor- ean were burleri"allve, said Lleul. Robert W. shultlce of Norfolk, Va. They surviyed. but one of the Am- ericans died later. shultlce, investigating atrocities for the adjutant-general, said the three were found struggling through the dirt for air. They had been bur- ied only lightly. The 30 Americans slain had been tied by their wrists to dead men. It was feared that 13 more may be found when the rest of a trench is 'uncovered, (AP correspondent o.H. P. King reported that mass graves found in Seoul indicated as many as 2.000 civilian political prisoners may have been executed in a single district of that capital before the common- ists retreated). Pattern to Killings Taejon'a .slckenlng shambles of death and destruction almost sur- passed belief. Yet there was g, at- hysterical butchcry by a trapped and terrified enemy. Each victim had been shot in- cllvidiually. Many apparently then had been clubbed to make certain none would survive. A hatchet pro- truded from the skull of one man. Remaining townsfolk said the Reds chose for death the wealthy the known anti-communists. na- tional police and the relatives of south Korean soldiers. , Rev. Francis C. Blel, n Fran- ciscan and an army chaplain, said be regarded the Catholic Church as no longer usable by Catholics. liv- ery sacred image had been des- troyed. A defiled cross surmounted the mass "grave. which has not yet been fully uncovered. Saint bf-lolin Civic Election Nominations SAINT JOHN, N. 3.. Oct. 2 - (CP) - Nominations .for Saint John's civic election Oct. 10 closed today with 18 candidates in the field-three for the rrgyoralty and 15 for the six Comm Council seats. i seekl the office o mayor are . W. Patterao . Deputy Mayor Mayor George E. Howard and Councillor J. Fred Belyea. The candidates for council seats are Walter J. Cam ell. . R. Camlck. .7. Frank dv. Ronald H. Howard. Herbert L. Jessomo. George T. Kane. councillor” C. F. lbeoriard, councillor M. L. McPhail. Harold s. Prince, Councillor Ildna A. steel. 1:. Jack Thomas. William R. Tippett, Albert A. Vincent. gaeanes A. Whliebqne and Joseph celpt be acknowledged through the pram. - One dounclllor. Charles P. Whelly. is not offering for re- election. 0. lfay) to "fa'ca"-spears to am See Korean .Experimen.t .,C-DSt1Y.TQ Soviet Union. ill such as if cow undou tedly ' or was particularly needed. armament program. Moscow didn't want that. Why did the Kremlin make a move that precipitated it? It may be that the sommunlat leaders, the Politburo. felt a ruc- cossful. fi-as south Korea no longer could be tolerated. not even Ifllltho Soviet preatlg was involved.- Soma of the uteri: aatellltaa. lavia. we becom- ing reatle it should be shown the power of communism in the omnc. prestige-"face" of par- amount Im ortance. 4 Here. M, :- roasoned. a need for a demonstration of pow- New the attempt at lg::lr':d1Il;F t n on n ' ”'. w.ie.... is f is reason that a now. lie .5osnmonfz- .mova' sono- tl the world is con- . nuaaiamust try 19; groiln& . K1G0V.fl'lln.l'lt and it Contests. Develop In All gFour Federal OTTAWA. Oct. 2 - (CF) -- Fif- teen candidates - four of them in the Quebec constituency of Rim- ouski where an ncclnmatlon had been expected - today were nom- inated to contest the four Federal by-elections scheduled for Oct. id. in Rimouslrl. three last-minute candidates entered -before official nominations closed. A The by-elections will be a battle among Liberals, unofficial Liberals and Independents in three Quebec seats - Rimouskl, Joilette-L'As- somptlon-Montcalm and Montreal st. Mary's. The Progressive Conservative and (10. F. parties are running candid- ates only in the Ontario constit- uency of Welland, made vacant through the death of Labor Minis- ter Mitchell. Nominated in Welland were Dr. W.I-I. MoMilland. Liberal: Sam Hughes, Progressive Conservative: Melvin Swart. C. C. F. and Mel Dolg, Labor-Progressive. In imouskl, a seat made vacant by t a