. e ° * "NOTES BY THE WAY Loan ‘not te uphold the status quo in 8 Le 7 ie i oe Che Guardian particular situation or who oppose ~ | outside intervention into what seems ‘Miseries WILDLIFE |5 To 8& “Managing Editor ‘Pu'slished every week_day morning (except Sun- day and statutory hetidavade ay 165 Prince Street, Charlottetown, P-E.1., by Thomson Newspapers td. | Branch offices at’ Summerside, Montague, Alberton and Souris : Represented nationally by: Thomson Newspapers Advertising Services: Toronto 425° University Ave. Empire 3-8894; Montreal 640 Cathcart Street Uni- | versity 65942; Western Office 1030 West Georgia Street Vancouver MA 7037 bee A Newspaper Publishers lication of all news dispatches ; credited to it or to the Associated Press or Reuters : and also the loca’ news published herein All ‘ right or republication of special dismatches. here-' | In-also reserved. Subscription rate: ” Not over-40c per week hy carrier. $12.00 » year by mail on rural routes and areas 4 not serviced by carrier. $15.00 « year off Island and= UK $20.00 per year in U.S. and elsewhere outside British Com | monwealth. Neat ever reA\gle copy: | Member Audit Bureau of Circulation. | “flexible relationship” between peace-keeping and - peace-making. This would involve making every ef- fort to find an agreed system of cost-» sharing before a force: is organized and deployed, and to review regular- ly the mandate of a peace-keeping force, especially where there is no A case in point is the UN force. in Egypt which has been there. for nearly 10 years, and to hich Canada has contributed cay ae ‘from the start. There is danger now that. the UN_ may find itself upholding the Status quo and thus face the pros- pect of an indefinite commitment. _ The Canadian government reportedly | . CENTE NNIAL COINAGE — REPORT FROM OTTAWA The e arpa! tunnel is a pas- | ‘Buy? You don’t buy ‘em, lady. sageway in .the wrist through***You print ‘em and sell 'em.’— ‘which the median nerve passes | Financial Post. Soe - on its way to the thumb and in- dex finger. The narrow canal is | hounded by bones” and fibrous | tissue and also contains the ten- dons of the flexor muscles of the hand. A’ bottleneck .is created when any part of the tunnel or ~ its contents swell; the nerve —is Bachelors, the U. 8. Public Health Service _firids, the most unhappy ‘persons of all. married women or married ~women er married men. That's develops numbness,'. tin : an aching or burning sensation law has to be chauffered to a in the hand and fingers. This is | party— and his bachelor budd- most noticeable over the palm | ies invite him out for golf. —— side of the thumb, index, and Cleveland Press. ring fingers. The distress is | sporadic and usually is encount- ered at night when in bed. The pain may awaken the victim from a sound sleep. Rub- bing the hand, holding the arm up, or dangling it from the side | of the bed. usually brings tem- | By Arch Canadian Press ‘ WASHINGTON (CP)—George «ing woman, t Cc Prince Edvard Island Like the Dew - a : Of he d . t . me W. J. Hancox, reat oe ° one affairs. What a need- “THE THEME OF THE z » T e.Han Matron: ‘What mining stocks | ‘There is nothing wrong w.th Wallace Ward fOnK: Vea ner ed, he. suggested, is to. finds some By Dr. Theodore R. Van Dellen | should I buy?’’ Old promoter: | the younger generation that be- EaHOr DESIGNS ON CANAPAS ee a parent and or taxpayer | won't cure, — Waterloo Cour- pier. | A. wife, is a pretty. valuable ' person to have around the house. as ‘been. estimated. that the services a wife and mother pro- Unhappier than. old maids, than~, vide for her family in a single | year would add up to $10,875, if they had to be obtained from ; Member Canadian Daily i BGIT— arter ALL ‘the f : “ > . ° Think of ee ute Sachi k Pease the (Canadinhe: y THe RA : softest structure and usually | a thought for a married man to | other sources.” Think of her du- aaner! Re ine neeeanne? ‘a the wae for renub. | aBFeement, on collective assessment. Loox HOW TAXES ARG suffers