death of Gleason Belzile. Parliamentary Assistant to Pin- ance Minister Abbott. Maurice Tes- sier. a Rimouskl lawyer. was nom- inated several weeks ago as the By-elections official Liberal candidate. The last-minute ”” tes were Joseph Hervey, Trois Plstoles, and Rene Cases of Rlmouskl, who list- ien Robltallle of Rimouskl. who ent. were 0iNell-Leonide Gingras, in- surance agent, Republican Party: Liberal; lgnace Deslauriers, ihwyi-r. official Liberal; Hector Dupuls clvil employee, Independent Liber- al. and Pierre Archambault, tailor Independe i.. The seat was made vacant when the sitting Liberal member. Hon. Gaspard Fauteux, former Common's Speaker. was appointed Lieutenant- Governcr of Quebec. Maurice Breton of Juliette. ol- flcial Liberal candidate. and Wilt- rld Guertin of Repentigny. Inde- pendent, are contesting Juliette. vacated when Georges Emile La- palme resigned to take over Liberal Party leadership in Quebec. An additional C-mmons vacancy was created Saturday thrbugh the member for the Prince Edward Island constituency of Queens. Stressed Carferry Service As A Constitutional Issue: Navy league A !ii'M9.9ling A u....-...-in .-...-v A satisfactory half-year was re- ported by Commndore Godfrey M. Hibbard, C.B.E.. R.C.N. (Rel). who was rt.-elected president of thurlavy League of Canada, Prince Edward island Division. Due to a change in the financial year. now ending May 31st instead of the calendar year, the reports of the president, the treasurer, Lieut. Lloyd Grant, and the Sea Cadet report by the Commanding Of- ficer, Lieut. Commander J. R. Morris all dealt with the half-year period only. The president announced that the Navy League had undertaken to provide 900 ditty bags for naval ggj:g,g.j........:..........l... (Continued on Page 5 Col. 5) News In Brief MOOSE JAW. Sssk.. oct. 2- (CP)-Thomas Grant, 45-year-old bus driver. today was convicted of the shooting-and-cremation mur- ae, or Wenael Wilhelm (Vince) Harte-ii 35-year-old painter. last April 23. Grant was sentenced to - be hanged Jan. 4. WASHINGTON. Oct. 2-(AP)- Russia rejected loday Amedul" Brltlah-French demands for infor- mation about German Second World War prisoners still held in the Soviet Union. LONDON. Oct. 2-(CP)-- The Royal Canadian Navy's Tribal-class destroyer Sioux. set a record of four- inutea. 46 seconds in mhkllllf fuel-ll e connections While I”9' fuellingi at sea during operation! for the Inchon landlnla in K0?"- tha Admiralty laid touilhi-' or-raws. Oct. .2-(oe)- The Supreme Court of Clnada will roll! tomanw, ,5 wh pm e.lie,Federal o(Pl'oVlnMl cln egally exchange sornrof their lggmgtlva powers tlndar the ex- isting constitution. In a decision that may have a major bearing on future Federal-Provincial con- ferences." the court will dllpole of a teat case bro" 1. 5990" it by igsgblova scetla ovarnment. u. S. Iteslrovv-'r Dsntagedly Mine waermvarou. Out. I - (AP) -A second Ania-lean destroyer - the Mansfield - has struck a mine off North Korea. Seven men were injured. The Defence Department said the Mansfield hit the mine Satur- day. about an or so miles north of the bath parallel on the east coast of Kane near the city of Changion. The announcement followed on the heels of.-Jeatimony by Admiral Forrest P. Shannan to a coagrea- . aional committee that navy ships on Korea have found "artist .36...- "We put up a strong case for our constitutional right to inter- rupted tranaportntlon lncilltles at Borden and for a re-statement of the provisions for adequate main- G.&.KlL...iIlchwIAl'iii,t'e-vine. ksop-- ing wit present day require ments."