first. . | - keep in mind when the baby is ties: purchasing agent, chef, < : in. this” paper * MULTIPLYING £ When this occurs the victim | crying, the wife wants the’ .win- | hostess, nurse, seamstress, chau-. laundress, - maid, | social convener and recreation ; director, to name only a few. ~ Comber Herald. De Gaulle’s Intransigence MacKenzie 7 Staff, Washington « ,ropean Consultative Assembly eC LT aN er eT orate Seen ee oe te eee) ‘ : + 7 ER i \ : ' : PAGE 4 FEADAY, MAY. 0, 1 | plans lo-ralse the matter at the ss porary relief. Others develop po the undersecretary of state |in Paris Tuesday, was forth- a Q Hon Of it at mer meeting of the UN's 33-nation ! tingling when gripping an ob +} Whe net ong ae ae [rights ones an open scrap i . This is true of the house- dent de Gaulle’s pitching when he ‘said: ues quiry ~ | peace-keeping group. wife when she sews, irons, knits, | United States during the last - “With friends like this, who Reference was. made recently in| holding against what they regard as «One reason why this: committee been looking: into the whole financial - —{ or holds--the steering~wheel of - i five years, once told the late an injury ora rheumatic disor- ; @cToss- the sea, General de- needs enemies.” : : ; re : the car. | president Kennedy: |° There is U.S. ambivalence. on . a these columns to protest meetings has been dragging its feet may be Middle-aged women are favor- “Every time the hand of display. s pec jal ties with which Alberta farmers have been that another committee of 14 has ed. The syndrome often follows -/-ftiendshiphas been extended France,on the one hand, date back to. flie American ‘tévolu- der of the wrist. Now and then 'Gaulle hi®”put a dead fish in |tion, which France helped the ' -inequities under the Canada Pension f. structure of the United Nations, in- ‘| the condition is traced to an in- | it.” . Americans to win. Now Plan. Further reference to this matter appears in. the current issue | F _of The Printed Word, Toronto, which: | quotes a spokesman for the farmers | as saying at a meeting held near Red | Deer: “We didn’t know what it was all about and were shocked when we learned‘ the extent of the obligations | being imposed on us.” To this state- ie ment Robert Thompson, their repre- | + ——~sentative—in-—Parliament;--replied: | -“Few members of the House of Com- mons -fully understood what: they were voting for when they passed the Pension Bill because the Bill had, been changed. so often, and so few details_of: the final draft-had been | given:” “ ' “This statement by a responsible member of the House of Commops,” comments ‘the’ Toronto publication, » ~ Parliament. If our elected represen- - + tatives are too busy or too indifferent ___. to keep themselves fully informed on _ the legislation they are passing, what. are they busy at? And what kindof i | “Gndicates —a—serious-condition in +. _sions have been cluding a possible way of amortiz- ing the peace-keeping debts ofthe Soviet bloc and France. Reports have been heard that the -Soviet~Union might make a lump payment into an emergency UN fund ‘to cover its ob- ‘ligation, but there is nothing definite on this point. The committee has held several meetings but no conclusive. ny kind have been report- nmittee-of.33,.meanwhile, | is presumably waiting for~any—suc- cess in this field before embarking on its own full-scale considerations. - _.. Whatever the reasons for delay, Canada does well to press its views on the need-of-reaching a working arrangement without further loss of time. New Riding Boundaries electoral boundaries dehate, and the reports of the representation commis- _Teturned to ‘Representation Commissioner Cas-_ tonguay. From him they will-go back The Commons. has—completed:_its_. |~politiclans in two other cases. _..Two months ago, ‘‘Ottawa. Re- | spotlighted” the soaring: HIGH FLYING” | COST OF LIVING =. THOSE WILDLIFE COINS OTTAWA REPORT By Patrick Nicholson Soaring Costs Of Royal Commissions The Canadian taxpayer will soon learn that crime does not pay.” With the most of govern- ment-by-commission already soaring to» unmatched -heights, Parliament Hill has no less than five royal commissions on spe- cific aspects of crime in action, ~—pendine--or—_just_past.-_In--addi- tion to the inquiries, there are. court . cases current involving ~ port” cost as well as the soaring num- ber of commissions. I pointed legislation are they likely to enact?” The farmer's first objection\to the | Pension Plan, it notes, is that it com- - ~ pels him to pay twice as much, and in . ~~gorme cases three times as much, for his pension as a wage earner of equal earning power has to pay for an equal Bio! pension. The farmer has no employer. who can be compelled*to pay half the cost for him, and he may have an ~~ employee. 3 oe ve “Thus itis argued that-a young man of 18 years, operating a farm with | the help of one hired man and earn- ing a taxable income ‘of $4,000 a year, might have to pay into the Plan about $200 a year. If he continued ,) Fe eee Ree Renee ee ree . | : to the provincial commissions, which. _then will have 30 days in which to consider and dispose: of the objec- tions-The commission can accept and ~-aet-upon-any-or-all-of -them,-or-can reject the lot. When the commissions , have reported back, Mr. Castonguay. will’ make a draft representation order for the country. as a whole. It will go to the Secretary of State and, -within five days, by order-in-council, 'the-representation-order will be de-- clared to be in force. Our four Island MPs have made protests with regard to the new rid- ing boundaries in this province. But they were not. exceptional. in this these payments for the full 47 years | regard. Thirty-three petitions, backed. | (from age 18 to age 85) he would, by that time, have paid in- something. | like $10,000. All he could expect in | return for that investment would be a pension. based.on. his average. con-. d tributions on his own behalf during | the period. and he would, receive that only for the few years left. to him.-.| were performed -by parliamentary ° But if, instead of making all- those | contributions to the Pension Plan, | he had‘invested the same amounts | at5 per cent interest, he would probably -have in the neighborhood of $35,000 to his credit by the time he reached the age of 65. This money would be his own to use as he-saw- | fit. Invested at 5 per cent, it would | yield him an income close to '$1.800, and he would still own the principal. Of course, if he was improvident he wouldn't have this nest egg; but that’s: another matter. , The conten- tion is that he is being mulcted in his compulsory contributions to the~ Plan and that -he should, as. the ‘Alberta farmers claim; have-the right | to “opt out.” That could present difficultigs of another kind. to the Pi iineeeaHon generally. But there is a grievance here which should, at least. get a full airing in Parlia- ment. A Slow Process Four months have passed since the UN General Assembly told a special committee to work on the question of authorizing and financing UN peade- ? keeping operations. The committee, known as the Committee of 33. met exactly once to appoint its officers. "It still has to even start on the ques: Aion which is at the root of the UN's. present financial crisis. In.a statement \p the House: of. Commons this week, Fxternal Af- fairs Minister Martin gave fresh ins week in June. the federal-provincial dication of Canada's desire to oh- --tgin action in this matter. No cost: sharing scheme will ‘he acceptable for long, jhe said, unless the leading states pay“their share. Rut’ there (vill always be states whose interest is GEE | by 158 members—well over half the total of 265—were filed after the new boundary maps were’ published. They. related to every province’ except Newfoundland. > One commentator notes that in the bad old days, when redistributions committee—invariably to loud cries of gerrymander and worse—the. re- formers used to say that what was needed was to get the process out of