- declared Premier J. Wal- ter Jones in commenting yester- day on the Dominion-Provincial conference on conslltuzlonal am- endments, held last week at Que- bec City. "We feel that we l'l'IElll(l a strong impression upon several of the Provincial leaders." he xald. "We made it clear that this issue wal vital to us. and that when this section of the Constitution is adopted in revised form we shall feel free to co-operate and even compromise on the other see- liona." ' The Premier's statement was made at the opening sitting of the conference and was discussed at later sittings which were held in camera. He said he was not at liberty to dlvu ge what transpir- ed at these sittings. and declined to comment on n rt-port ihtlt Prime Minister St. Laurent had opposed the island proposals. He emphasized. however. :hat the is- sue was by no means closed and that the Province will continue to press for a redress of its carferry service grievance. Premier's Statement "The Government of Prince Ed- ward Island is Prep-"ed '0 mt operate in every way to fashion a satisfactory constitutional agree- ment lf such can be detnrmined at this conference." Premier Jone! declared at the Opening of ill”- conferencc. "We desire. however. that whatever methods of as!”- ment are determined upon, that these should have all the solem- nlty and sanction of n formnl agreement which would be hon- oured In future in accordance with its terms. "The basic constitutional docu- ments. in so far as my Province is concerned. are emoudiad not only within the terms of the Bri- '1C' (Continued on Page ii Col. 8) Vlaliiouis In A Three Ford Plants WINDSOR. Orii.. Oct. 1 - (CF) ..w.1kouu by workers in three planta of Ford Motor Company of Canada this afternoon were re- ported by a company naolmmlm '1-lo said the walkout might spread to all five of the company: sprawl- ln -plants in Windsor": cut end. ania affected were the final assembly line. the machine shop and office ,and stores plant. some 0,000 men were involved. The waiitouta occurred two hours before the company was scheduled to" meet with officials of local 200. United Automobile Workers (C-1- 0.). whlch represents ll,oo0 Ford workers. The meeting was call- ed io discuu union demands for supplementary wage increases. I-0.A.l'. BAG No. 1 squadron (lt.d.A.l'.) de- many floating nitneg" of Russian nuoufaoturoo, ., I trcyeo so chem aircraft curing insasoaoramluau W ad themselves as Liberals, and Luc- 1: said he would run as an Independ- . ” Nominated in Montreal st. Mary's Emil Naud. publicist. Independent . death of J.L. Douglas. Liberal. ..llIarn....i'raiher-s. til Elected President Of ll.C.A.F. Ass'n Mr. Gregory Mulholland (above). manager of the Pbvincial Bank of Canada. Summerside. was last night elected president of the R C. A. F. Association, Summeralde. at the organization meeting held in the Maple Leaf Gardens. Mr. Jock l-lopkirk was elected vice pre- sident and Mr. Eric Sheen. second vice president. A. G. Rogers, lec- relary and J. R. Mungall.' treas- urer. The meeting was well attended by former members of the R. A. F. and R.C.li.F. and 42 applications for membership were received and will become the charter members of the Association. Prominent speakers present at last night's meeting were Wing Commander Aslln. president of the Maritime Group Headquarters R. C. A. F. Association. Air Vice (Continued on Page 13 col. 6) Mothers of Dangers From Smoking- WASHINGTON, Oct. 2--(AP)- Smoking by mothers, ranks high among the causes of eye accidents to very young children, a medical conference here was told today. Mothers were warned not to smoke while feeding, dressing or otherwise ministering to such children-and also to keep lighted cigarets well beyond reach. . Fathers were warned. too, against making while holding children over their shoulders. The seriousness of the hazard was explained by representatives of theDlst.rict ofoolumlbla society for the Prevention of Blindness. The organization is puttirg on an exhibit of children's eye injuries during the annual. scientific as- sembly of the District of Columbia Medical Society. Representatives of the exhibiting society said eye burns due to cig- arets rank high among the single causes of eye injuries seen among "very young children" at two