politics. It. has been one of the main complaints this time that politics got too little into the process; member after member has said the job. was approached with a bloodless disre- ‘gard for everything but regular shapes and near uniformity of size. Creditiste Leader Real Caouette | ‘went so far as to suggest a return to the old system where a Commons committee set the new boundaries. That would be a poor way, indeed, of making progress. ; Certainly it is well to remember that for the first time, a real attempt has been made to set up riding boun- |” daries on a non-partisan basis:-One exchange suggests that perhaps MPs are too close to the subject to be com- pletely objective in their views. Some of them, indeed, -will find — their ridings wiped out ‘altogether; the majority will find changes. requiring’ more work to prepare for future elections. How could they be expect- ed to react in the circumstances? On the other hand. where parliamentary protests are plainly. keved to the public interest, its to he hoped they will be given very Careful consider: ation. EDITORIAL NOTE Originally scheduled for the: first conference at Victoria, B.C. on-in- creased aid fo higher education has heen postponed to June 16-17. By that time the provincial elections here and in Quebec will be safely out of the way. ? | | out that one such inquiry alone, | the ‘‘Byesand bye’’ commission, had already passed . the total cost for eight recent important commissions. together. The Bi- lingual and Bicultural Commis- ~sion: already -forecast--to——cost $5,700,000 up to the end of this fiscal year, thus exceeds the group cost of the eight most important other. recent commis- sion. , zs My figures prompted a ques- tion to the government in the PUBLIC FORUM This column ts open te the discussion 7 by correspondents ef questions of in- terest. The Guardian does not neces- sarily endorse the opinion of corre’. pondents. All letters ‘published are sub- ject te editing and condensation where mecessary. The Guardian is unable te enter inte any correspondence regard- ing letters submitted. DANGEROUS CROSSINGS Sir,—Recently in our city-a tragic accident occurred at one ‘of the railway crossings that ‘every city seems:to be cursed with. I_feel very _strongly..that- this accident could have been avoided had this particular crossing been marked properly. Merely putting a stick in the ground with two pieces of wood attached is not enough; this is inviting tragedy, these cross- ings, which are located within a city should have an electric signal erected, not alongside the track, “but far enough from it to warn a motorist early enough for him to stop. ee The roadbed on each side of the track should be miade ‘of | some abrasive material which would help a _ vehicle stop without sliding into the train, | especially. when the surface is ' wet. ._ The engine and cars could have an, application of glow- paint, much like some highway. signs, that ‘would reflect a car's lights. _ i : 7 The crossings marked by a light and bell system are not adequate enough. These cross- ings should... have,/dropgates—-to~ | hold up the traffic till the train | - }House of Commons, and the of-; Association of Canada. This | ficial reply exactly corroborat- proved to be a remarkable pro- ed my figures. Now the Cana- motion of Canadian foodstuffs, dian ‘Tax Foundation points out | mostly from the. sea, this year. that the Pearson Years have|The menu included such rare seen, $13,000,000 committed on | delicacies as ‘‘Whale meat balls’ ‘such enquiries, contrasted to | ‘curried seal meat’ and ‘‘brais- $3,582,855 in the five Diefenbak- | ed buffalo steak in beer"’. © er Years, and vividly contrast-. There was also a profusion of- ed to a meré five St. Laurent Years. | wick sardines, P.E.1. lobster, On- AUTO PARTS VICTIMS tario cheddar cheese and so_on. Lake Simcoe Industries Utd. | Even the first course was a dis- -of—Beaverton, Ontario, is the ~tinctively Canadian~dish of Ca- latest auto-parts plant to feel nadian ingredients - beer cheese . the axe of the Canada-USA auto- | Soup. The only non - Canadian 230 employees, a mere handful | items were the coffee and the will remain at their old jobs; | olives. t many more ‘will be employed Ne This ingenious presentation a short-term government roc of Canadian foods was from a pontsact, ee ee familiar. source; remember | guarantee of jobs. _per_cent | those 6) trade._dri of the plant’s order book in-.the | “se}} ee te Dae past consisted of items which enbaker Years? are made in USA by the parent | planning and detailing of those companies of its Canadian cus- | was. carried out—by—the—execu- tomers. Such Canadian - only re- | tive assistant to Trade Minist- quirements can in future be | er George Hees, Mél Jack: .to- | made more economically by USA | day that same Mel Jack is the | plants with long run orders ‘for | $50,000 per year president and USA as well as Canadian assem: | general manager of the Brew- | bly-plants.- ~-\ers Association: of Canada | BREWERS MEET IN OTTAWA | “From politics to profits’ one Timmins’ well - known brew- | might say. i. er, Mr. W. J, Doran, was a re- : | cent visitor to our capital...He | PART TIME MPs reminisced to me about the old | -I write this on April 30th. | days in Timmins, the early days the past ten days,. the import- ant Public Accounts_Committee of thé Roy Thompson empire-in | fact, when a light in a window of the Commons has had to ad- Much of the Tn $681,000 in the last smoked B.C: salmon, New Bruns | fection_in the ligament. within -! the tunnel. Psychiatrie factors muscles. ness, or weakness of the hand is due to this condition. Nerve con- duction tests.on the nerve he to determine tf the impulses are passing through normally. _ Some obtain relief when the ‘wrist. is immobilized with a band or splint. Hydrocortisone, inject- the swelling, helps others. Diu- ema. But surgery is the best re- the nerve is being pressed upon and relief follows when the-fib- rous part of the tunnel is cut. This. simple operation is per= formed under a local anesthee- tie. FILTERED AIR‘ D. writes: Some of our friends say we should not run an air conditioner when the weather is cool. They feel_ raising the win dows for fresh air is better. My husband and T are ‘more \com- fortable with filtered air. We don’t like the night air or the dust from open windows Witt this harm our health? the French president has | On the other hand, there is shown—he~is-firm-about quitting the conviction in \many quar--' medy when.-there-is_proofthat— leven lower.. munication with de Gaulle,” mused a senior -American. dip- jlomat. The ,American ambassa- ;dor_in_Paris_apparently has not had an-audience with the presi- dent of France’ for many weeks. Moreover, competent observ- ers say, French officials must also-play a role. Prolonged-pres--| NATO's..integrated military sys-,|ters de Gaulle personally is sure on the. nerve ultimately-jtem by next April, Franco: | wrecking all progress made in leads to weakness of the hand | American relations have sunk the last 20 years towards Eu- ropean. unity. Not all pain, tingling, numb- |——‘Somehow we have lost com- RESENT DE. GAULLE he feeling that de Gaulle is an) ingrate runs strong among e older -American~— diplo- ‘mats who recall the days when ‘they fought against domestic lisolationism .amid charges of being unsympathetic to world . problems outside the hemis- ~yed-into~the~canal-to~reduce--the--frequently-guess—in-order-to—in- phere _terpret what de Gaulle means, Fetics ocassionally lessen the ed- pending subsequent clarification | | from on high. | PRESERVES NATO | The official U.S. line is the “open chair’’—methodical prep- |aration to preserve NATO | against the day when de Gaulle 'is. gone and France can return. |The spring meeting of NATO | foreign ministers in Paris may | show what success the U.S. line jis having. ‘ | - But’ while President’ Johnson _|.has_ended_a_sterile exchange of diplomatic notes, the accumula- tion of bitterness and frustra- tion expressed .by American