Washington hospitals. Flooring. Mines or A A. Russian Origin 1? WASHINGTON, Oct. I - (AP) -Admiral Forrest Sherman said today U. S. navy ahipa off Korea have found "a great many floating mines" of Russian type. Sherman, , the chief of naval operations. told the House of Representatives arm- ed scrvices committee that an ex- amination of recovered mines in- dicated they had been "recently laid and not long out of the store- house." - Canadian liollar - NEW vdax, Oct. 2 - (op) - The Canadian dollar was up all cents at a discount of 593 per cent in terms of United states funds in closing foreign exchange dggnngg 13011337. The pound sterling was un- changed at sz.aov.. ' u Governor-General Visits 3. C. Premier QUEBEC. Oct. 2 -- (CF) -Gov- ernor-General Lord Alexander to- day vislied Premier and Mrs. Byron Johnson of British Colum- bia in St. Sacrcment Hospital. The Johnson: were injured Friday in an auto collision at St. Augustin, 15 miles west of here. Hospital authorities said today both were doing "very well.” 0 aiiiisasspaangssouv-roeea.seisrauIe.aeT .odsea!rovheeall7.I.O'l.IO. only lipid Ileslslance - . ls Encountered By William J. Waugh . TOKYO, O . 3 -(Tuesday) - (AP)-Alnsoet .000 south Korean troops drove to points 30 miles in- side Red Korea. Monday In the Communist regime gave no reply to Gen. MacArthur's brbadcast de- mand for surrender. Advanced spearheads of the South Korean ard Division reach- ed Kansong, on the east coast 30 air miles north of the 38th par- allel. against "very light resist- ance." an American liaison officer said. The Republican troops were headed northwst toward Wonsan, heavily-bombed North Korean oil centre 100 road miles north of the 35th parallel. Communist forces were reported being mustered there for an organized stand. More than two regiments of the South Korean Capital Division also were north of the old de- facto boundary between North and South Korea. Capital Division troops swung west from the cap- tured easi: coast town of Van- yang. seven miles inside Red Koren. Elements of the Republican 8th. Division were on the move 60 miles in from the east coast. after jump- ing off from Chunchun.elght miles south of the parallel. All U. 5. ground l0l'('eS remaini- ggg,ggg,gg.gg(gg,.,,g (Continued on Page 5 Col. ll 0 Russians Submit 7-Point gliorezui Peace Plan To U. By FRANCIS W. CARPENTER LAKE SUCCESS. N.Y., Oct. 2 - (AP) -- Russia's Foreign Minister. Andrei Y. Visbinslcy, and the Rus- ,-Sllii.-lllat:.todasL,sri;brn.ittt!d ialaevcrr-O point Korean peace plan to the United Nations. - It called for immediate cessa- tion of hostilities. immediate withdrawal of American and all other foreign troops from Korea and for all-Korean elections ob- Served by a U. Nucomimittee in- eluding Russia and Communist China. Withdrawal of American ma other foreign troops, the nub of the Soviet-bloc resolution, was defeated in the Security Council when Russia proposed it last sum- mer. The resolution was laid before the political committee of the General Assembly by the soviet Union. the Soviet Ukraine. White Russia. Poland and Czechoslovakia. Vishinsky rejected a resolution Dmposed by Britain, Australia, Brazil. Cuba. the Netherlands. Norway, Pakistan and the Philip- pines. He attacked the South Korean Government as a "fascist" puppet of the United States, and demanded the U. N. hall Ameri- can bombings in. Korea. The first point of the Soviet- bloc resolution - a' cease-fire .. 'was voted by the Security Coun. cll in its June 25 resolution but the North Koreans did not halt Rumors Britain May Increase Value Of Pound LONDON. Oct. 2 - (Ari -Hugh Galtskell. Britain's Minister for Economic Affairs, announced un- expeclediy today he will fly to Canada and the United States Oct. 8 to discuss "mutual economic problems." The announcement gave new life to rumors that Britain may soon increase the dollar value of the pound. The pound was devalued from 34.03 to 32.80 in U. S. funds Sept. l8. 1949. Similar monetary confabs in Washington preceded that action. Government spokesman said the new talks next week would be "informal and informative." Gait- akeil, acting Treasury Chief, will meet U. S. Treasury Secretary John Snyder in Washington. Gaii.skell's flying visit. coming on the heels of Canada's decision to free list dollar from controls. was linked in financial circles with persistent speculation that a boost on the value of the pound is near. informed sources said the plop subject of discumion in Washing- ton would be the conflict between Irliain's recovery and the United States dlfence spending programs. Britain s asked the U. S. for about Ol.500.000,0(l) to help fin- ance the proposed three-year re- armament program. The U. 8. thus (far has not formally answer- . e The Treaeury announcement said Oaitakellla visit "will not be the '-(An authorised British official ilvaabington said revaluation discusslo area not the purpose of Galtskeli's visit. The official said there is no fixed agenda for the talks. but they are expected to revolve around the task of rearm- lng the Western Powers and the economic alpicbs of this vast de- fence move.) occasion for formal negotiations." A spokesman explained that Gailskcii, acting as a deputy for the ailing Sir Stafford Crlpps, Chancellor of the Exchequer, needs "lo have the fullest possible understanding" of the American vnew on global financial policy. It is almost certain. informants reported, that Gaitakell will dia- cuss the effects on the British economy of Canada's free dollar. Britain buys wheat and raw mau- rlals of all kinds from her Cem- monwealth partner. An increase in the value of the Canadian dollar will impose A greater strain on Britain's dollar reserves unless lritain .incteasaa the value of the pound sterling from the present poo in terms of U. S. currency. The Treasury avoids cornmeal- ing on rcvaluulon rumors. ai- ihough most qualified Government informants here diamiaa eucll talk as "premature." One reason is that men rumors hel strengthen sterling. A sec- on reason is that the Government vvouldnvant to keep any renlua- . tlon intentions secret as long as polible to avoid wldcpread fin- ancial dislocation through Qeaulh tign. i ' C i 7i their advance. The second point already has been defeated by' the Security; Council. the U..N. countries re- fusing a Russian demand that the i-Us-Nwfonca-getitout. of"KtTf!s. - - a M 40 START A Love Lcrrcn. -ro ' Acuouus dial.- mam ADARLANCM - A Ann c.r.n1i.EmaN TORONTO, Oct. 2 - (CP) - Minium and maximum tempera- tures: Vicloria 42-59: Ed-monlon 33- 42; Regina 25-37; Winnipeg 33-37; Toronto 55-76; Ottawa 30-Bi; Mon- treai 59-17; Quebec 52--; Saint John 44- -; Moncton 32-70; Halifax 42-82: Yarmoulh 46-62; St. Johns 43-49. HALIFAX. Oct. 2 - (C?) -- Official forecasts issued by We Dominion Public Weather Office at Halifax. . Synopsis: While Southern Manitoba ex- perienced a taste of winter, the Marltimes enjoyed sunny skies and well above normal temperatures today. Edmundsion was the warm- est reporting station in the Mari- iimes today where the tempera- ture roached 78. Continued vcrv warm weather is forecast for Tues- ay. : Regional forecasts, valid unlit midnight Tuesday: Prince Edward Island-Clear and warmer. Light winds increasing Tuesday morn- ing to southwest 15. Low and high Tuesday at Charlottetown 40 and 75. High tide lbdey at 1.50 A. M. and 3.39 P. M. - sun rises at 8.1! A. M. and sets at 5.53 P. M. aummerslde tide eighteen min- utes later than Charlottetown. IOBDIN - CAPI TOIIMIINTINH FIIIY IIEBVICI Dally Except Sunday Leave not-den Love, C. T. 0.10 AM. 10.35 AM. 1.00 PM. ' 2.40 RM. 4.80 PM. 1.30 PM unday uave Borden Leave C. I 9.10 AM. 10.05 A.M. LI EM. a.eo EM: Ml PM. . us PJI. FOOD gr.gstns-oaasaou- , Y lllltl Weed have dunes I All 1! Li. Ll. C EH. L I --n”.7-Te.-E31999 3! 44-67; Charlottetown 40-62: Sydney '