spokesmen might well be called the “gritted teeth” technique. Canada” during the Dief- {i REPLY Congressman Wayne Hayes, | Ohio Democrat heading a ‘con- elegation to the-Eu-— Such a figure is former state secretary Dean—Acheson,.at 73 in de_Gaulle’s age bracket. A co- founder=of-NATO, he has been summoned back to diplomatic harness to help preserve it. He commented recently, in giving his version of what Pres ‘ident de Gaulle resents about the U.S. role in Europe: “It’s a curious situation of a recovered patient—a__ convales- | cent who's been weak, who has ibeen ill and has finally been ‘built up and had good food and house and warm bed and sud- denly he says: ‘I’m a great big man, I don’t need any more food, no_more doctors, no more house. I want to_get out in the ~~ wind and the rain, the ice and the snow. I don’t need any more tof ar ury, especially for those living | ard in an urban area. a COLD IRRITATES -- R. writes: Why do iced drinks induce coughing? ews icc REPLY — che oes . Because cold irritates the | Plowing {8 an. act of faith. back of the throat and stimulat- Man,. inarticulate in the pres- ‘es the cough reflex. But this-is | ence of the verities, knows that an uncommon reaction, for most | for himself and: all other forms. of us are able to drink ice cold | of plant and animal life, essen- liquids without being bothered | tial food comes from a thin lay- in this way. : ler of humus: git - . DIMINISHING HEIGHT _| It was an epochal day when M. O. writes: Can an opera- | man first learned he could stir tion be performed on a young | soil with a crooked stick, plant girl to decrease her height one seeds, and harvest grain: It or two inches? : | meant that nomadic man could REPLY ~+settle in one place instead of Possibly but it is easier to do | following flocks and herds. So with hormones provided she has | far as research goes, wooden not reached the age of adoles- | Plows were used exclusively ‘un- cence. : til 1770 when the first patent was ‘A Furrow Turned Ottawa 8 Journal > powerful muscles rippled “he-~ neath glossy coats, the point of ‘the share dipped into the soil and a shining ribbon of moist dark soil glistened in the eun. Before soil conservation be- came the watchword, men and youth, were proud of straight furrows. Men wrote their names in quiet satisfaction in the turn- ed lines of sod. Pioneers con- quered a new land with axe, rifle and plow. Beneath a golden suf and blue sky, the shining ribbons: unfolded. Robins followed to harvest worms;—crows called—from the good, care, _ been in a warm. was a welcome mat to any late home-goer, and everyone knew journ twice out of ‘three meet- ings through absence of the ne- _cessary quorum of MPs. - Watch for some fireworks to be touch- ed. off by - Guelph’s energetic MP Alf Hales, who is the angry | everyone else in what was then {the hub of ‘‘the largest gold- field in the British Common- | wealth’. I- was delighted to TODAY’S HEALTH: HINT— Do not buy or use cracked or | unclean eggs ~ ‘ (NOTE: correspondence to Dr. Van Dellen should be, addressed to: Dr. Theodore Van Dellen, co Chicago Trib- -issued for-a-cast-iron plow. Today a powerful machine | Woodland and bobolinks made | pulls‘many plows. Half a cen- tury ago on a spring morning a man went forth with horses. The | first day of plowing was a high- | light of the season. As the hors- | meet [’' Doran by chance at | the. annual ‘‘Beer and Sea Food | Part” given by the Brewers _ Cur Yesterdays | (From The -Guardian Files) | TWENTY - FIVE YEARS AGO | (May 6, 1941) Immediate use of the United ; States Navy_‘'to make—the seas. | secure for the delivery of muni- | tions to Britain’ was urged by | the United- States Secretary of | War, Henry Stimson. j , | Jean Tarte, Montreal lawyer, testified in court that he had re- ceived money to facilitate evas- ‘ion from military training and [had ‘split’ the money with) | Pierre Decary, former division- _al registrar in Montreal. | | TEN YEARS AGO | : (May 6, 1956) | Mr. Wilson Ross; B.Sc. B.ED, | }-a_supervisor of Schools in | | Queens County left for a short «' course in Educational leadership | in Edmonton, Alta. | bey chairman of that committee. daily schedules June 5-September 24 incl. musie in the meadow. The ripe ping steady monotone of the opening sod was music that struck a deep chord in ‘a man who knew that plowing was an .une, Chicago, Illinois.) es leaned into their collars and North Sydney-Port aux Basques fast passenger and = | a automobile ferry-service daily ? a7 pees ‘CN’s stabilizer equipped modem ocean ferries provide fast daily 1 service between Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Ferries carry 500 passengers and 110 aut6mobiles...provide cabin accommodations, lounges, Cafeteria and bar services. Please make your passenger and automobile reservations early...at any-CN Ticket Office. a ec one “William Carson’. ~ “Leif Eiriksson” affirmation of faith. has passed. I speak particularly of the | It was announced that af form- - two crossings are extremely | Levy. B.A., B.D., S.TM., then dangerous. Driving .out Long- | of St: Catherines, Ont.. would worth. towards the jail, I found , receive a honorary degree at that the signal is hidden from | the 113th annual convocation at View by the light poles, a very | Acadia University. Gs great hazard, especially toy. 7 ' f strangers in our city. 1. FARM GAMF RIRDS _ While walking in the vicinity §©=WINNIPEG. (CP Manitoba of the Kensington Road crossifig has established # 4400 --~ acre one ie ld I watched a train game. management area 75 passing” and waited f-or the | miles. northeast of Winnipeg and signal to stop. I -waited for minutes <just-to-seeif- it, would | nearby. Mines department offi- stop. but being stuck it was une! cials will test conservation pol- able to stop ' Licies without curbing recrea- This fosters disrespect. for | tional opportunities these warning signals. and ShOWS | ——————————— eT how important maihtenafice is ‘ I believe the responsibility for | Island Mobile- this situation lies between the | Homes railroad and our civi¢ authori- | i ties. Something should be done Sales and Service to prevent these needless trag- ;| Summerside Dial $117 edies and what I have suggest- ed might help. Maybe some oth- er suggestions would prove het- > ter I invite | anvone interested ta add’ their comments to mine and if: we shout loud: enough maybe ‘someone might hear us. Tam, Sir, etc., “oye I MUISE Charlottetown, . Travel Trailer. » crossings on Longworth Avenue er minister of the Charloftetown |": | and “Kensington Road. These | Baptist Church. Rev 17 son 10 | a- 9,600-acre game hjrd refuge | Accessories * : | it Lv. North Sydney 11.55 p.m. AT. 17.00 am._A.T. Ar. Port aux Basques ae 6.55 a.m. N.T. 6.00 p.m. N.T. Lv. Port aux Basques 11 -55 a.m. N.T. 9.00 p.m. N.T. Ar. North Sydney © , 5.55 p.m. AT. ” 6.00 a.m. /A.Ts = rr = seerccalstas ese te eames ee: “Willi Se ise: -LOCAL-TIME-——--———] J Before June 5 and after September 24 “William Carson’ Newfoundland Time ‘is 30 minutes Lv. North Sydney 11.55 pim: .A.T: in advance of Atlantic Time. - At. Port aux Basques 6.55 a.m... N.T. Sannin i parerncer ae Wy. Port aux Basques 11-55" am. —N.T- «| sailing from North qyney. wt |Z” Ar. North Sydney 5.55 p.m... A.T. hour from Port. aux Basques. PASSENGER .FARES Grie Way Round Trip gs Adults $ 5.00 . -$ 9.00 “| Children, 5 arid under12 2.50 4.50 ‘i Children under 5 Free Free , Cabins, berths and meals are extra ; VEHICLE CHARGES OneWay Round Trip . Passenger Automobiles’ . 16,00 29.00 Rates for transportation of trailers and other ve applicatiomto any Canadian National ticket office. All automobiles must be in charge of a driver outlined under “Passenger Fares”, ae CONNECTING TRAIN SCHEDULES who Trains in and out of North Sydney make connections to and from Truro, Halifax, Charlottetown, Moficton, Saint John, Mo 4. higles. available upon will pay passage fare as | ff . ntreal and New York; ~ es | Contagt your authorized CN travel agent or CN p assefger sales office, CN }